5 325 résultats
1st edition. original cloth, 8vo. 303 pages. Inscribed by author in year of publication on front end paper. Illustrated. In Yiddish. Unusual design where illustrated "cover" is instead mounted as front pastedown, as issued. SUBJECT (S) : Jews South Africa Johannesburg history; Johannesburg (South Africa) ethnic relations. lightly bumped corners, Very Good condition. (YIZ-8-4)
8vo; 424 pages; 21 cm. . In Yiddish. Special issue to "Unser Weg". "The extermination of the Jews of Kowno (Kaunas) " on copyright page. Includes index, portraits, music and 18 pages of photo plates. The US Holocaust Memorial Museum keeps their copy in their Rare Book Collection. Pages tanned. Ex-library Lacks front wrapper, but text pages and internal binding remain solid. Good condition thus (YIZ-1-3)
8vo; 424 pages; 1st edition. Original Blue CLoth21 cm. . In Yiddish. Special issue to "Unser Weg". "The extermination of the Jews of Kowno (Kaunas) " on copyright page. Includes index, portraits, music and 18 pages of photo plates. The US Holocaust Memorial Museum keeps their copy in their Rare Book Collection. Pages tanned. Hinges starting, some wear to boards, Good condition (YIZ-3-11A)
1st edition. Original Publishers cloth. 4to. VIII, 2008 pages. 29 cm. In Yiddish. First edition. Edited by Mendel Sudarsky, Uriah Katzenelenbogen, J. Kissen. This Yizkor volume consists of hundreds of testimonies and local histories compiled by Lithuanian survivors and landsmanshaftn detailing their communities history and the destruction thereof, is an extremely important contribution to regional Jewish historiography and to knowledge about the Holocaust era in Europe. From the preface to the second volume:"the momentous compilation Lite (published in 1951 in New York) which was received by the general Jewish public with such appreciation" (from the forword to Vol II, issued a decade later). Subjects: Jews - Lithuania - History. Lithuania - Ethnic relations. Memorial volumes. Lithuania - History. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Lithuania. Cities and towns - Lithuania. OCLC lists copies 8 copies worldwide. Inscription on title page, a few margin notes in index, light wear, Good + condition. (yiz-7-9)
1st edition. Original cloth in dust jacket. 8vo. 231 pages. Illustrated. In Yiddish. SUBJECT (S) : Jews Lithuania history; Haskalah Lithuania history. SERIES: Dos Poylishe Yidntum ; ; bd. 70; Variation: Poylishe Yidntum ; ; bd. 70. Born in Warsaw, Shatzky [1893-1956] received his doctorate in 1922 for a dissertation on 19th-century Polish-Jewish history. During World War I he served as an officer in the Polish Legion. From 1913 on he wrote Polish articles and reviews on Jewish literary and historical subjects. He came to write mainly in Yiddish after 1922, the year he settled in the U. S. Where he was one of the founders of the U. S. Section of YIVO. From 1929 until his death he was librarian of the New York State Psychiatric Institute. Shatzky's range was extraordinarily wide: Spinoza, psychiatry, theater, music, folklore, literature, language, and other areas. His principal field, however, was Eastern European Jewish history, and his major work was his history of Warsaw Jewry. He was an indefatigable and often querulous reviewer of scholarly works; the quality and accuracy of his own historical scholarship has often been questioned. (Prager, EJ) Has tanned dust jacket and sewn in ribbon bookmark. Very good condition in good jacket. (YIZ-8-5)
1st edition. Original publisher's cloth, large 8vo, 652 pages. Includes illustrations, facsimiless, portraits; 25 cm. In Yiddish. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Poland -- Luków (Siedlce) Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Added title page: "Sefer Lukow. " Partly also in Hebrew. Includes bibliographical references (p. 56-57) . OCLC lists 11 copies worldwide. Inside hinges repaired Good Condition. (YIZ-6-11) xx
1st edition. Original publisher's cloth, large 8vo, 652 pages. Includes illustrations, facsimiless, portraits; 25 cm. In Yiddish. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Poland -- Luków (Siedlce) Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Added title page: "Sefer Lukow. " Partly also in Hebrew. Includes bibliographical references (p. 56-57) . OCLC lists 11 copies worldwide. wear and some discoloration to boards, Good Condition. (YIZ-6-12) xx
2nd edition, first edition published in 1977. Original cloth, 8vo. 207 pages, illustrations throughout. In English. A revised, expanded edition of The Ritavas community. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Lithuania -- Rietavas. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Ethnic relations. OCLC: 50155428. Very Good Condition. (YIZ-18-20) xx
1st edition. Original Cloth, Large 8vo; 508 pages; In Yiddish & Hebrew. Title translates as, "Memorial Book for the Community of Sarny." Memorial volume for the Jewish community of Sarny. Maps on the endpapers of the Sarny ghetto and White Russia. Frontis photo of town memorial grave. A history of the community, its institutions and prominent members. Includes numerous portraits & other photos. Very Good Condition. (yiz-5-5)
1st edition, original cloth with dust jacket, 4to. 449 + xiii pages, illustrations throughout. In Hebrew, with English introduction, and some Yiddish. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Poland -- Siemiatycze -- History. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Ethnic relations. OCLC: 19187600. Light marks on cover, dust jacket is worn and yellowed, book title written in pen on dust jacket flap, hinges starting, Good Condition Overall. (YIZ-19-20)
1st edition. Original cloth. 4to, 284+ [1] pages. Illustrations throughout. Yiddish. Title translates as, "Jews in the USSR. A Symposium." Nazi-era Soviet description the Soviet Jewish experience in the lead-up to the Holocaust and the great purges. Loaded with photos. Beautiful sepia photographic endpapers. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Soviet Union -- Political and social conditions. OCLC: 7431478. Bit of staining to covers, but attractive, excellent condition inside, far better than usually found, really an excellent Copy, Very Good Condition (YIZ-16-12A)
1st edition, original cloth, 8vo. 795 pages, illustrations throughout. In Hebrew and Yiddish. (Wednesday, 15th of Shvat 5700, December 27, 1939.) Thirty-five years have passed since that dark day when shots were fired, and the entire Jewish population left their hometown of Zgierz. On that day, confusion and terror enveloped the big and the small, the poor and the rich. Children lost their parents and parents searched for their children. The weeping and screaming could be heard on all of the streets. Driven to the old marketplace, with their packs over their shoulders, the Jews of Zgierz fled into the forests with the fear of death, that only the eyes that saw could believe. The largest group of them fled to Lodz, a smaller group went to Glowno, and only a very few set out and arrived in Warsaw. In their despair, the unfortunate souls could not imagine that all of the roads were leading to a strange ending, to death. Thus in one day did end the flourishing Jewish community of Zgierz, that numbered 5, 000 souls and was bound up with the city throughout the 200 year history with intertwined work for its growth and development. It ended for not only were our holy shrines burnt, but the despicable people even desecrated the 150 year old cemetery and covered it over with earth, so that there would not remain even a memory of Jewish life on Zgierz soil. For us, the survivors, lies the great and holy duty to observe this memorial day and perpetuate it forever. This should be a day of memory and warning for us and for our children. Just as we light the memorial candles for our martyrs, we also must not forget the curse and the eternal hate for the disgusting criminals and murderers of the Jewish people. We who remain in sorrow should find comfort in the work for those close to us, and in the work to perpetuate the memory of our martyrs our parents, our brothers and sisters, relatives and friends and the entire community of Zgierz. May their memory be blessed! (translated from book, Jewishgen 2018) SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Poland -- Zgierz. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Ethnic relations. OCLC: 40705049. Some edgewear and markings on cover, Good Condition Overall. (YIZ-19-2)
1st Edition. Original Boards. 8vo. 209 pages ; 23 cm. In Hebrew with Title Pages in Hebrew and English. Nr 58 in the Comprehensive Digital Bibliography of the Dreyfus Affair (Guieu, N. D. ) . Michel Abitbol is an Israeli Jewish historian, professor, and chair of the Department of African Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He is considered an expert on the history of the Jews of North Africa. He is also the scientific director of the Center for Research on Moroccan Jewry, founded in Jerusalem in 1994. (Wikipedia, 2016) SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Algeria -- History. Antisemitism -- Algeria -- History. Very good+ condition. (SPEC-42-36)
Original Wraps. 8vo. 31 pages. 22 cm. First edition. "Cape Town Hebrew Congregation". Contents: Address to Field Marshal the Rt. Hon. J. C. Smuts - Purim thoughts for modern times - Spiritual realignment: goodwill service (broadcast) - Delville Wood: address at M. O. T. H. Service Shema: sermon broadcast - Czechoslovakia: sermon ... In honour of the 25th anniversary of the Czechoslovak Republic - For whom do we mourn? : address delivered ... On the Jewish Day of Mourning - "A victory of ideals": sermon broadcast ... At the Special Chanucah Military Service. Sermons on the war against Nazism, in memory of those murdered, and in support of the South African war effort by Israel Abrahams (19031973) , "South African rabbi and scholar. Born in Vilna and educated at Jews' College and London University, he was rabbi in London and Manchester before going to South Africa in 1937 as chief rabbi of the Cape Town Hebrew Congregation. " - 2008 EJ. Subjects: Cape Town Hebrew Congregation. Jewish sermons, English - South Africa. Jewish sermons, English. World War, 1939-1945 - South Africa. OCLC lists 7 copies. Previously disbound and restapled; light soiling and small institutional marks to front wrap, otherwise clean and fresh. Good condition. (HOLO2-121-53)
Original Wraps. 8vo. 42 [1] pages. 23 cm. First edition. Forty-Fifth anniversary and Memorial book of the landsmanshaft Akkerman Benevolent Association. Includes register of names of persons from Akkerman who died in the Holocaust (p. 3-4) . With Song of the Ghetto by Isaac Katznelson, History of Akkerman, Anecdotes from Life in Akkerman (with humorous stories on the assassination of Von Pleve and responses to the 1905 revolution) , history of the Akkerman Relief Committee; with photographs of the Akkerman House in Israel, Akkerman Hospital, Akkerman Talmud-Torah, etc. Subjects: Jews - Ukraine - Bilhorod-Dnistrovs'kyi. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Registers of dead - Ukraine Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Ukraine - Bilhorod-Dnistrovs'kyi. Ethnic relations. Jews. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Bilhorod-Dnistrovs'kyi (Ukraine) - Ethnic relations. OCLC lists 11 copies. Light soiling to wraps, faint institutional mark throughout, light soiling to last leaf, otherwise clean and fresh. Good + condition. (HOLO2-121-58)
1st Edition. Original Wrappers. 8vo. 15 pages ; 22 cm. Holocaust-era ALFP publication 2 years before their production of A Flag is Born. Executive Board members are listed on the back of the pamphlet, and include many notable members from the Jewish community, and New York Theater and Arts community including the legendary screen-writer Ben Heht, who co-wrote A Flag is Born, Stella Adler, Lester Cohen, Jo Davidson, and Konrad Bercovici. SUBJECT (S) : Zionism. Palestine -- Colonization. OCLC lsits 4 (NY Hist. Society, Yale, NYPL, NLI) , none south or west of New York. Ex-library with perforated stamp through several pages, no text effected. Some markings on cover. Creased. Inside pages clear with little wear. About very good condition. (zion-10-56)
Original wrappers. 4to. [16] pages. 31 cm. First Edition. Proceeds to American Palestine Campaign for the Settlement of German Jews in Palestine. Quote from statement by Louis Lipsky inside back cover: No one contends that Palestine is capable of receiving all or even the greater part of those Jews who are being crushed by the Nazi Regime. Subjects: Jews -- History -- To 1200 B. C. -- Drama. Jews -- Illinois -- Chicago. OCLC lists 10 copies worldwide. (Brown, HUC, Brandeis, Univ. Of Florida, USHMM, Chicago History Museum, Univ. Of Illinois at Chicago, Johns Hopkins, American Jewish Historical Society, Natl. Libr. Of Israel. ) Light stain along lower fore-edge. Light cover soiling and spotting. Good + condition. (HOLO2-112-20)
Original Wraps. 8vo. 31 pages. 23 cm. First edition. First appearance. Nazi-era booklet. 'National Avukah program; first series: The Jews as a group; first semester: The development of Jewish society and institutions'. This essay is planned as the first part of a four year course - p. 3. Historical survey, designed for Avukah students, on Jewish history from the Second Temple period to the present (covers Babylonia, the expulsion from Spain, the ghetto, Poland, Emancipation, Russian and American Jewry, etc. ) . Subjects: Jews - History. Jews Civilization. OCLC lists only 2 copies (Harvard, Dallas) . Wraps soiled, otherwise clean and fresh. Good + condition. (ZION-8-21)
Original wrappers. Oblong. 8vo. 32 pages. 23 x 30 cm. Illustrated. First Edition. DP-era illustrated promotional brochure describing the structure and programs of the Anti-Defamation League. Containing black and white photographs and illustrations decoratively included throughout the text. Laid in form letter about the brochure describes it as a graphic record of our organization, principles, and methods of operation. The letter further states that the brochure has been published in a very limited edition. Subjects: Anti-Defamation League. WWII antisemitism. No copies listed on OCLC. Library stamp on front cover and one internally, with Charles K. Solte library dedication on inside of back wrapper. Some edge wear with crease at top fore-edge corner. Good + condition. (HOLO2-112-21)
1st edition. Original paper wrappers, 8vo, 19 pages. Interesting period analysis, in under 20 pages, of the new German Mythology which is being taught to Germanys children. The author includes no fewer than 8 references to Antisemitic references to the Jews or Jewish conspiracy against Germany, as well as the other standard Nazi tropes. "Germany is now making a legend - the legend of the Third Empire. She is giving it saints and heroes and martyrs. Unlike other legends, this legend is new and burning and contemporary. It fans national pride (suffering from a sense of defeat) with ardent fires, and ... It tends to encourage dislike of other nations. The new Germany, based on racial nationalism, is building a story of the great Renaissance of national life since the collapse of 1918; and it is building it on the foundations of exaltation of German blood and depreciation of what is non-German. Being thorough, as well as passionate, the Germans are making the story they have built not only a matter of song and poem, but also a matter of text-books and educational method. The result is school history-books like that which is analysed in the following pages" (from the Foreword) . Friends of Europe publications, no. 11. SUBJECT(S) : History -- Study and teaching (Elementary) -- Germany. National socialism -- Study and teaching. Questions and answers. -- Juvenile literature. Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiter-Partei. Spine repaired, quality glossy paper has held up well and is solid. Good Condition thus. (Holo2-139-18) xx
1st Edition. Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. [2], 76 pages ; 24 cm. In English. World War II Era handbook from the National Council of Jewish Women on best practices for getting immigrant families citizenship in the United States. The National Council of Jewish Women (NCJW) is an American organization of volunteers and advocates who turn Jewish ideals into action. NCJW says it strives for social justice by improving the quality of life for women, children, and families and by safeguarding individual rights and freedoms... World War II found NCJW engaged in rescuing Jewish children from Germany and working to reunite thousands of displaced persons with family members, as well as a broad range of other relief efforts. (Wikipeida, 2016) . SUBJECT(S) : Naturalization -- United States. OCLC lists 18 copies worldwide. Ex-library with Jewish Institutional Stamp and usual markings. Some pencil marks. Good+ condition. (AMR-47-19)
1st Edition. Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. [2], 76 pages ; 24 cm. In English. World War II Era handbook from the National Council of Jewish Women on best practices for getting immigrant families citizenship in the United States. The National Council of Jewish Women (NCJW) is an American organization of volunteers and advocates who turn Jewish ideals into action. NCJW says it strives for social justice by improving the quality of life for women, children, and families and by safeguarding individual rights and freedoms... World War II found NCJW engaged in rescuing Jewish children from Germany and working to reunite thousands of displaced persons with family members, as well as a broad range of other relief efforts. (Wikipeida, 2016) . SUBJECT(S) : Naturalization -- United States. OCLC lists 18 copies worldwide. Ex-library with usual markings. Inscribed. Spinewear. Inside pages in good condition. (AMR-47-19a)
Large 8vo; 378 pages; Original Publisher's Paper Wrappers. Large 8vo. 378 pages. 24 cm. In Polish. Title translates to English as, "Extermination of Jews in Poland During the Nazi Occupation: Sets of Documents." Robinson & Friedman # 2002. Includes 9 pages of indices Loaded with German documents. Pages tanned but all text is clear. Light wear to wrappers, paper browning but solid. Very good condition. (H-17-25)
Original Boards with Original Dust Jacket. 8vo. 102 pages ; 22 cm. In Czech. Title translates into English as, What Was. Frantiek Bláha (1896 - 1979) was a Czech and Czechoslovak physician and politician who belonged to the Czechoslovak Social Democratic Party. He was a member of the postwar Constituent National Assembly, and, after the year 1948, a member of the Communist Party and a member of the National Assembly of Czechoslovakia and during Normalization became a signatory of Charter 77 In the years 1925-1938 he was head physician of the gynecological department of the hospital in Jihlava. In the spring of 1939 was the organizer of Sokol resistance. In the years 1939-1945 he was imprisoned in Dachau. (Wikipedia, 2017) This is Bláhas story of his internment in Dachau, from the year of original publication. OCLC lists 7 copies worldwide, and only 1 in the United States (UNC) . Both book and Dust Jacket are in very good condition. (holo2-135-49) xx
Paper wrappers. 12mo. 16 pages. 20 cm. Fourth Supplement. In Dutch. Gedenckclanck was originally the name of a volume published in the Netherlands in 1626 which contains the well known hymnal, we go out together now, a celebration of Dutch independence and liberation. In the occupied Netherlands consecutive four part anthologies of illegal poetry, letters, and writings, all in the service of the resistance, were printed at the same underground press in Alphen aan den Rijn, and each collection was given the same title Gedenckclanck. Gedenckclanck 1940-1944 was printed in three parts, in the years 1944, 1944, and 1945, of lengths of 112, 176, and 68 pages respectively, in editions of 2200, 400, 200 respectively. The first volume was printed hastily, without corrections being made to the print run. The latter two volumes were reserved for the Royal House (presumably the Dutch Royal Family was allowed to obtain any type of literature even during the occupation) , prisoners in the camps, prisoners overseas, and those fighting in Free Dutch units elsewhere. Part four, entitled Gedenckclanck 1940-1945 was printed in the early spring of 1945. Four supplements, prepared during the occupation and which appeared one month after the liberation, were produced in very limited print runs. The pamphlet we have to offer is the last of the four in the series. Approximate translation from the title page recto: This little book was commenced after a presentation entitled "The Message of the Dead". / We go out together now! Radiant, young, happy. But above all grateful. / Closing with the farewell letter from a condemned man. / To the memory of Jaap Sickenga, shot by the Germans on May 11, 1942. This supplement to pt. 4 of the clandestinely published series of the same title contains letters and poems by or about Dutch victims of Nazi terror. Gedenckclanck first appeared in the autumn of 1944. They included only illegal poems, referring to the sacrifice of the dead and suffering in prisons and camps. The second Gedenckclanck offered an anthology of illegal poetry, from bundles and loose sheets of papers that had made the rounds. In the third Gedenckclanck illegal prose poetry was also included. Volume four appeared in the early spring of 1945. In the first months after liberation there appeared four 'supplements' also titled: Gedenckclanck. The compiler lectured in various places on 'The Message of the Dead ", after which a few small anthologies of illegal literature were offered. The mimeographed supplements, respectively: 26, 18, 31 and 16 page count. The first was dedicated to the sacrifice of the dead and suffering in prisons and camps. Nos. 2 and 4 contain only testimonies of martyrs. The third supplement is subtitled: Prayers. (This information, and the preceding specifications, with gratitude taken from Dirk de Jong (red. ) , HET VRIJE BOEK IN ONVRIJE TIJD. BIBLIOGRAFIE VAN ILLEGALE EN CLANDESTIENE BELLETTRIE. Interbook International, Schiedam 1978 (THE FREE BOOK OF UNFREE TIME. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ILLEGAL AND CLANDESTINE BELLES LETTRES. Interbook International, Schiedam 1978) . Subjects: Dutch poetry -- 20th century. Netherlands -- History -- German occupation, 1940-1945 -- Poetry. OCLC lists only 2 copies worldwide (Univ Amsterdam, British Library) , none in the US. Paper wrappers worn, with a slight tear to cover at edge, and marked water stains on the back cover. Light pencil marks on title page. Pages browned, but very clean. Very good + Condition. (HOLO2-80-6)