3 333 résultats
Original Publisher's Cloth. 8vo. xvii, 528 pages. In Yiddish with added English Table of Contents, Summaries and Conclusion. Fold out maps. First edition. SUBJECT (S) : Jews Poland Lódz; Holocaust, Jewish (1933-1945) Poland Lódz; Jewish ghettos Poland Lódz. SERIES: Yad va-shem-Yivo monograph seriesm [Yad Washem-YIVO Monograph Series] No. 1. OCLC lists 26 copies worldwide. Bumped corners, very good condition. (HOLO2-7-2)
Single sided flyer. [1] page. 20 x 16 cm. Enlarged facsimile reproduction of a Western Union telegram, addressed to Hon Dennis J Mahon 205 West 89 St. The contents of the telegram are as follows: Dear Denny stop I bitterly resent unfair political use by Sol Tekulsky of strictly Jewish new year greeting telegram stop I repudiate these tactics. Am in New York campaigning for you stop. Am with you one hundred percent stop I urge all my friends to support you by voting group eight today = Sol Bloom. Apparently a political flyer aimed at getting American Jews to support Mahon and reject Tekulsky. Subjects: American politics. New York politics. Controversy. Light ageing, otherwise fresh and clean. Good condition. (LB-5-45) Xx
1st Edition. Issue is matted and framed. 16 x 10 ½ Inches. Le Petit Journal was a conservative daily Parisian newspaper founded by Moïse Polydore Millaud; published from 1863 to 1944. Together with Le Petit Parisien, Le Matin, and Le Journal, it was one of the four major French dailies. In 1890, during the Boulangiste crisis, its circulation first reached one million copies. Five years later, it had a circulation of two million copies, making it the world's largest newspaper (Wikipedia, 2017) . Illustrated supplement to the French magazine, Le Petit Journal, first published in 1860 by Moïse Maillaud, with supplements, from 1890-1920. The color cover illustration by Henri Meyer (1844-1899) is captioned: "Campement D'Emigrants Juifs A La Gare De Lyon, " and depicts chiefly Eastern European Jews in colorful costumes camped in the streets outside the Gare de Lyon train station in Paris, waiting to Emigrate to America. The US Holocaust Museum includes this very issue in their Katz Ehrenthal Collection of antisemitic artifacts and visual materials. SUBJECT(S) : Paris (France) -- Newspapers. Emigration and immigration--France--History--19th century. Small tear in lower left corner. Some toning. Not examined out of frame. Very Good- condition. (PAINT-1-4)
1st edition. Original Boards, 4to. Xiv, 229 pages. 29 cm. First Edition. Inscribed by author in Hebrew on front endpaper. English interspersed with Hebrew and other exotic alphabets. The Son of a Shinto priest and descendant from a long line of Shinto priests, the author Abram Kotsuji (1899-1973) was a Japanese Hebraist and ardent philo-Semite who founded the Institute of Biblical Research at the University of Tokyo. The present work is his Phd dissertation. During the Holocaust years Kotsuji greatly assisted the hundreds of rabbis and yeshiva students from Eastern Europe (including the entire Mir Yeshiva) who escaped before the German onslaught to Kobe, Japan and later to Japanese-occupied Shanghai. In 1959 Kotsuji formally converted to Judaism in Jerusalem. Internally some age toning but very clean.Very Good Condition. (HOLO-114-17a)
Small 8vo; 134 pages; 8vo. 134 pages. 21 cm. In the original Dutch with beautifully illustrated cover. Memoir of life in Neuengamme Concentration Camp near Hamburg from 1941-43.van de Poel was prisoner #5919. Wiener Library (Wolff) #1: 1797. Pages browning. Overall Very Good Condition. (HOLO2-53-7).
Original Wraps. 8vo. 31 pages. 21 cm. First edition. In French. On cover: Temoignages de deportes politiques en Allemagne. 'Testimonies of political deportees in Germany'. 'Extermination Camps: Documents, Testimony, Photographs of the Camps of the deported in Germany. ' Contains 8 pages of photographs, depicting deportations, ovens, those murdered. Testimonies describe the deportations of Jews and resistance members to Drancy and on to Auschwitz. Subjects: Concentration camps - Germany. World War, 1939-1945 - Atrocities. Atrocities. Concentration camps. World War (1939-1945) . Wraps torn at edges and soiled; bumped edges, otherwise fresh and clean. Good condition. (HOLO2-124-9)
Original Publisher's Boards. 8vo. 48 pages. 24 cm. First edition. Early photographic expose of Nazism in Germany, in French, with parallel German and English translations. Mostly illustrated (pgs 6-47) , containing photographs and the printed speeches of Nazi leaders. Photographs of childhood, training of youth, propaganda, S. A. , S. S. , police in the Third Reich, which demonstrate that the everyday tutelage of the people, no matter of what age, constitute the terror of the third Reich (p. 5) . The world is threatened by the brown hate! ! (p. 5) . Dt. Exilarchiv 4106; Sternfeld/Tiedemann 350. Subjects: National socialism. Political science. 1933 - 1945 Germany - Politics and government - 1933-1945. OCLC lists 29 copies. Light wear to spine, otherwise Very good condition. (HOLO2-125-23) xx
Postage stamps from the Nazi occupation of Poland. Four stamps in denomination of 2, 4, 6 and 10 zloty. Each stamp displays a structure or city scene above the inscription Deutsches Reich Generalgouvernement. Perforation: 13-3/4, 14 -1/4. MichNr. 113 116. OCLC lists no copies. Unused, no gum; very good condition. Interesting display item. (HOLO2-55-12)
1st edition. Original Orange Paper Wrappers, 8vo, 50 pages + 8 pages of photo plates of atrocities + maps. Very slight discoloration along top edge, otherwise Very Good Condition. (SPEC-35-13)
(FT) Publishers cloth. 8vo. 229 pages. 23 cm. First edition. In Yiddish. Published by the South African Yiddish Cultural Federation. Authors first book. This volume contains detailed stories and anecdotes from the authors early years in the Shtetl of Tykocin, with vivid descriptions of his fathers court and the personages who came there, as well as attending synagogue and Yeshiva, in the period just before and during the first world war. The book is commemorated to those loved ones of the author who perished in the holocaust. Inscribed by author on title page. Subjects: Jews - Poland - Tykocin. Tykocin (Poland) - Ethnic relations. OCLC lists 21 copies worldwide. Dustjacket lightly aged and soiled. Endpages and outer edges soiled. Internally clean and fresh. Good condition. (HOLO2-95-47)
1st edition. Very Good Condition; 16mo; 42 pages; 14 cm. Rabinovich was editor of the Army newspaper " Forward to teh West" during WW II and is a contributor to Sovietish Heimland. A historical as well as contemporary explanation of Jewish life in the USSR, and how the national question was solved. RUS-11
1st Edition. Original Boards with Original White Dust Jacket. 8vo. 214 pages ; 25 cm. In Hungarian with some Hebrew. Memorial book to the Jewish communities of Vas County in Hungary, which includes name registers of those who perished in the Holocaust from the following towns: Szombathely (p. 129-147) , Pósfa (p. 148) , Hegyfalu (p. 148) , Ikervár (p. 148) , Uraiujfalu (p. 149) , Pórládony [Nemesládony] (p. 149) , Rábakovácsi [Meggyeskovácsi] (p. 149) , Nagysitke [Sitke] (p. 149) , Porpác (p. 149) , Bejcgyertyán [Bejcgyertyános] (p. 149) , Kémenyegerszeg [Sömjénmihályfa] (p. 149) , Rum (p. 149) , Felsöpaty [Rábapaty] and Szeleste (p. 149) , Káld (p. 149) , Rábahidvég (p. 149) , Nyögér (p. 149) , Gérce (p. 149) , Hosszufalu [Vashosszúfalu] (p. 150) , Egyházas Hetye [Egyhúzashetye] (p. 150-153) , Sárvár [and vicinity] (p. 154) , Jánosháza (p. 154-156) , Káptalanfa (p. 157) , Nagysimonyi (p. 157) , Körmend [and vicinity] (p. 157) , Celldömölk (p. 159-161) , Szentgotthárd (p. 162) , Alsóság (p. 163) , Sömjénmihályfa [Kemenessömjén] (p. 164) , Vasvar [and vicinity] (p. 164-165) , Koszeg (p. 166) , Enyingi [Enying] (p. 167) , and a section of additional names (p. 167) ; also includes lists of 1928 Szombathely Orthodox Community Leaders and Szombathely Taxpayers [which also notes occcupations] (p. 86) . OCLC lists 14 copies worldwide. A few names underlined. Dust jacket has a few small tears. Very good condition. (HOLO2-130-30)
1st edition. Folio. Newspaper. Illustrated throughout. Includes many advertisements and numerous personal family announcements. Following the Kristallnacht pogroms of November 1938, Jewish life in Germany and Czechoslovakia was even further curtailed and all remaining Jewish newspapers were shut down by the government. In their place, the Nazi Party ordered the creation of a single, new Jewish newspaper, "Das Jüdische Nachrichtenblatt, " that would be directly under Gestapo control. It was published concurrently in Berlin, Vienna and Prague and was occupied to a large extent with announcing the ever-increasing number of anti-Semitic discriminations, orders and exclusions imposed by the Reich government. Over the course of its history, the editors of the Jüdische Nachrichtenblatt were Leo Kreindler (1938-42) and Willi Pless (1942-43) . The Berlin edition ran from the 23rd November, 1938 until the final issue of 4th June 1943. The Prague edition continued until 1945. In a ghoulish twist of Nazi irony, Gentiles were forbidden from reading the Jüdische Nachrichtenblatt yet the newspaper's targeted readership, the Jews, were literally hounded to their deaths by the very authorities who presided over the newspaper's ownership! See Reiner Burger, Von Goebbels Gnaden: "Jüdisches Nachrichtenblatt" 1938-1943 (2001) . A mixed collection of 102 issues from Berlin and Prague sold at auction in 2015 for 9225.00 USD. These issues were at one point bound, but the binding was at some point removed. The newsprint is brown and quite fragile, with edgwear and old dampstains, but there is generally little text loss, except to a few letters on the lower outer margins of the final 10 issues. Now housed in an acid-free sleeved portfolio, with each issue in a separate clear sleeve for easy protected viewing. Fair condition, but very rare, very important, and very powerful. (kh-5-47)
Original Orange printed paper wrappers, showing distinctive elements of both modern and traditional typeface. 8vo, 24 pages, 21 cm. In Yiddish. Rare 1940 Riga edition of the 1936 Soviet constitution, certainly one of the last Yiddish publications in Latvia; OCLC-Worldcat literally lists not a single Yiddish publication from Riga 1941-1987. Immediately after the establishment of German authority [in Latvia] in the beginning of July 1941, the elimination of the Jewish and Roma population began, with major mass killings taking place at Rumbula and elsewhere. The killings were committed by the Einsatzgruppe A, and the Wehrmacht. Latvian collaborators, including the 5001, 500 members of the Arajs Commando (which alone killed around 26, 000 Jews]) and other Latvian members of the SD, were also involved. 30, 000 Jews were shot in the autumn of 1941 with most of the remaining Jewish people being rounded up and put into ghettos. In November and December 1941 the Riga Ghetto became crowded and to make room for the imminent arrival of German Jews, who were being shipped out of the country, all the remaining 30, 000 Jews in Riga were taken from the ghetto to the nearby Rumbula Forest and shot (Wikipedia, 2016) . SUBJECT(S) : Soviet Union. Konstitutsiia (1936) -- Politics and government. OCLC lists only 1 copy anywhere (Harvard) . Only the lightest wear to wrappers, an amazingly well-preseverd copy of this exceedingly rare Yiddish imprint. (yid-26-6)
1st edition, original wrappers, 8vo. 64 pages, portraits throughout. In Yiddish with English title page. Book 3 part 1 of History of the Jews in Bialystok. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Poland -- Bialystok. OCLC: 970935047, OCLC lists 17 copies worldwide. Staples rusted, light wear on spine, Very Good Condition overall. (YIZ-18-12)
1st edition. Original cloth. 4to, x + 205 (English) + 396 (Yiddish) + v pages. Illustartions throughout. Bialystok's strength rests only in its extraordinary features but in its normal characteristics as well. The fifty thousand living there are doing reasonably well financially and also spiritually, like other Jews in Poland. Still, Bialystok was the first, at the end of the German occupation after World War I, to abolish its autocratic community leadership, replacing it with an exemplary democratic system that will do down in history. The Hebraist movement in Bialystok was only a part of the diffuse cultural advance in all of Poland. But when Bialystok established its Hebrew Gymnasium (high school) it was the rank and file Jews, not the radical Hebraists, who erected it. The tall, sturdy building evoked the admiration of the local community as well as of visitors from near and far, especially since it could accommodate seven hundred students. The Yiddish influence in Bialystok was also only a part of the Yiddish movement in all of Poland and in the entire world. But with the exception of Wilno, no other Jewish town besides Bialystok was able to fashion such an intricate Yiddish school network, let alone a high school, despite difficult circumstances. The orphan problem became one of the most critical social issues in Bialystok after World War I. Surely no other city had someone like Mrs. Rabinowicz, who, when the situation became next to hopeless, was the only leader in all of Poland who went to America to obtain the necessary assistance for these unfortunate children. It is possible to mention hundreds of other examples of community and private initiatives in Bialystok which clearly depict its special atmosphere of effervescing creativity a contagion transmitted from one to another compelling everyone to outdo his neighbour. Such is the breeding ground for important accomplishments. (Pejsach Kaplan, a prominent Bialystoker writer and social activist) SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Poland -- Bialystok. World War, 1939-1945 -- Jews. Memorial books (Holocaust) . Jewish (1939-1945) Ethnic relations. OCLC: 19303249. Ex library with usual marks, inscription on front end page by Max Ranter, Honorary Chairman of the Book Committee. Very Good Condition Overall (YIZ-16-2A)xx
1st edition. Original cloth with dust jacket. 4to, x+ 205 (English) + 396 (Yiddish) + v pages. Illustrations throughout. Bialystok's strength rests only in its extraordinary features but in its normal characteristics as well. The fifty thousand living there are doing reasonably well financially and also spiritually, like other Jews in Poland. Still, Bialystok was the first, at the end of the German occupation after World War I, to abolish its autocratic community leadership, replacing it with an exemplary democratic system that will do down in history. The Hebraist movement in Bialystok was only a part of the diffuse cultural advance in all of Poland. But when Bialystok established its Hebrew Gymnasium (high school) it was the rank and file Jews, not the radical Hebraists, who erected it. The tall, sturdy building evoked the admiration of the local community as well as of visitors from near and far, especially since it could accommodate seven hundred students. The Yiddish influence in Bialystok was also only a part of the Yiddish movement in all of Poland and in the entire world. But with the exception of Wilno, no other Jewish town besides Bialystok was able to fashion such an intricate Yiddish school network, let alone a high school, despite difficult circumstances. The orphan problem became one of the most critical social issues in Bialystok after World War I. Surely no other city had someone like Mrs. Rabinowicz, who, when the situation became next to hopeless, was the only leader in all of Poland who went to America to obtain the necessary assistance for these unfortunate children. It is possible to mention hundreds of other examples of community and private initiatives in Bialystok which clearly depict its special atmosphere of effervescing creativity a contagion transmitted from one to another compelling everyone to outdo his neighbour. Such is the breeding ground for important accomplishments. (Pejsach Kaplan, a prominent Bialystoker writer and social activist) SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Poland -- Bialystok. World War, 1939-1945 -- Jews. Memorial books (Holocaust) . Jewish (1939-1945) Ethnic relations. OCLC: 19303249. Dust jacket has light wear on edges and corners, else near perfect condition. Very Good Condition overall. (YIZ-16-2B)xx
1st edition, original cloth, 4to, xix+ 288+ (2) pages. Illustrations throughout. Yiddish, with English introduction. There once was a town of Jewish tailors Brzezin. From early dawn until late at night one could hear the music of the Singer sewing machines. It was the music of hard work, of intense anxiety, of a hard life, but also of noisy youth, semi-intellectuals, observant Jews, Hasidim who lived and had aspirations in the small Jewish town Brzezin. The Nazi savages extinguished this life forever, transformed it into ashes. Only a few Jews from the tailoring town Brzezin, by some miracle, remain, scattered over the entire world, individuals who were witnesses to the German cannibalism. May these words, frail in print, but inscribed not with ink but with blood, be a modest contribution to the matseve [gravestone] for my native town, Brzezin. Brzezin was one of the oldest and most popular Jewish communities in Poland. When this community was established, it carried the name Krakowek [Little Krakow]. At that time, the community extended from the Strykower highway to beyond the Jewish besoylem [cemetery] to the surrounding hills. The Polish noblewoman, Anna Lasocka, had brought the first weavers from afar into this community. Then the community developed even further and began to broaden its borders. At that time, the town already carried the name Brzezin. Jewish tailors came to Brzezin from many places, and after several generations, the town developed its own type of tailoring industry, by which it was known all over the world. A cottage industry was the main occupation here. As early as 1772, Brzezin was famous for its mass production in tailoring. Until 1914 the great Czarist Russia was flooded with the inexpensive products of Brzeziner tailors. In the years between the two world wars, the export of Brzezin industry was spread over many lands in Europe and into other parts of the world. In this, the great Jewish magaziners [owners of clothing enterprises] exporters such as Frankensztejn, Tuszynski, Sulkowicz, and others played a great role. The Jews in Brzezin did not only work, they also participated actively in the socio-political and cultural life of the town, had their representatives on the town council in town hall, and had their religious and secular educational, cultural, and social organizations. Materially, it was a life of Jewish poverty, but spiritually, socially, and culturally, it was rich. (translated from book) SUBJECT(S) : Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Poland -- Brzeziny (Lo´dz´) ; Jews. OCLC: 19306453. Light wear on cover, Good Condition Overall. (YIZ-16-6)
1st Edition. Original boards. 8vo. 579 pages ; 23cm. In Italian. Title translates into English as, Religious Research. Ernesto Buonaiuti (18811946) was an Italian historian, philosopher of religion, Catholic priest and anti-fascist. He lost his chair at the University of Rome owing to his opposition to the Fascists. As a scholar in History of Christianity and religious philosophy he was one of the most important exponents of the modernist current . He directed the magazine Ricerche religiose (Religious Researches) . Those magazines were soon banned by the church and placed on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum, the index of publications to be considered as forbidden to Catholic readers. (Wikipedia, 2016) OCLC lists 24 copies worldwide. Ex-library with usual markings. Pages browning and some pages slightly stained. In about good condition. (IT-9-8)
1st Edition. Original boards. 8vo. 568 pages ; 23cm. In Italian. Title translates into English as, Religious Researches. Ernesto Buonaiuti (18811946) was an Italian historian, philosopher of religion, Catholic priest and anti-fascist. He lost his chair at the University of Rome owing to his opposition to the Fascists. As a scholar in History of Christianity and religious philosophy he was one of the most important exponents of the modernist current . He directed the magazine Ricerche religiose (Religious Researches) . Those magazines were soon banned by the church and placed on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum, the index of publications to be considered as forbidden to Catholic readers. (Wikipedia, 2016) The first article in this volume is a scholarly work by Buonaiuti on reform movements with a discussion on Louis Israel Newman, the prominent American Reform Rabbi, and the influence of Jewish reform movements on Christian reform movements. OCLC lists 23 copies worldwide. Ex-library with usual markings. Back pages browning and some pages slightly stained. In about good condition. (IT-9-9)
1st edition, original cloth, 4to. Viii + 36 + iv pages, illustrations throughout. In Yiddish. The beginning of the Second World War is simultaneously the beginning of suffering, pain, death, martyrdom and heroism of the Jews of Czestochowa. In the early morning hours of Friday, the first of September, 1939, Nazi Germany attacked Poland. And already on the third day, at nine o'clock in the morning on Sunday, the third of September, the Nazi motorized units began to penetrate Czestochowa and, one day later, there began the first slaughter which received the name Bloody Monday. Monday, the fourth of September, under the false accusation that Jews had shot at Germans, a horrible pogrom took place that lasted three days. The first victim was Naftali Tenenboym, owner of a button factory at 7 Pilsudskego Street. The second victim was Luzer Prafart, who was known under the nickname Po Pientsh ([Polish for] five each) . The third, Katz, a carpenter by occupation, was known as a leader in the artisans unions. Among the numerous victims in the three day pogrom was the son of the Rosh-Hayeshiva [Head of the Talmudic academy], Yakubovitsh. The first three days of Nazi rule over Czestochowa were marked by bloody murder and looting. Jewish economic life was completely paralyzed. Cultural, social, and political life, including the entire school system, was completely dissolved. Falling like hail, there were repressions and decrees aimed at psychologically choking Jewish life, the theft of Jewish property, the exploitation of the Jewish labor force for free, and the placing of Jewish life into a lawless situation. (translated from book, Jewishgen 2018) SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Poland -- Czestochowa. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . OCLC: 19303642. Ex library with usual marks, some wear on cover, some chipping on spine. Pages in Very Good Condition. (YIZ-18-3)
1st edition. Original cloth. 4to, 307 pages. Yiddish. The shtetl of Gliniany once played a large role in Polish history. A decree of the Polish kingdom is found in the archives of the Gliniany community. The decree announced that the city of Gliniany was to be referred to as the Royal Free City of Gliniany. The wordsKrolewstwo Wolny Miasto Gliniany are engraved on the seal of the city hall. Due to the privilege of appearing in the king's decree, the nobleman who owned the city no longer had the right to force residents of Gliniany to work for him as forced laborers. After the death of the Polish king, Casirmirz the Great, Polish senators traveled to Hungary and crowned King Ludwig of Hungary as king of Poland. The senators gave him the gift of the entirety of Galicia, which in those days was calledCherwony Rus [Red Russia], which was a part of Poland. When the issue became known in the kingdom of Poland, it caused tremendous dissatisfaction. In Gliniany a large meeting was held, which subsequently led to a political trial, because of the actions of the senators. Ludwig attended the trial together with a regiment of Hungarian hussars. The result of the trial was the beheading of seven Polish senators. In Polish history, the trial was known as The Tragedy of Gliniany. Many years ago there was a large district that covered a large territory. On one side there were fields and forests that extended all the way to the village of Khonochovka, near the city of Premyshlan. On the other side forests and fields stretched all the way to just south of Lemberg. Over time, the size of the territory that had belonged to the city declined, and in the 18th century the city of Gliniany, together with the neighboring gentile regions, included an area of approximately nine square miles. (translation from book) SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Ukraine, Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) , Ethnic relations. OCLC: 19305032, OCLC lists 30 copies. Ex- library with usual marks, dampstains, some pages wavy, but Good solid Condition Overall. (YIZ-16-7A)
8vo. 468 pages. With 70 pages of photographs. In Yiddish with forward in English. SUBJECT (S) : Jews persecutions Lithuania; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Lithuania personal narratives; Oshry, Efriom, b. 1915; Lithuania ethnic relations. A scarce Yizkor title, very well illustrated.Very Good condition. (YIZ-1-1A) xx
1st edition, original cloth, 4to. X + 377 pages, illustrations throughout. In Hebrew. English title: Lomza- In Memory of the Jewish Community. After the end of World War I, the ethnic structure changed significantly. After Orthodox Russians and German Protestants had left Lomza, it became a city of two religions, being inhabited by Catholic Poles and Jews. After regaining independence, Lomza reached the status of a county town in Bialystok Province (from 1939 on in Warsaw Province) . It was also the local centre of trade, crafts and industry, and also the seat of garrison at the same time. A few high school operated there, and what is more, the local press in Polish and Yiddish language was published. In 1925, Pope Pius XI made Lomza the capital of Lomza Diocese. After the outbreak of World War II, on 7 September 1939, Lomza was destroyed as a result of bombing. Three days later Germans entered the city. On 28 September 1939, the city was handed over to Red Army units. Lomza was incorporated into the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic. The occupiers transported to Siberia. When the war between the Germans and the Soviets began, on 22 June 1941, Lomza was bombarded by German Luftwaffe, while on 24 June occupied by Wehrmacht. In July, the city and the whole land of Bialystok were subordinated to the Gauleiter of East Prussia. A ghetto was formed in August. Jewish inhabitants and refugees from other areas were relocated there. In September 1941 about 31, 000 Jews from the ghetto were sent before a firing squad; most of those who remained were killed in Treblinka and Auschwitz-Birkenau. During the war (fights on the line of the River Narew) , in winter 1944/1945, about 70 per cent of Lomza's buildings were destroyed. The reconstructed city was the centre of county in Bialystok Province to 1975, and next it was the capital of Lomza Province, existing to 1998, as a result of an administrative reform in 1975. In 2013, the city had a status of the centre of Lomza County and a city with county rights (so-called municipal county) . (sztelt.org 2018) SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Poland -- Lomz? A -- History. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Poland -- Lomz? A. Ethnic relations. OCLC: 19162885. Ex library with usual marks, wear on cover and spine, pages are separating from binding slightly in some parts, Good Condition Overall. (YIZ-18-2)
Very Good Condition No Jacket; 8vo; 261 +98 pages; In Yiddish, Hebrew, & English. Map endpapers, of the town. Very good condition. (YIZ-1-10A) xx