5 326 résultats
19431220266München, Deutscher Volksverlag, (1943). 237, (3) S. m. einigen Bildnissen. OPp. (Kopf leicht bestoßen, Außenfalz m. Einrissen).
Original illustrated wraps. 12mo. 56 pages. 19 cm. First edition. A Record of the German Barbarities in Poland in the First Six Months of 1942. With two page map of concentration camps in Germany. Extremely detailed early report concerning Nazi atrocities, executions, concentrations camps, the extermination of the Lublin ghetto, etc. ; Destruction of the Jewish Population is one section in Documents from Poland. As early as 1940, the Government Delegate alerted London about the persecution of Jews in Poland. Thereupon, the Polish government-in-exile sent a note on this subject to allied governments (May 3, 1941) . Also in 1941, the Polish Ministry of Information in London published a booklet on the persecution of Jews in Poland, entitled Bestiality Unknown in Any Previous Record of History and based on information received from occupied Poland. In January 1942, the Ministry issued another publication, The New German Order in Poland. Both publications created a stir throughout the allied world, which after 1941 could no longer plead ignorance of the persecution of Jews in Poland. ("The Polish Underground State: A Guide to the Underground, 1939-1945" Stefan Korbonski) Subjects: World War, 1939-1945 - Poland. World War, 1939-1945 - Atrocities. Some staining to covers, staples show rust, still atttractive and dramatic, about Very Good- Condition. (HOLO2-104-27C)
1982R67635Baarn, Ten Have 1982 212pp., 21cm., twee stempeltjes
212pp., 21cm., twee stempeltjes
Original cloth boards. 12mo. 102 pages, 24 cm. In German. Holocaust-era imprint. Inscrbed "In deepest reverance" by the author in English on title page. Title translates roughly to Praying Judaism. Rabbi Davin Schoenberger performed the marriage of Anne Franks parents and later fled Nazi Germany...It was while serving as chief rabbi of Aachen, Germany, from 1926 to 1938 that Rabbi Schoenberger married the parents of the Jewish teen-ager whose wartime diary was later read around the world. The Schoenbergers and their daughter fled Europe after their synagogue was burned to the ground on Kristallnacht, Nov, 9, 1938, when Government-incited mobs attacked Jews and Jewish institutions and properties. (NYT Dec. 10, 1989) . This book was published that same year. Part of the Series: Sammlung Jüdischer Wissen, Band II. SUBJECT(S) : Judaism, Liturgy. OCLC lists 17 holdings worldwide. Staining to boards, including some on inside of front board. Internally clean, Good Condition overall. (GER-52-4A)
19942763FBZürich, Rio-Verlag, 1994. 8°. 22 x 14 cm. 319 Seiten. Gebundener Original-Pappband mit Original-Schutzumschlag.
1998biblio925<p>512 pages. Translated from German by Mary Harber</p> Rubin Mass Ltd. hardcover
199897162New York / Oxford, Oxford University Press 1998. 1998. XII,290 S. mit einigen Abbildungen, Orig.-Halbleinen mit Orig.-Umschlag.
Hardcover, 335 pages, illustrations, 8vo, 25 cm. Much on absorption of Holocaust survivors into Israeli society. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Palestine. Immigratie. Acculturatie. Palestine -- Social conditions. Signed by Mr. Seligman. Stains to front cover. Top left inch of front of dust jacket torn off. Some notes throughout book. In dust jacket. Otherwise, good condition. (Holo2-19-27)
First edition. Original Cloth in dust jacket, 8vo, 335 pages, illustrations, 8vo, 25 cm. Much on absorption of Holocaust survivors into Israeli society. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Palestine. Immigratie. Acculturatie. Palestine -- Social conditions. Ex-library with usual marks. Jacket heavily worn at spine and covered with tape. Otherwise Very Good Condition. (Holo2-19-27A)
22.5x14.5 cm. VIII+519 pages. Gilt hardcover. In good condition.
IN HEBREW. Contains plates in black and white. 23X16 cm. 313 pages. Hardcover. Cover slightly chafed. Marker markings on several pages. Else in good condition.
Softbound. 8vo. XI, 261 pages. 22 cm. First edition. Poems and fiction by Herman Taube, with a foreword by Elie Wiesel and watercolors by Steffi Rubin. Herman Taube was born in Lodz, Poland in 1918. Orphaned at an early age, he was brought up by Mirle and Gershon Mandel, his grandparents. Gershon ran a small shop that produced soap and candles. Herman attended a yeshiva (school for study of the Torah) prior to WWII. Gershon hoped his grandson would become a rabbi, but Herman instead began nursing in 1937. Herman was called for duty as a medic in the Polish Army in August 1939. Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939, thus marking the start of WWII. The Polish army was defeated within weeks of the blitzkrieg, (lightning war) . The Soviet Union occupied eastern Poland according to the German-Soviet Pact on September 17, 1939. Herman, along with the retreating Polish Army, was captured by the Soviet forces after crossing the Bug River. While officers and those of higher rank were sent to Katyn and later executed, lower ranking soldiers were sent to Siberia, a harsh area of the Soviet Union where gulags (Soviet work camps) were located. German forces invaded the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941. Based on an agreement between the Soviet government and the Polish government in exile, all Polish citizens held in Soviet camps were to be released (in part, to create a Second Polish Army in exile) . Upon his release, Herman went to Uzbekistan to join the Second Polish Army. He worked as a medic in Uzbekistan for two years until his unit moved to the eastern front. In June 1944 Herman was injured when the ambulance he was riding in drove over a land mine. After recuperating Herman was sent to the headquarters of the Second Polish Army, newly stationed in Lublin, the former Lublin/Majdanek concentration camp. Herman worked in the Majdanek hospital, caring for the liberated prisoners who were left behind when the retreating Nazis liquidated the camp. Shortly thereafter Herman was sent to work in a hospital in Pomerania where he worked until the end of the war. After the war Herman married Susan Strauss, a fellow survivor. The two immigrated to the United States in 1947. Herman is the author of more than twenty novels and books of poetry and has worked as a writer and journalist for over 60 years. Herman and Susan live in the Washington, DC area and volunteer at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. (USHMM) Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Poetry. Very light shelf wear to covers. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-100-40)
438 pages. Index. The gripping autobiography and fascinating reflections of a man, neither Jew nor Aryan, who recounts his dramatic WWII experiences and life afterwards. Unmarked. Above-average wear. Binding intact. A worthy copy of this fascinating life story. Book
Wrappers; 8vo. 184 pages. In Dutch. Illustrated with photographs, diagrams, and charts. Interesting pictorial cover in black, white and red, a photographic collage. A National Socialist look at the so-called Communist menace to Germany on the eve of Adolf Hitler's ascension to power in 1933. Communism -- Germany. Named Corp: Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiter-Partei. Originally published as: Bawaffneter aufstand! English version is Communism In Germany: The Communist Conspiracy On The Eve Of The 1933 National Revolution. Bookseller's stamp on flyleaf. Front cover nearly detached; spine chipping. Pages brown. Fair condition. (H-34-7)
Publishers cloth. 8vo. 199, 29 pages. 24 cm. First edition. In German. Published under the auspices of the Council of Jews from Germany. Title translates as Suspended Destruction; Commerative Book. A commemoration book for German-Jewish rabbis, community leaders, scholars, and writers, with 29 pages of photographs. Subjects: Jews - Germany - Biography. World War, 1939-1945 - Jews. Great condition in fair jacket. (HOLO2-103-19)
265 pages. 21 of Canada's most eminent writers of Jewish decent try in their various ways to make sense... of the Holocaust." - from back cover. Clean, bright and unmarked with minimal wear. Excellent copy. Book
Original Cloth Portfolio. 4to. 60 pages. 27 cm. First edition. Signed by Saul Touster. This edition is limited to 600 numbered signed copies. A Holocaust History in sixteen woodcuts done in 1945 by Miklós Adler, a Hungarian survivor. Edited, with an introduction and commentary, by Saul Touster. Contains facsimiles of the woodcuts and a separately bound volume with Professor Touster's commentary, bound in a folio box. Two pockets to inside covers. One contains book with introduction and woodcuts, captions in English, Hungarian, and Hebrew, vis-a-vis descriptive text, the other 16 woodcuts on seperate leaves. Series depicts plight of Jewish people during the Third Reich starting with the yellow star to be sewn onto clothes, transport to Ghettos and eventually to concentration camps; selection for and description of various work units, debasing scenes suffered at the hands of the Nazis, a woodut showing row of dead, closing with a woodcut showing smokestacks with "souls ascending". Mikos Adler was an art teacher in Debrecen, Hungary. Sometime in 1944, Adler and his family were loaded onto a transport for Auchwitz, but their train was diverted to Lager 15 in Vienna, and then to Theresienstadt, where they were liberated by the Soviet army on May 8, 1945. Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Pictorial works. Jewish artists - Hungary - Biography. Wood-engravers - Hungary - Biography. Holocaust survivors - Hungary - Biography. Adler, Miklós. OCLC lists 8 copies. Very clean and fresh. Very good + condition. Powerful. (HOLO2-115-36)
(FT) Hardcover with dustjacket, 8vo, 2 Volumes, 572 pages (continuing page-count) , Illustrated. Inscribed by author. On the underground organization that helped Jewish refugees during World War II to escape to the British Mandate for Palestine. Aliyah Bet. Ex-library. Dustjackets have edgewear, overall very good condition in good attractive illustrated jackets. An attractive set of this important work. (HOLO2-89-92)
1962017845New York / Jerusalem: Yad Washem Martyrs' and Heroes' Memorial Authority / YIVO Institute for Jewish Research 1962. Very Good condition. NOT a library discard. NO underlining. NO highlighting. NO margin notes. Text is in Hebrew Yiddish and English. Foreword translated from the Hebrew by Jacob Robinson. ON THE BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE JEWISH CATASTROPHE translated from the Yiddish by Leibush Lehrer. Introduction translated from the Yiddish by Joseph Gar. Joint Documentary Projects Bibliographical Series No. 3. Bound in the original gilt-stamped black cloth. 7.75" wide by 10.75" tall 19.5 cm x 27.5 cm. First Edition in English. Hardcover. Very Good condition/No jacket. xxxi 330pp. Yad Washem Martyrs' and Heroes' Memorial Authority / YIVO Institute for Jewish Research Hardcover
1974166070Tl Aviv, Pinczower Reprints, 1974. 8,S., Original-Broschur, klammergeheftet, 8°. Bibliographie der zwischen 1941 und 1951 in der Edition Peter Freund erschienenen Bücher. Weil er das Interesse als dazu gering einschätzte, und die Kosten für einen Druck als zu hoch, veröffentlichte Freund alle seine Bücher im Umdruckverfahren. Die meisten Bücher waren in deutscher Sprache, einige wenige erschienen in Hebräisch, in den meisten Fällen hatte Peter Freund die Matrize selber getippt. Die Auflagen lagen zwischen 100 und 200, entsprechend selten sind die verzeichneten Publikationen. Der Herausgeber führte in den 1970er Jahren ein auf Exilliteratur spezialisiertes Antiquariat, Wie die darin verzeichneten Bücher, wurde auch der vorliegende Katalog hektographiert. Softcover Etwas angestaubt. Pinczower Reprint, Number 5
THIS VOLUME ONLY. IN YIDDISH. 275x200 mm. XXIV+306 pages. Gilt hardcover. Cover slightly curved. Spine edges slightly bumped. Pages slightly yellowing. Else in good condition. PLEASE NOTE: This item is overweight. We may ask for extra shipping costs.
IN HEBREW WITH FOREWORD AND INDEX IN YIDDISH AND ENGLISH. 23.5x16.5 cm. 10+433 pages. Gilt hardcover with dust jacket. Spine bottom edge slightly faded. Pencil marking on several pages - no damage to text. Pages slightly yellowing. Else in good condition. PLEASE NOTE: This item is overweight. We may ask for extra shipping costs.
Original Cloth. 8vo. XXIII, 934 pages. 24 cm. First edition. Compiled and edited by Randolph L. Braham. An indispensable sourcebook for anyone interested in the catastrophe that befell Hungarian Jewry during the Nazi era. It includes close to six thousand annotated references to independent and periodical literature on all aspects of the history of Hungarian Jewry before, during, and after the Holocaust. Supplied with author, name, and geographic indexes, the sourcebook is easily usable. - Publishers Description. Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Hungary - Bibliography. Ungarn. Judenvernichtung. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Bibliography. Hungary. Light wear to jacket. Very good + condition in vg jacket. (BRAHAM-1-25) xx