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1st edition. Original (?) blue boards, 4to [Life Magazine Size], 188 (Yiddish) + 39 (English) pages. In Yiddish and English. Annual Yearbook of the American Federation for Polish Jews, started in 1932-33, as Hitler ascended to power in Germany. Title varies based on the year: Polish Jews; Polish Jew; Poilisher Yid; Poylishe Idn. English essays include: Abraham Goldberg In Memoriam; Abraham Goldberg (by Louis Lipsky); Message to the Delegates of the 34th Convention (by Benjamin Winter); Looking Ahead (by B.J. Weinberg); Jewish Cultural-Aesthetic Life in the Independent Poland (byJakob Apenszlak); Polish Jews in War and Peace (byDr. Joseph Tenenbaum); Polish Jewish Artists (by Alfred Werner); Reactionary Groups in Poland (by Alexander Z. Hafftka); Art and Art Appreciation (by Rachel Wischnitzer-Bernstein); Federation Activities (by M.B.); & Women's Division. The American Federation for Polish Jews, formerly known as the Federation of Polish Jews in America, was founded in 1908 as the Federation of Russian-Polish Hebrews, primarily to help Polish landslayt in New York in any possible way" and to strengthen the activities of landsmanshaftn in the city. It established the Beth David Hospital to aid members and newly arrived immigrants around 1912 and contributed to the People's Relief Committee in 1919. The Federation sent a delegate to the Versailles Peace Conference in 1919. In 1920, the organiztion dropped the word "Russian" from its name and in 1926, changed the word "Hebrews" to "Jews". The Organization established the related World Federation of Polish Jews in 1935 for relief and economic assistance for Jews in Poland. The women's division, Ezra, was organized in 1931. The Federation cooperated with the Association of Jewish Refugees and Immigrants from Poland in publishing The Black Book of Polish Jewry in 1943. In the mid-1940s, they also coordinated relief activities of New York Polish landsmanshaftn on behalf of their home towns and landslayt, going on, in the 1950s, to campaign actively against antisemitism and racial discrimination. Leaders included Dr. Joseph Tenenbaum, Zelig Tygel, and Benjamin Winter (YIVO). SUBJECT(S): Jews -- United States -- Periodicals. -- Poland. -- Europe. Juifs -- E´tats-Unis -- Pe´riodiques. -- Pologne -- OCLC: 145390394. Stains to spine Very Good Condition (AMR-65-4B-ELx)
1st edition. Original printed boards. 8vo, 62 pages. Commemorating prominent French-speaking rabbis and ministers who were murdered in the Holocaust. Introductions by Chief Rabbi Yeshayahu Schwartz and Leon Meiss, chairman of the Consistoire Central of the Jews of France. Very Good Condition. An Outstanding copy. (KH-5-53)
1st edition. Original printed paper wrappers. 8vo; 314 pages; In Polish. Robinson & Friedman # 2054. Bulletin of the Central Commission for the Investigation of German Crimes in Poland. Includes 2 fold-out plates. SUBJECT(S): World War, 1939-1945 -- Atrocities -- Periodicals. Nazi concentration camps -- Poland -- War criminals. International criminal law. OCLC: 2788580. Some wear and toning to wrappers, with silver dollar sized piece missing at top of spine and rear wrapper, internally very clean text and images and bright white paper, Very Good Condition thus. (-ECC
1st edition. Original Wraps. 8vo. 31 pages. 22 cm. First edition. "Reprinted by courtesy of The Conference on Jewish relations. " Cover title reads April, 1936, reprinted by courtesy of The Conference on Jewish Relations. An important mid-1930s report from Abraham G Duker on the oppression of Polish Jews in the interwar period (following Hitlers rise to power but before the German invasion of Poland) , with detailed sociological and statistical materials on educational, economic and political facets to the Jewish community, and the changes undergone in an increasingly anti-semitic Polish state; with introductory statement from Salo W. Baron and Morris R. Cohen concerning pogroms in Poland and comparison of the viciousness of Polish Antisemitic parties to that of Nazi Germany. The author of the report Abraham Gordon Duker (19071987) , was born in Rypin, Poland, went to the U. S. In 1923. He served on the library staff at the Jewish Theological Seminary (192733) and was research librarian at the Graduate School of Jewish Social Work (193438) . From 1938 to 1943 he was on the staff of the American Jewish Committee, serving inter alia as the editor of the Contemporary Jewish Record (193841) . He was also an editor of the Universal Jewish Encyclopedia (193943) , Reconstructionist, and Jewish Social Studies, a quarterly. Duker was president of the Chicago Spertus College of Judaica (195662) and from 1963 director of libraries and professor of history and social institutions at Yeshiva University. His works include education surveys, books, and articles in his main fields of interest, Polish-Jewish relations and American Jewish sociology. (EJ 2007) Subjects: Jews - Persecutions - Poland. Jews - Poland - Social conditions. Joden. Poland - Ethnic relations. "Distributed by... Jewish Nat'l Workers' Alliance" on cover, light sunning, Very Good condition. (HOLO2-104-12A)
Original Wrappers. 8vo. Pages. 26 cm. First edition. Four reports printed for public circulation. Reports are titled, Some Aspects of the Jewish Economic Problem, A Bibliography for Jewish Vocational Agencies, A Guide to General Vocational Services, and Patterns of Jewish Occupational Distribution in the United States and Canada. Note laid in to Report No. 2 reading, This printed edition of Some Aspects of the Jewish Economic Problem differs slightly from the mimeographed edition issued in 1939. Aside from minor revisions, there is new material in the section headed Conclusion on page 10. Most of the changes are based on reaction by readers of the earlier edition. Additional copies are available upon request. The Jewish Occupational Council established in 1939 in New York as a national advisory and coordinating agency for Jewish organizations and communities in the U. S. And Canada engaged in educational and vocational programs and job placement. (yivoarchives.org) The organization is now called the International Association of Jewish Vocational Services. Subjects: Occupations -- Choice -- Jews. Jews -- United States -- Charities. Employment agencies, bureaus, etc. -- Jews. Spines rebacked. Some shelf wear. Light library markings. Very good condition. (HOLO2-109-21)
Original illustrated wraps. 8vo. [16] pages. 23 cm. First edition. Front lithography by Kathe Kollwitz, 'They were the first' stanza by Yitshak Katzenelson; rear wrap list of 'recent foster parents' including numerous local branches of Fraternal Organizations, various Landsmanschaften branches, Arthur Syzk, etc. Illustrated throughout with photographs of Jewish orphans, with abridged descriptions of how they survived; includes a list of over 100 children currently being helped by foster parents through the Labor Zionist Committee for Relief and Rehabilitation; it appears that all of the children reside at the Labor Zionist Home for Orphaned Children in France; the brochure asks for payments of $300 per year, or 85 cents a day. Printed in red, black, and grey ink throughout. Very scarce. Subjects: Labor Zionist Committee for Relief and Rehabilitation, Inc. , Foster Parents Division. Jewish War Orphans Holocaust. Does not appear to be held by any library, none on OCLC. Pages previous cut at edge, previously glued back together by former owner, text in gutter affected on two pages; institutional stamp, otherwise clean and fresh. Good + condition. (HOLO2-121-2)
8vo; 76 pages; 23 cm. Probleme des Sozialismus # 5. Weiner Library (Wolff) # I: 1801. First printing of the world's first eyewitness account of Hitler's concentration camps. Early memoir & expose of Oranienburg Concentration Camp from which Seger escaped, fleeing to the US where he became editor of the NEUE VOLKS-ZEITUNG, the American voice of the SPD in exile (and of German-American Socialism in general) . He had earlier been the Secretary General of the German Peace Society and in 1933 had been elected to the Resichstag. In 1933 Seger was one of the first to be imprisoned by the Nazis. (HOLO2-119-3)
1st edition. Original stiff wrappers with 2 staples. 8vo, 13 leaves. Typescript mimeograph. The Attorney-General of the Government of Israel v. Malchiel Gruenwald, commonly known as the Kastner trial, was a libel case in Jerusalem, Israel. Hearings were held from 1 January to October 1954 in the District Court of Jerusalem before Judge Benjamin Halevi (19101996), who published his decision on 22 June 1955.[1]The defendant, Malchiel Gruenwald (18811958), a hotelier who lost 52 relatives in the Auschwitz concentration camp, had accused Rudolf Kastner (19061957), a Hungarian lawyer and journalist who became a civil servant in Israel in 1947, of collaborating with the Nazis in Hungary during the Holocaust. The allegations were made in a self-published newsletter, Letter to Friends in the Mizrachi, in August 1952. The Israeli government sued on Kastner's behalf, calling him as one of 59 witnesses. Gruenwald was represented by Shmuel Tamir, a former Irgun commander, who turned the case into one that examined the actions of the governing Zionist Mapai party during the Holocaust, and what had been done to help Europe's Jews. One of the key issues was whether Kastner, who in Hungary had helped to found the Budapest Aid and Rescue Committee, had in effect collaborated with Adolf Eichmann and Kurt Becher, two SS officers, in his efforts to secure safe passage from Budapest to Switzerland in July 1944 of 1,684 Jews, on what became known as the Kastner train. Gruenwald and Tamir accused Kastner of having failed to warn the Hungarian Jewish community that they were to be loaded onto trains and taken to the gas chambers in Auschwitz, in occupied Poland. They alleged that he had known about the gas chambers since at least the end of April 1944 when he had received a copy of the Vrba-Wetzler report but had neglected to inform the wider community that they were not being deported from Hungary to be resettled, as the Nazis had said. His motive, they said, was to safeguard the release of a smaller number, which included his family and friends. In failing to alert the wider community to the danger, they alleged that he had helped the SS avoid the spread of panic among the Jewish community, which would have slowed down the transports. The judge ruled in Gruenwald's favour, accusing Kastner of having sold his soul to the devil. Kastner was assassinated outside his home in Tel Aviv in March 1957 as a result of the decision and the subsequent publicity. (wikipedia) This booklet is against Kastner and how the Israeli Government handled it. They say, Had the Kastner case taken its natural course, had Kastner been tried on the strength of the prima facie evidence like any other citizen in such circumstances (and in execution of the law specially passed for that purpose) there would, of course be no need for any special public action. But the Government, in defiance of accepted democratic procedure and in disregard of the country, has thrown all its weight on the other side of the scales. This can only mean that there is more behind the Kastner trial than has so far been revealed, and that Kastner is the key to other mysteries that accompanied the greatest catastrophe in our modern history. (page 7-8) OCLC: 2056270, OCLC lists 4 copies worldwide (YU, YIVO, HUC, TAU) none at any non-Jewish institution. Tearing around staples on cover, repaired, cover is slightly creased and has a stain in the lower right corner. Very Good Condition Overall. Scarce.(HOLO2-144-29)
17938° (23 x 16 cm). 265 Seiten. Original-Halbleinenband mit farbig illustrierten Pappdeckeln und illustriertem Original-Schutzumschlag. Insgesamt gutes Exemplar mit Alterungsspuren. Ecken und Kanten etwas berieben. Papier altersbedingt gebräunt. Der seltene Schutzumschlag mit Randläsuren und Fehlstellen. Erste veröffentlichte Ausgabe. Originalausgabe in niederländische Sprache, entstanden unter dem unmittelbaren Eindruck der Lagerhaft. Exemplar aus dem Vorbesitz des Autors mit seinem handschriftlichen Eigentumsvermerk auf dem Vortitelblatt sowie alter Bibliotheksmarke "International Literatuur Bureau".
1944FRMA0620aBerlin, Zentralverlag der NSDAP Franz Eher Nachf. 1944. 68 S., OKart., itelbl. von Klammerheftung gerissen, papierbedingt gebräunt. Letzte Auflage der antifreimaurerischen Hetzschrift.
Paper Wraps. 8vo. 40 pages, xi. Published in exile by the heavily Jewish SPD, these monthly reports covered sociopolitical and economic conditions in Germany, and were harshly critical of the Nazi regime. CONTENTS: The Terror Against the Political Opposition in Germany, Terrorization of the Jews. OCLC lists 5 copies worldwide (Staats & Universitatsbibliothek Hamburg, Univ m Hannnover & TIB, Universitatsbibliothek Oldenburg Ibit, Bibliothek Des Herder-Instituts, Universitatsbibliothek Passau) . Internal pages are lightweight, tissue-like paper. Some chipping at edges and tears on corners of covers, but all text is clear. Good condition. Includes summary of issue laid in. (HOLO2-33-6)
Used Very Good Condition; Paper Wrappers, 8vo, 79 pages, chiefly illustrations. 31 cm. "Photo-record of Axis crime" Very Early (1945) publication of photos of the Holocaust and abuse of civilians-Concentration camps, destroyed villages, public executions, death, destruction, and mayhem. Particularly interesting because of its target population: the lay-out mimics a supermarket tabloid, suggesting an attempt to reach a more unsophisticated audience in its documentation of Nazi & Japanese Terror. Forewards by Prof. James Sheldon and former Ambassador to Germany James W. Gerard. SUBJECT(S): World War, 1939-1945 -- Atrocities -- Pictorial works. World War, 1939-1945 -- Pictorial works. OCLC lists 12 copies worldwide. Very Good+ Condition. An outstanding copy (holo2-139-21A)
1989192483-1Oxford, Pergamon Press 1989. 4°. XXV, XIII, IX, 3202 S. Original-Leinenband
21058° (18 x 13 cm). 172 (1) Seiten, 15 Tafeln mit Zeichnungen und fotografischen Abbildungen, ausgewählt vom französischen Ministère de l'Information. Unter den schockierenden Fotos wenig bekannte Aufnahmen. Farbig illustrierte Originalbroschur (signiert: C. Aditang ?). Sehr gut erhaltenes, sauberes Exemplar mit den zu erwartenden Alterungsspuren.
21328° (22 x 16 cm). 48 Seiten mit zahlreichen Zeichnungen, deren Anmut in schmerzlichem Kontrast zu der Brutalität des Dargestellen steht. Illustrierte Originalbroschur. Sehr gut erhaltenes Exemplar mit leichten Alterungsspuren. Titelblatt mit handschriftlicher Widmung der Illustratorin (oder ihrer gleichnamigen Tochter): With love + heart-felt thanks from Elsie. E. Maréchal.
21348° (17,5 x 12,5 cm). 190 (1) Seiten. Schön illustrierter Original-Leinenband. Handschriftlicher Vorbesitzervermerk auf dem fliegenden Vorsatz. Papier altersbedingt gebräunt. Sonst außerordentlich sauberes und gut erhaltenes Exemplar. Selten.
1947012038Jerusalem, Lychenheim & Sohn, 1947. 27 S. Orig.-Broschur. Der Jurist Manfred Herzfeld (1887-1968) lebte bis 1935 als Rechtsanwalt in Celle unter wirtschaftlich zunehmend schwierigeren Bedingungen, bevor er aufgrund eines Zwischenfalls mit der SA nach Jerusalem emigrierte. Dort schlug er sich mit seiner Familie mehr schlecht als recht als Versicherungskassierer durch, bevor er 1950 als Anwalt für die Jewish Restitution Successor Organization in Wiedergutmachungsfragen für Juden nach Deutschland zurückkehrte. Seinem als Privatdruck erschienenen Gruß an Deutschland liegt ein eigenhändiger Brief aus Jerusalem vom 7.3.1947 an die Redaktion des Mannheimer Morgen mit der Bitte um Besprechung bei: "Sie haben Millionen erschossen und vergast, / Sie haben - wilde Bestien - gebrandschatzt und gerast; / Sie haben ihre Opfer geschändet und gequält, / Sie haben Henkersknechte zu Führern sich erwählt. / ... / Nun winseln sie um Gnade, nun betteln sie um Brot, / Nun wollen sie Euch ködern mit ihrer großen Not, / Sie haben keine Regung des Herzens je gespürt - / Und Ihr seid durch ihr Flennen gewandelt und gerührt?" (Vergeltung, S. 7). Der Brief mit gelaufenem Kuvert und, ebenso wie das Titelblatt, mit kleiner Rostspur einer Büroklammer, sonst handelt es sich jedoch um ein schönes, gut erhaltenes Exemplar des seltenen Beispiels früher Holocaustliteratur mit allenfalls leichten Gebrauchsspuren.
1948007445München-Obermenzing, Hans von Weber, 1948. 75 S. Orig.-Broschur. Die Abbildungen zeigen Fotos des Lagers, die beiden Farbtafeln zeigen die farbigen Häflingskennzeichnungen. Der Schriftsteller und Journalist E. de Martini (1902-1969) emigrierte zunächst in die Tschechoslowakei. Im Mai 1940 wurde er in Königshütte wegen illegaler politischer Tätigkeit festgenommen und im Gestapogefängnis Montelupich inhaftiert. Von dort wurde er als politischer Häftling nach Auschwitz überstellt, wo er am 18. Juli 1940 ankam und als politischer Häftling mit der Nummer 1402 in das Stammlager eingewiesen wurde. Zunächst musste er Zwangsarbeit im Bauhofkommando und anderen Arbeitskommandos verrichten, bis er im Sommer 1942 im Krankenbau des Stammlagers als Häftlingsschreiber beziehungsweise dort im Herbst 1942 schließlich als Blockältester eingesetzt wurde. Im Februar 1943 folgte seine Entlassung und Einziehung zur Wehrmacht, wo er im Reichsgebiet eingesetzt war (Wikipedia). Ein gut erhaltenes Exemplar mit nur leichten Gebrauchsspuren. Selten.
21098° (16,5 x 11,5 cm). 51 (2) Seiten. Vorwort in englischer und französischer, Gedichte in englischer Sprache. Originalbroschur. Tadellos erhaltenes Exemplar. Selten.
1944164516Genf, [Komitee zur Hilfeleistung für die kriegsbetroffene jüdische Bevölkerung], 1944. 87 Bll., Original broschiert, 4°. Typoskript, hektographiert auf 80 einseitig bedruckten Blättern. Aus dem Französischen, zusammengestellt von A[dolf Henryk] Silberschein. Sehr selten. Softcover Bibliotheksexemplar. Umschlag etwas berieben und angestaubt. Leimspur von ehemaligem Signaturschild auf Deckel, Fehlstelle in der Ecke unten rechts, Titelseite Ecke oben rechts ausgeschnitten.
Paper Wraps. 8vo. Issues are mostly 30-40 pages each. Ill. 22 cm. Published by the Polish Government Information Center, this work seeks to interpret Polish political and social problems for the American public and give to a true presentation of the struggle which Poland, the charter member of the United Nations, has carried on since September 1, 1939. Issue titles are: The Polish-Russian Controversy, Polish Children Under German Rule, Public Education in Poland, Jews in Poland, Polands Fighting Record, It Started in Poland, Poland at Work, Battle of Warsaw 1944, Polish-German Frontier, Polands Social Progress, Province of Lwow, Government of the Polish Republic, Soviet Puppet Government in Poland, USA and Poland, 1939-1945, Polish Views on International Organization. SUBJECT (S) : Poland -- History -- Occupation, 1939-1945. Covers of first three issues are slightly soiled in bottom corner. Issue no. 13 has unobtrusive stamp on cover. Internal pages are clean and binding is tight. Very good condition. (HOLO2-51-13) .
VOLUME TWO ONLY. RARE LIMITED EDITION of the memorial book dedicated to the Jews of the Bukovina district in southeastern Europe. The book uses authoritative sources to create a clear historical account of the Jewish community in Bukovina from the earliest records of its existence to the destruction during the Holocaust. Contains numerous b&w photographs and illustrations. 330x250mm. VIII+228 pages. Red leather Hardcover with dust-jacket. Gilt lettering on front cover and spine. Jacket yellowing, dirty, wrinkled and slightly age-stained. Jacket edges and corners worn/tattered. Front cover bottom edge peeling. Spine edges bumped. [SUMMARY]: Save for some external wear (mostly to jacket), this extremely rare volume is in good condition. PLEASE NOTE: This item is overweight. We may ask for extra shipping costs.
Original Illustrated wrappers, 4to. 28 cm. Ceased in 1951. In Yiddish with English Rear Cover. Title from masthead. Includes music, poetry, fiction, journalism and, of course, many photos, photo-mantages, and artwork. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Periodicals. OCLC lists 6 holdings that potentially include these issues. Light wear, Very Good Condition. (period-1-6)
1st edition. Original printed paper wrappers, small 8vo, 50 pages, 21 cm. In Polish. An early (1945!) post-war assortment of eye-witness reportsand documentation of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising of 1943, 2 years earlier. Table of contents on the last leaf, listing out all 22 essays, some of which are reprinted here for the first time from diaries and newspapers. Also reproduces to flyers honoring the ghetto and a photo of yizkor services to those who perished there. "Between July 22 and September 12, 1942, the German authorities deported or murdered around 300,000 Jews in the Warsaw ghetto. SS and police units deported 265,000 Jews to the Treblinka killing center and 11,580 to forced-labor camps. The Germans and their auxiliaries murdered more than 10,000 Jews in the Warsaw ghetto during the deportation operations. The German authorities granted only 35,000 Jews permission to remain in the ghetto, while more than 20,000 Jews remained in the ghetto in hiding. For the at least 55,000-60,000 Jews remaining in the Warsaw ghetto, deportation seemed inevitable. In response to the deportations, on July 28, 1942, several Jewish underground organizations created an armed self-defense unit known as the Jewish Combat Organization (Zydowska Organizacja Bojowa; ZOB). Rough estimates put the size of the ZOB at its formation at around 200 members. The Revisionist Party (right-wing Zionists known as the Betar) formed another resistance organization, the Jewish Military Union (Zydowski Zwiazek Wojskowy; ZZW). Although initially there was tension between the ZOB and the ZZW, both groups decided to work together to oppose German attempts to destroy the ghetto. At the time of the uprising, the ZOB had about 500 fighters in its ranks and the ZZW had about 250. While efforts to establish contact with the Polish military underground movement (Armia Krajowa, or Home Army) did not succeed during the summer of 1942, the ZOB established contact with the Home Army in October, and obtained a small number of weapons, mostly pistols and explosives, from Home Army contacts. In October 1942, SS chief Heinrich Himmler ordered the liquidation of the Warsaw ghetto and deportation of its able-bodied residents to forced labor camps in the Lublin District of the Generalgouvernement. In accordance with this order, German SS and police units tried to resume mass deportations of Jews from Warsaw on January 18, 1943. A group of Jewish fighters, armed with pistols, infiltrated a column of Jews being forced to the Umschlagplatz (transfer point) and, at a prearranged signal, broke ranks and fought their German escorts. Most of these Jewish fighters died in the battle, but the attack sufficiently disoriented the Germans to allow the Jews arranged in columns at the Umschlagplatz a chance to disperse. After seizing 5,000-6,500 ghetto residents to be deported, the Germans suspended further deportations on January 21. Encouraged by the apparent success of the resistance, which they believed may have halted deportations, members of the ghetto population began to construct subterranean bunkers and shelters in preparation for an uprising should the Germans attempt a final deportation of all remaining Jews in the reduced ghetto. The German forces intended to begin the operation to liquidate the Warsaw ghetto on April 19, 1943, the eve of Passover. When SS and police units entered the ghetto that morning, the streets were deserted. Nearly all of the residents of the ghetto had gone into hiding places or bunkers. The renewal of deportations was the signal for an armed uprising within the ghetto. ZOB commander Mordecai Anielewicz commanded the Jewish fighters in the Warsaw ghetto uprising. Armed with pistols, grenades (many of them homemade), and a few automatic weapons and rifles, the ZOB fighters stunned the Germans and their auxiliaries on the first day of fighting, forcing the German forces to retreat outside the ghetto wall....Though German forces broke the organized military resistance within days of the beginning of the uprising, individuals and small groups hid or fought the Germans for almost a month....The Warsaw ghetto uprising was the largest, symbolically most important Jewish uprising, and the first urban uprising, in German-occupied Europe. The resistance in Warsaw inspired other uprisings in ghettos (e.g., Bialystok and Minsk) and killing centers (Treblinka and Sobibor)" (USHMM 2018).Subjects: Warsaw (Poland) --History--Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, 1943. Beautiful Polish commemorative bookplate from the early post-war years, touch of wear to crown of spine, some toning, Very Good condition, a very nice copy. (H-13-1-EU)