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IN HEBREW. EXTREMELY RARE book on the history and fate of the Jewish cemeteries in Europe which were desecrated or damaged during the Holocaust and WW2. The book features numerous b&w photographs. 305x240mm. 1008 columns (504 pages). Blue Hardcover. Gilt lettering on front cover and spine. Cover curved, slightly stained and rubbed. Front cover slightly scratched. Cover corners slightly bumped. Rear cover upper corner and spine upper edge peeling. Spine yellowing. Spine edges bumped. Edges of some pages wavy. Few pages slightly dog-eared. Pages slightly yellowing. [SUMMARY]: This rare volume, indispensable for anyone taking an interest in the Holocaust and/or Jewish cemeteries in Europe, is otherwise in good condition. PLEASE NOTE: This item is overweight. We may ask for extra shipping costs.
16x23.5 cm. xvi+328 pages. Hardcover in dust jacket. In good condition. PLEASE NOTE: This item is overweight. We may ask for extra shipping costs.
IN HEBREW, YIDDISH AND ENGLISH. 25x18cm. LXI+357 pages. Gilt hardcover. Spine slightly faded. Else in good condition.
0773442464.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1st edition, original cloth, 4to. 826 columns, illustrations throughout. In Yiddish, foreword also in English. This book describes the city of Suwalk, Poland and the surrounding communities. Many black and white photographs are included, along with reproductions of important documents. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Poland -- Suwalki -- History. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Ethnic relations. OCLC: 11558550, OCLC lists 29 copies worldwide. Some wear on corners, some marks on page edges, spine replaced, very good internally, Good Condition overall. (YIZ-19-12)
8vo; 214 pages; Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. xv, 214 pages. 23 cm. In Polish. Documents of Crimes and Martyrdom. Includes 2-page names-index & 4-page bibliography. SUBJECT(S):World War, 1939-1945 -- Prisoners and prisons, German. Jews -- Poland. Picture cover and many facsimiles. Front cover is slightly worn with closed tear and some tape along spine. Otherwise a nice, clean copy in good+ condition. (HOLO2-62-10)
Original Wraps. 8vo. 12 pages. 23 cm. First edition. Nazi-era publication on the revival of Hebrew and a survey of Hebrew literature and the press. Discusses specialized areas of study in history, biography, literary criticism, reprinting medieval classics, translations; the specialties of Hebrew writers (terror and gloom, romanticism) . Contains three tables displaying the number of Hebrew books sold in Palestine and exported elsewhere. Subjects: Literature. Hebrew literature - Israel. OCLC lists 4 copies (NYPL, Natl Libr Israel, Harvard, HUC) . Light soiling to wraps. Previous owners name and stamp on front wrap, otherwise clean and fresh. Good + condition. (ZION-8-22) xx
(FT) Original Wrappers. 12mo. 79 pages. 17 cm. Undated edition. In Yiddish. Song of the Murdered Jewish People" by Itzhak Katzenelson (18851944) , a Hebrew and Yiddish poet. Katzenelsons world fell apart when in August 1942 his wife Hanna and two younger sons, Ben-Tsiyon and Binyamin, were deported to Treblinka. From then on, his literary creativity was piercingly shaped by lamentations over the loss of his family. Nonetheless, with his oldest son, Tsevi, he found the strength to join the Jewish Fighting Organization and took part in the first uprising of January 1943. After the ghetto was destroyed in April and May 1943, he escaped to the Aryan section of Warsaw and obtained a Honduran identity document. Nevertheless, he was sent to a German detention camp for foreign subjects in Vittel, France. He was imprisoned there until April 1944, and devoted most of his time to writing. Two important works were produced during that period: Pinkas Vitel (The Vittel Diary) , a Hebrew composition that uses the language of an incensed diarist and reconstructs the days of terror in Warsaw during the mass deportations; and Dos lid fun oysgehargetn yidishn folk (The Poem about the Murdered Jewish People) , a pathos-filled Yiddish poem that laments the destruction of the Jewish people and of the poet himself, who has been become bitterly angry with humankind and God. These two works are among the boldest and most lofty literary expressions to emerge from the Holocaust. All of Katzenelsons works from his Vittel period were either buried in hiding places or were given to people he trusted; consequently, they were saved and published shortly after the end of the war. In the middle of April 1944, Katzenelson and his son Tsevi were sent to the Drancy transit camp, and from there one month later to Auschwitz, where they were murdered. In 1950, the Ghetto Fighters kibbutz built a museum and an institute for research about the Holocaust that bear Yits? Ak Katzenelsons name. (YIVO Encyclopedia) Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Poetry. Half Dollar size chip to cover, no text loss, institutional stamp on title page, taped spine, otherwise Good Condition. (HOLO2-97-33xx)
195722704ABBelgrade, Federation of Jewish Communities of the Federative People's Republic of Yugoslavia, 1957. Gr. 8°. XIX, 245 pages including 93 photographs. Original Cloth. Die Versandkosten für Kunstwerke und mehrbändige Werke können von den Standard-Versandkosten abweichen. Edges a bit bumped, otherwise good condition.
2008300048South Africa: Hands-On Media 2008. Book. Very Good. Hardcover. 4to - over 9¾ - 12" tall. includes Good dustjacket. jacket edges creased and rubbed in places with a few small tears at joints. 152 pages. Hands-On Media Hardcover
SIGNED WITH DEDICATION BY AUTHOR - Yehuda Bauer (b.1926), an eminent Israeli historian and scholar of the Holocaust, professor of Holocaust Studies at the Avraham Harman Institute of Contemporary Jewry at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. RARE monograph on the contribution of American Jewry to the disorganized Jewry of post-WW2 Europe, mostly through organization such as the JDC, HIAS and ORT. Includes several plates b&w plates. 235x155mm. XXV+318 pages. Illustrated Hardcover. Cover slightly rubbed. Cover corners rubbed. Front cover upper edge and spine edges bumped. This rare and important monograph, signed by author, is in very good condition.
IN YIDDISH AND HEBREW. RARE Yizkor book (memorial book) commemorating the Jewish community of Falenica annihilated in the Holocaust. Falenica is a part of Wawer, one of districts of Warsaw on the right bank of the Vistula, in the far southeastern corner of the city (until 1951 a separate village, afterwards became part of Warsaw). Falenica is located along the main rail line, which connects Warsaw with Lublin. During World War II the Germans opened a Jewish ghetto there, called Falenica-Miedzeszyn Ghetto. All of its inhabitants were transported to Treblinka in August 1942. Contains many b&w photographs. 280x220mm. 478 pages. Black cloth Hardcover with gilt front cover and spine. Cover dirty and slightly scratched. Front cover upper corner and spine edges bumped. Rear endpaper upper edge/corner slightly peeling. Rear whitepage bottom corner creased/wrinkled. Pages slightly yellowing. [SUMMARY]: This extremely rare Yizkor book commemorating the exterminated Jewish community of Falenica is in good condition. PLEASE NOTE: This item is overweight. We may ask for extra shipping costs.
73DS. Haifa. A partly printed document signed "Olga Polok" regarding moving funds from her bank fund just four days after the start of World War II: "I. have conferred general authority upon Olga Polak whose signature please find below to administer - as he may think fit - all funds or securities now or in future lying for my our account with yourselves or with any other offices of the Hollandsche Bank Unie N.V. or with any one of their correspondents; to dispose of same to receive the countervalue of all securities moneys deposits bills cheques and promissory notes telegraphic and letter-payments. to give discharge for same to give all kinds of instructions and to sign as my our mandatory receipts. It is hereby expressly stipulated that I we waive the right to notarial notices in connection with any matter arising out of these presents. ". The document has a few light toning patches and is in fine condition overall. An unusual Holocaust-era document. unknown
199410479Los Angeles: Holocaust Remembrance Committee Michael Diller High School 1994. Hardcover. Fine/very good . Tall quarto black paper over boards167 pages illustrations maps portraits. -- Inscribed & signed by Arnold Lorber one of the twelve survivors on the first free endpaper. -- Unable to locate any hardbound copies of this book. Scarce in hardbound. Contents: stories of Jewish survivors of the Holocaust I'm not a hero merely a survivor! / Ernest Braunstein -- A child in and of the Holocaust / Ralph Codikow -- Courage personified / Renee Firestone -- Mazel & persistence / Jona Goldrich -- Assured by mother she would survive and she did / Zelda Grodsenski Gordon -- Surviving the "mine field" / Fred Kort -- Never give up! / Arnold Lorber -- A hero saved by his mother's wisdom and love / Paul Mandel -- Mila Leopold and Schindler / Leopold Pfefferberg Page -- Saga of the Pasternak Family / Alfred Pasternak -- "We must never never forget" / Maurice Pechman -- The messenger of life / Andrew Stevens. Holocaust Remembrance Committee, Michael Diller High School hardcover
73Haifa. A partly printed document signed "Olga Polok" regarding moving funds from her bank fund just four days after the start of World War II: "I. have conferred general authority upon Olga Polak whose signature please find below to administer - as he may think fit - all funds or securities now or in future lying for my our account with yourselves or with any other offices of the Hollandsche Bank Unie N.V. or with any one of their correspondents; to dispose of same to receive the countervalue of all securities moneys deposits bills cheques and promissory notes telegraphic and letter-payments. to give discharge for same to give all kinds of instructions and to sign as my our mandatory receipts. It is hereby expressly stipulated that I we waive the right to notarial notices in connection with any matter arising out of these presents. ". The document has a few light toning patches and is in fine condition overall. An unusual Holocaust-era document. unknown books
0889467145New. hardcover. New. Satisfaction Guaranteed or your money back. hardcover
Volume 1. Crisp, clean, bright and tight. Some notes in biro on the front end page. Used
Original Cloth. 8vo. IX, 158; VIII, 255 pages. 24 cm. First edition. Two volume set of the selected writings of Randolph Braham. Contains the following essays: Volume 1. The Holocaust in Hungary: a retrospective analysis; What did they know and when? ; The Hungarian press, 1938-1945; The Holocaust in Hungary: an historical interpretation of the role of the Hungarian radical right; The official Jewish leadership of wartime Hungary; The rescue of the Jews of Hungary in historical perspective; The national trials relating to the Holocaust in Hungary: an overview. Volume 2. The Christian churches of Hungary and the Holocaust; Remembering and forgetting: the Vatican, the German Catholic hierarchy, and the Holocaust; The influence of the war on the Jewish policies of the German satellite states; Revisionism: historical, political, and legal implications; Anti-semitism and the Holocaust in the politics of East Central Europe; Romanian nationalists and the Holocaust: a case study in history cleansing; The assault on historical memory: Hungarian nationalists and the Holocaust; Canada and perpetrators of the Holocaust: the case of Regina v. Finta. Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Hungary. Holocaust. Judenvernichtung. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) 1939 - 1945 Ungarn. Hungary. Light shelf wear to jacket of both volumes, otherwise very clean and fresh. Very good + condition in very good jacket. (BRAHAM-1-1) xxxx
14.5x22 cm. 149+124 pages. Gilt hardcover. Cover edge is faded. Side of spine is worn - binding is visible. Else in good condition.
2003Q-0884481875Tilbury House Publishers 2003-06-01. Paperback. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Tilbury House Publishers paperback
RARE copy of the periodical published by former Jewish residents of the Polish/Lithuanian/Belorussian city of Grodno (Hrodna). Contains articles written by ex-residents from all over the world, and includes a wealth of information about the city and its pre-holocaust Jewish community. Written almost entirely in Yiddish, with 4 pages in Spanish. Includes several b&w photographs. 320x235mm. 140 pages. Softcover. Cover yellowing, worn and slightly stained. Cover edges slightly tattered. Cover corners creased and slightly torn. Spine creased. Spine edges torn and peeling. Binding slightly loose. Pages yellowing. [SUMMARY]: Save for the aforementioned external damage, this testament to the lost world of Jewish Grodno is in good condition.
2000Q-0316070866Little Brown 2000-04-01. hardcover. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Little, Brown hardcover
8vo., First Edition, with a portrait frontispiece, 4 plates of drawings by E. Ainsworth, 7 plates on 4, 2 full-page plans in the text and endpapers maps; original red cloth, backstrip lettered in white, a good, clean copy. Vividly-written account of one family's seemingly endless travels, from Holland through Germany, Czechoslovakia and back to Holland. Includes first-hand account of Arnhem and Belsen. Extremely scarce. Enser, p.112.
Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. 160 pages. In Yiddish with Spanish title page. On the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Covers worn and detached but present. Internal pages in good condition. (HOLO2-10-12).
No Date [1934]. [2] typewritten pages, 30cm x 21 cm. 2-page membership list from the first full-year of Hitlers full power in Germany, showing approximately 75 current members with city and address. Agudath Israel was founded in Kattowitz, German Empire (now Katowice, Poland), in 1912, with the purpose of providing an umbrella organization for observant Jews who opposed the Zionist movement. In Erez Israel, Agudat Yisrael was established as a branch of this movement, to provide opposition to the organized Jewish community (the "Yishuv"). One of its most authoritative spokesmen against the formation of a Jewish State, the Dutch poet Jacob Israël de Haan, was assassinated by the Haganah in 1924. In the wake of the Holocaust, anti-Zionist rabbis who led Agudat Israel recognized the great utility of a Jewish state, and it became non-Zionist, rather than anti-Zionist. It did not actively participate in the creation of Israel, but it ceased its opposition to it. In 1933, it entered into an agreement with the Jewish Agency, according to which Agudat Yisrael would receive 6.5% of the immigration permits. Eventually, at the eve of the Israeli Declaration of Independence (1948), Agudat Yisrael yielded to pressure from the Zionist movement, and has been a participant in most governments since that time. age staining, few tears, very brittle. (Holo2-146-8)