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32526Robert Laffont 0 XXV - 398 pp
2014100119758Cherche midi 2014 368 pages 13 8x3 4x21 8cm. 2014. Broché. 368 pages.
First edition. Original green boards with illustrated blue dust jacket with green abstract image. 8vo. 399 pages; 22 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates to On the Way with the Saving Remnant. Includes several black-and-white photographs. SUBJECT (S) : Lithuanian Jews, Holocaust, Personal narratives, Vilnius, Biography. Some dampstaining. Some edgewear to jacket. Very minimal markings. Slight toning to pages. Very good condition. (HOLO2-134-25)
(FT) Paperwrappers. 8vo. 32 pages. 22 cm. First edition. In Yiddish. Title page verso: "Mit der dratve-A tzi" (And the Heel Was Threaded) A story of Jewish Life in the Warsaw Ghetto. Khaim Margoles Dav? Idzon (1891-1960) Born in Warsaw, died in New York. Subjects: World War, 1939-1945 -- Fiction. Jews -- Poland -- Warsaw -- Fiction. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Fiction. OCLC lists 13 copies worldwide. Paper wrappers lightly worn and stained at edges. Pages fresh. Very good+ condition. Scarce, early, and important. (HOLO2-80-5)
1st edition, original paper wrappers. 8vo, iv (English) + 27 (Hebrew) pages. In Hebrew with additional English abstract and title page. The Eichmann trial was one of the most important events in pre-1967 Israel. The article attempts to compare the reactions of two witnesses to the trial, Hannah Arendt and Haim Gouri, to the proceedings. These writers represent two conflicting perspectives- a Jewish-universalist one on the one hand, and a Jewish-Israeli one on the other .Interestingly, the insight of both Arendt and Gouri played a role in subverting the prevalent attitudes toward the memory of the Holocaust in Israeli society. While Arendts assertions became a basis of a tendency to universalize the Holocaust, removing it from a specific Jewish context, Gouris observations led to a strong identification with Diaspora Jewry. The Eichmann trial and the new perceptions in its wake marked the beginning of the decline of the concept of Negation of the Diaspora and the acceptance of the Holocaust as a major identity-forming factor in Israeli society. (from abstract) SUBJECT(S): War crime trials -- Jerusalem. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945). Eichmann, Adolf, Trials, litigation, etc. Arendt, Hannah-- Views on the Holocaust. Gouri, Haim, Middle East -- Jerusalem. OCLC: 50757632. Near Perfect Condition. Very Good++ (HOLO2-159-41-ALXZ)
First Shanghai edition. Original boards. 8vo. Vol. Nashim-Kedushah is 256, 72, and 222 pages. Vol. Haflaah-Zeraim is 274 and 198 pages. Vol. Nezikin-Shoftim is 140, 128, 268, and 216 pages. Publication of this Mishneh Torah edition was made possible by a donation of Rabbi Zvi Efron, to whom a tribute is made. Published by the exiled Mir Yeshivah, one of the only yeshivas to survive as a whole body. In terms of the learning, yeshiva students say this was the most productive period ever, as they had nothing else to do other than sink into the study of the Rambam and the Talmud. This book of the Rambam was edited by the heads of the yeshiva during its years in the exile in Shanghai. SUBJECTS: Rambam Holocaust Displaced Persons. OCLC lists one copy at JTS. Very light wear to boards. Pages are browning. Text is very clean overall, but very lightly faded in some areas. Overall Very Good Condition. (RAB-60-22)
8vo. Xxviii, 195 pages. SUBJECT (S) : Germany - foreign relations - Poland; Poland - foreign relations - Germany; Great Britain - foreign relations - Germany; Germany - foreign relations - great Britain; World War, 1939-1945 - causes - Europe. Covers darkened and a little edge-worn, pages a little tan, good condition. (Holo2-12-14)
8vo. Xxviii, 195 pages. SUBJECT (S) : Germany - foreign relations - Poland; Poland - foreign relations - Germany; Great Britain - foreign relations - Germany; Germany - foreign relations - great Britain; World War, 1939-1945 - causes - Europe. Covers darkened and a little edge-worn, pages a little tan, good condition. (Holo2-12-14)
Original cloth. 8vo. 31 pages. 25 cm. First edition. Nazi-era publication. Lucien Wolf Memorial Lecture. No. 1. By Viscount Cecil of Chelwood; with a foreword by Gustave Tuck and an afterword by the Very Rev. Dr. J. H. Hertz. A lecture on the need for the League of Nations Peace and Minorities treaties to be observed by member nations, and the benefits of such a policy, especially in central Europe. Lord Robert Cecil (1864-1958) was one of the principal architects of the League of Nations, an advocate for world peace, and winner of the Nobel Peace Prize. Subjects: Minorities. Peace. Light soiling to cloth, stitched binding slightly shaken, otherwise clean and fresh. Good + condition. (HOLO2-123-22)
196087175ABNew York, Viking, 1960. 8°. 246 S. mit Abb. auf Tafeln. Roter Original-Leinenband mit OUmschlag.
First separate edition. Original paper wrappers with green ink. 8vo. 27 pages; 24 cm. Reprinted from the International Labour Review Vol. LXII, No. 2, August 1950. A detailed DP-era investigation into the migration and economic issues facing the worlds population post- World War II. Focused efforts on two main areas: how to use the existing migration opportunities the most efficiently and how to increase migration opportunities going forth. If the Governments for their part translate the recommendations of the Conference into action, it is permissible to think that life may once again be made worth living for millions of human beings. Includes description of the International Labour Organization as well as other publications from the International Labor Office. SUBJECT (S) : Economics, Migration, Post-WWII. OCLC lists no holdings worldwide. Slight toning. Several red markings on original paper wrappers. Very good condition. Rare. (Holo2-133-4) xx
First separate edition. Original paper wrappers with green ink. 8vo. 27 pages; 24 cm. Reprinted from the International Labour Review Vol. LXII, No. 2, August 1950. A detailed DP-era investigation into the migration and economic issues facing the worlds population post- World War II. Focused efforts on two main areas: how to use the existing migration opportunities the most efficiently and how to increase migration opportunities going forth. If the Governments for their part translate the recommendations of the Conference into action, it is permissible to think that life may once again be made worth living for millions of human beings. Includes description of the International Labour Organization as well as other publications from the International Labor Office. SUBJECT (S) : Economics, Migration, Post-WWII. OCLC lists no holdings worldwide. Slight toning. Minimal markings. Very good + condition. (Holo2-133-4A) xx
8vo. 22, 76 pages. Illustrated. In Polish, Yiddish, English, French, Russian, and German. SUBJECT (S) : Jews - persecutions - Poland; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Poland; Poland - history - occupation, 1939-1945. Good+ condition. (SPEC-7-17)
Two sheets. 17 x 23 cm. Two photographs from the service at a memorial in Paris, France in memory of the Holocaust victims from Miedzyrzec-Podlaski, Poland. One photo is of the headstone with inscription: A La Memoire de nos chers parents, freres, sceurs et amis lachement assassines par les Nazi. 1939-1945. A Miedzyrzec-Podlaski n'oublions jamais ces crimes. (In memory of our dear parents, brothers, sisters and friends assassinated by the Nazis. 1939-1945. Miedzyrzec-Podlaski Never Forget These Crimes. ) Inscription is also in Yiddish. Second photo is a wide shot of the memorial with a surrounding crowd, 19 of whom are numbered in pen. Names and relatives and/or friends lost are listed on reverse of photograph in Yiddish with corresponding numbers. Reverse side of each photograph also contains stamp from photographer as well as their benevolent society (Association de Secours Mutuels: Miedzyrzec-Podlaski et ses Environs) . Sepia toned, with scalloped edges. Very good condition. Price for both photos. (HOLO2-55-18).
Paper Wrappers with later boards. 12mo. XVI, 278, [3] pages. 1st edition. In German. Title translates to English as, Micha: Newly Translated and Explained. Accompanied with 5 Digressions. Hartmann (1774-1838) was a German author focusing primarily on the Old Testament and of Oriental languages. (EJ) OCLC lists 19 copies worldwide. Rebound in later, stiff boards. Brief notes from previous owner on inside of covers. Internal pages are lightly soiled with some foxing but all text is clear. Good+ condition. (HOLO2-60-5)
Softcover, 15 pages, portraits, 8vo, 21 cm. Sympathetic look at the complicated Levin, who some say was "obsessed" with Anne Frank. SUBJECT (S) : Jewish authors -- United States -- Biography. Levin, Meyer, 1905-1981. Cover title. OCLC lists 6 copies worldwide. Articles added. Near fine condition. (Holo2-19-82)
10032Noah In-8, broché, couverture souple unie élégante, 237 pages pour cet ensemble couché sur un vergé de remarquable fraîcheur.
2018190593Paris Fayard Paris, Éditions Fayard, 2018. Collection Fayard Histoire. In-8 broché de 287 pages. Photographies en versos de la couverture. Très bon état
1st edition of author's first book. Original Cloth in dust jacket, 62 pages. In Yiddish with English on rear of dust jacket. Sherit ha'pletah title. OCLC lists only 2 copies worldwide (Royal Danish Library, Brown) . Quite probably, this copy is far better than either of those two. Toning, Very Good Condition in Good+ Jacket. Very attractive. (HOLO2-128-2A)
Softbound. 8vo. 182, [4] pages. 22 cm. First Belorussian edition. Title translates as: The Minsk ghetto; Soviet-Jewish partisans against the Nazis. In Belorussian, With four pages of black and white photographic plates. Hersh Smolar (19051993) , was a Polish and Soviet Yiddish writer and editor. Born to a poor family in the town of Zambrów, Poland, Hersh Smolar (also rendered Smolyar) attended primary school until the age of 11, when he began working, and soon became involved in revolutionary activities. He was a leader of the local branch of the Jewish Socialist Youth Association from 1918 to 1920. During the 1920 PolishSoviet War, Smolar belonged to a revolutionary committee that had formed in Zambrów when the Red Army had occupied the town. Smolar fled to Soviet Russia in 1921, initially living in Kiev. He moved to Moscow two years later, after being admitted to the Yiddish department at the Communist University for the Peoples of the West (known in Yiddish as Mayrevke) , one of the universities run by the Comintern. Forced to interrupt his studies the next year, Smolar was dispatched to Kharkiv (then the Ukrainian capital) , where he was given the task of reinforcing the local Yiddish-speaking Communist cadre. He helped to edit the newspaper Yunge gvardye (Young Guard) , which targeted Yiddish-speaking youth. He returned to Moscow in 1926 and continued his studies at the Communist University, coediting its Yiddish journal Mayrevnik (Student of the Mayrevke) . Smolar served as a Comintern agent in Poland from 1928 to 1939; twice arrested, he spent six years in prison. After World War II began, he fled to Bialystok (then in Soviet-occupied territory) , where he gained prominence among refugee Polish Yiddish writers and as editor of the Communist newspaper Byalistoker shtern (Bialystok Star) . Smolar did not manage to evacuate when Germany attacked the Soviet Union in 1941. A leading member of the resistance in the Minsk ghetto, he became commissar of a partisan group operating in Belorussian forests. His wartime memoirs, Fun Minsker geto (From the Minsk Ghetto) , were published by Emes in Moscow in 1946. Smolar and his wife, Walentyna Najdus, subsequently returned to Poland, where he held key positions in the Jewish community as chair of the Jewish Cultural Alliance and editor of the Yiddish newspaper Folks-shtime. He published a collection of partisan stories, Yidn on gele lates (Jews without Yellow Patches; 1948) , and the play A posheter zelner (An Ordinary Soldier; 1952) . His Folks-shtime editorial Undzer veytik un undzer treyst (Our Pain and Our Comfort; 4 April 1956) , which was reprinted all over the world, became the first semiofficial source of information on the liquidation of Soviet Yiddish cultural institutions and their leading personalities between 1948 and 1952. Indeed, this editorial triggered a radical decline in the number of Yiddish-language organizations that supported the Soviet Union. As a result of the 1968 anti-Jewish campaign and the involvement of his sons (Aleksander [1940 ] and Eugeniusz) in dissident student circles, Smolar acknowledged that his life in Poland had become untenable. He left for Israel in 1971. (YIVO Encyclopedia) Subjects: Jews - Persecutions - Belarus - Minsk. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Belarus - Minsk - Personal narratives. World War, 1939-1945 - Jewish resistance - Belarus - Minsk. Smolar, Hersh, (1905-1993) . Light shelf wear to covers, with lightly bumped lower back corner on cover. Very clean. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-92-2)
199535180Berlin ; Frankfurt am Main : Ullstein, 1995. 160 S. Ill., Kt. 8°. Geb. in ill. orig. engl. Broschur.
1944144893(Bern), Schweiz(erischen) Zentralstelle für Flüchtlingshilfe, (1944). 32 S., mit zahlreichen Abbildungen nach Zeichnungen von Otto Baumberger im Text sowie einer Illustration nach Aldo Patocchi auf dem Umschlagrückseite. Or.kt., kl.8°. Von 20 privaten schweizerischen Hilfswerken, die sich in der "Schweizerischen Zentralstelle füre Flüchtlingshilfe" zusammengeschlossen hatten, herausgegebene Textsammlung mit Berichten von Flüchtlingen, die während des Dritten Reichs, respektive des Zweiten Weltkriegs in der Schweiz Zuflucht suchten. Neben anonymen Berichten der verschiedenen Hilfswerke, als Hauptbeitrag von Hans Zbinden, "Die grosse Heimatlosigkeit". Die Zentralstelle war politisch und konfessionell neutral und vertrat die verschiedenen, teils politischen, teils religiösen Hilfswerke gegenüber den Behörden und in der Öffentlichkeit. Obschon in grosser Auflage verteilt, heute selten. Softcover Minim angestaubt.
Publishers cloth. 8vo. 171, [1] pages. 21 cm. First edition. In Norwegian. Title translates as: People among the people: a book on anti-Semitism and xenophobia. Written by Leo Eitinger (1912 - 1996) , Holocaust survivor, Norwegian psychiatrist, and Human Rights advocate. He devoted a long period studying late-onset psychological trauma amongst Holocaust survivors, wherein Holocaust survivors like Paul Celan, Primo Levi and many others committed suicide due to holocaust trauma, several decades after the experience, towards late adulthood. Leo Eitinger was born in Lomnice, Moravia, at that time a town in the Austrian-Hungarian empire; currently the capital of Jihomoravský kraj and belonging to the Czech Republic. He studied medicine at the Masaryk University of Brno, graduated in 1937, and was drafted as an officer into the Czech Air Force. In 1939 he fled Nazi persecution of Jews and came to Norway as a refugee with the help of Nansenhjelpen. Upon arriving in Norway, he arranged for Jewish children to escape from Czechoslovakia to settle in the Jewish orphanage in Oslo. He was given permission to work as a resident in psychiatry in Norway in Bodø, but the permission was revoked by the Nazis after they invaded the country in 1940. He stayed underground from January 1941 until he was arrested in March 1942. He was imprisoned in various places throughout Norway and was deported on the ship Gotenland on February 24, 1943, arriving by train via Berlin at the concentration camp at Auschwitz (where the number 105268 was tattoed on his arm) and was later moved to Buchenwald. Of the 762 Jews deported from Norway to German concentration camps, only 23 survived - Leo Eitinger was one of them. After returning to Norway he specialised in psychiatry. In 1966 Leo Eitinger was appointed professor of psychiatry at the University of Oslo and became Head of the University Psychiatric Clinic. After the war Leo Eitinger allocated all his time and efforts to the study of human suffering with emphasis on clinical psychiatry, in particular victimology and disaster psychiatry. He conducted several landmark studies about the long-term psychological and physical effects of extreme stress and also about being a refugee. Some of the major works have been published; e. G. Concentration camp survivors in Norway and Israel (1964) ; Mortality and morbidity after extreme stress (1973) ; Strangers in the world (1981) (University of Oslo description) Subjects: Antisemitism -- History. Race Relations. Jews. Popular Works [PT]. Sociology. OCLC lists 16 copies. Pages lightly aged, contain consistent penciled marks throughout, and penciled notes on endpages. Otherwise fresh. Good condition in good jacket. (HOLO2-104-4)
Original Softcover. 8vo. 82 pages. Illus. 20 cm. In the original Danish. First edition. First person account of Melanie Oppenhejm who, after helping to save many Jewish childrens lives by helping them flee to Denmark, was captured by Nazi forces and sent to Theresienstadt. Title translates to English as, Man Trap: On Life in the Concentration Camp Theresienstadt. SUBJECT (S) : Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Denmark -- Personal narratives. Jews -- Denmark -- Biography. Named Person: Oppenhejm, Mélanie. Named Corp: Theresienstadt (Concentration camp) . Geographic: Denmark -- Ethnic relations. OCLC lists ten copies worldwide. Some wear to cover. Internal pages are nice and clean; binding is tight. Very good condition. (HOLO2-77-57)
197991038ABKöln, 1979. 8°. 47 S. Original-Karton. (=DLF; 25/79).