5 326 résultats
197921303Wien, Europaverlag, (1979). 228 S. OLn.
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
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 in Good+ Jacket. Nice copy. (YIZ-1-1)
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
8vo; 1st edition. Original illustrated red boards, 8vo, 342 pages. In Yiddish. Title translates as, "The destruction of Vilna." Kaczerginski (19081954) was a Yiddish writer and cultural activist. Born in Vilna to a poor family and educated at that citys Talmud Torah, Shmerke (Pol., Szmerke) Kaczerginski lost both his parents during World War I. As a youth, he was involved with outlawed Communist groups and was arrested several times, serving a lengthy prison term. In the 1930s, two of his revolutionary poems became popular in Poland. He wrote short stories with a radical bent and was a correspondent and reporter for literary publications, including the semilegal leftist press in Poland and the New York Communist daily Morgn-frayhayt. Kaczerginski played a key role in shaping the writers and artists group Yung-Vilne; he organized its evening events and was the de facto publisher of its three miscellanies between 1934 and 1936. During the period of Soviet control over Lithuania in 19401941, he was even more active in the field of Yiddish culture, but at the same time experienced his first disappointments with the attitude of the Soviet regime toward Jewish culture. During the first period of Nazi occupation, Kaczerginski wandered through villages and towns posing as a deaf mute; after many difficulties, he ended up in the Vilna ghetto. Kaczerginski was very involved in the ghettos cultural activities. As a leader of its youth club, he wrote its Yugnt-himen (Youth Hymn), a song that immediately became popular. In 1943, he wrote the song Shtiler, shtiler in memory of the mass murders committed at Ponar. Set to music that Aleksander Volkoviski (later known as Aleksander Tamir) had submitted to a contest organized by the ghetto, the song was first heard at an evening performance there and over the years became one of the best-known songs of the Holocaust. With Avrom Sutzkever and others, Kaczerginski became part of a group of forced laborers whom the Germans designated to sort Jewish cultural treasures at YIVO and other locations. Known as the Papir-brigade (Paper Brigade), the groups members risked their lives to hide the most significant items, smuggling them back into the ghetto or entrusting them to non-Jewish acquaintances. Kaczerginski was a member of the Fareynikte Partizaner Organizatsye (United Partisans Organization; FPO), and, since YIVOs building was located outside the ghetto walls, he took part in smuggling weapons into the ghetto. In September 1943, Kaczerginski, along with Avrom and Freydke Sutzkever and other members of the FPO, escaped from the Vilna ghetto as part of an organized group of fighters just before its liquidation. They joined a Soviet partisan unit in the Naroch Forests, where Kaczerginski fought as a partisan until liberation in July 1944. Kaczerginskis books describe the destruction of Vilna, the partisan struggle, and his own experiences during the Holocaust period: Khurbn Vilne (The Destruction of Vilna; 1947), Partizaner geyen (Partisans on the Move; 1947), and Ikh bin geven a partizan (I Was a Partisan; 1952) (YIVO, 2010). Ex-library, spine sunned, otherwise very Good Condition. (HOLO2-89-3A)
20182-1695143868Independently published 2018. Paperback. New. 146 pages. 11.00x8.50x0.35 inches. Independently published paperback
64 pages. Features: Spike Lee's "Clockers"; Richard Price on Screenwriting; Ken Loach; Ulu Grosbard; Tiananmen Documentaries; Marlene Gorris; Mark Rappaport; "North Star"; Holocaust Videos; and more. Average wear. A sound copy. Magazine
19862124Cerf, cinémaction, 1986. 1 volume broché in-8 ; 255 pages. Photographies. Bon état.
1985yd1075Editions du Cerf Revue 1985 In-8 (17 x 24 cm), broché, 189 pages ; très bon état. Livraison a domicile (La Poste) ou en Mondial Relay sur simple demande.
22x16 cm. 8+21+12+16+24+13+17+20+13+20 pages. Ten booklets in plastic box. As new.
1st edition. Stapled sheets, Five leaves, 8.5x11 inches. Mimeographed on one side only, staples in the upper left corner. Written in June 1940 prepared by Allan Taub, member of the New York Bar for the Jewish Peoples Committee. Basic legal advice in the present war hysteria for non-citizens who may fear reprisals or worse, advising them to apply for citizenship, and giving them tips about how to handle legal situations and a basic primer of their legal rights. Given that the Jewish Peoples Committee was communist led, the intended target audience for this would have been left-wing immigrants. Light wear, Very Good Condition. (holo2-125-34)
200457710[Frankfurt (Main)] : Societäts-Verl. 2004. 221 S. : Ill. ; 22 cm kart., Softcover/Paperback, Exemplar in sehr gutem Erhaltungszustand
8vo. 280 pages. In English. Note: by Max L. Berges ; trans. From the German by Benjamin R. Epstein. In very good condition. (HOLO2-8-11)
Original Cloth in dust jacket 8vo. 280 pages. In English. Note: by Max L. Berges ; trans. From the German by Benjamin R. Epstein. Both Very Good, Dust jacket is beautiful with just a touch of edgewear, an outstanding copy (HOLO2-8-11)
A clean, unmarked book with a tight binding. Age-toned pages. Light wear to cover. Previous owner's name stamp inside. 78 pages.
240X170 mm. 386 pages. Softcover. Cover slightly yellowing. Sticker on spine. Ex-library copy with usual marks. Pages slightly yellowing. Else in good condition.
8vo. 52 pages. Illustrated. Contents: "Auschwitz: An account of a personal experience, by Dr. William Glicksman." Includes bibliographical references. SUBJECT (S) : Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Very good condition. (Katsh-2-28)
285 pages. Index. Black and white photographic plates. First published in Polish in 1951 under the title Wspomnienia. Second printing. "Author was taken prisoner by the British, handed over to the Poles, tried, sentenced to death, and taken back to Auschwitz and there hanged." - from dust jacket (not included with this copy. Somewhat above-average wear to decorated orange cloth-covered boards. Binding intact. Relatively few library markings. A sound reading copy. Bibliographic references: Kehr & Langmaid 6069, Enser p. 113. Book
Soft cover, worn cover, spine and edges, b/w pictures, else in good condition.
Paperback, 8vo, v, 102 pages, illustrations, poems, 28 cm. Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Periodicals. Warsaw (Poland) -- History Uprising of 1943 -- Periodicals. Cover repaired, first page loose, pages clean and fresh. Good condition. (HOLO2-106-11A) xx
27.5x21.5 cm. 84 pages. Softcover. Cover slightly chafed. Spine slightly chafed. Pen writing on first page. Else in good condition.
27.5x21.5 cm. 109 pages. Softcover. Cover slightly chafed. Spine slightly chafed. Else in good condition.
In period Spring Binder. 4to. [Various paginations]. 30 cm. First edition. Report detailing and classifying the professions of Jewish workers in New York City. Includes many German-Jewish refugees. Data is estimated and sourced from census and trade union records, and for use in connection with Jewish economic services in New York City. In 1933, Abraham Shohan a former overseas field executive of the Joint Distribution Committee, [was] appointed national field director of the B'nai B'rith Wider Scope Fund. ("Shohan Named Head of Wider Scope Fund. " Jewish Telegraphic Agency 23 Aug 1933.) Subjects: Jews -- New York (State) -- New York Metropolitan Area -- Economic conditions -- Statistics. Jews -- New York (State) -- New York Metropolitan Area -- Social conditions -- Statistics. Jews -- Employment -- New York (State) -- New York. OCLC lists 1 copy worldwide. (Harvard) In period Spring Binder. Some edge wear. Light age toning and minimal library markings. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-109-58)
Pamphlet. 8vo. [3] pages. 22 cm. Holocaust-era publication detain this period attempt at explicitly bringing Christian and Jewish young people together. [This] article by a correspondent describes an experiment in a mixed Jewish-Christian youth camp SUBJECT (S) : Jewish camps -- England. Jewish youth -- England. Named Corp: Association for Jewish Youth (Great Britain) . Young Men's Christian Association (London, England) . "Reprinted by courtesy of the The Jewish Chronicle August 24th 1945." OCLC lists one copy (Harvard College Library) . Lightly worn with some bumping at edges, but all text is clear. Very good condition. Interesting period piece. (HOLO2-61-24) . Xx
1st Edition. Original Illustrated Paper Wrappers depicting Skulls in the OOs of Moordhausen. 8vo. 14 pages. ; 20 cm. In Dutch. Title translates into English as, Mauthausen Concentration Camp: Murder House. Prisoner No. 12564 Tells Title is a pun on the name of the Mauthausen-Gusen Concentration Camp. Mauthausen was derived from the German word maut, meaning toll, as the area was originally a shipping station in the 10th century; this work changes the maut to moord, the dutch word for murder. In this work, a holocaust survivor tells their story of the Mauthausen Concentration Camp in August 1942. OCLC lists just 4 copies worldwide. None outside of the Netherlands. Rebacked. Tear to Back Wrapper with no text effected. Some other tears along edges. Overall good condition. (holo2-130-69)