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Newsletter. 8 pages. Ill. 28 cm. Holocaust-era issue with relevant content. The JLC was formed in February 1934, by Yiddish-speaking immigrant trade union leaders seeking to support Jewish labor institutions in European countries; assist the anti-Hitler underground movement; aid the victims of Nazism; cooperate with American organized labor in fighting anti-democratic forces; and combat anti-Semitism and other effects of Fascism and Nazism upon American life. The Voice of the Unconquered was published monthly from 1943-1949. Contents in this issue include: Martyrdom of 6, 000, 000 Murdered Jews Cries Out for Justice at Nuremberg Trial, Ghastliness of Nazi Barbarism Against Jews Unfolded in Nuremberg Indictment, Pictures of Gruesome Dachau, Justice Jackson Addresses Nuremberg Tribunal on Crimes Against Jews of Europe. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- United States -- Periodicals. World War, 1939-1945 -- Jews -- Periodicals. Jews -- Politics and government -- Periodicals. OCLC lists 10 copies worldwide. Ex-library with minimal markings. Covers are slightly discolored with tape on binding. Small rip on edge and light crease through middle of all pages, but all text is clear. Good condition. (HOLO2-35-18)
Original Wraps. 4to. 11 pages. 28 cm. First edition. Typewritten copy. Detailed report on the re-establishment of vocational training courses in ORT facilities in Warsaw, discontinued during the siege of Warsaw (as the Ort Building on Dluga street was destroyed) , with no classes functioning during the 1939-40 school year, but renewed, with saved equipment and machinery moved to ORT Quarters at Zabia and Stawski. The renewed courses, until May 1941, consisted of 2, 500 pupils; the enlargement of courses offered, the programs, results, conditions for development, plans for new courses, statistics of the artisan courses, office work courses, agricultural courses, and housekeeping courses are given in detail. A section entitled Cooperation with ORT, concerning relations with the Jewish Council, and the self-financing of ORT towards its courses was negotiated. Subjects: Jews - Poland - Warsaw. Vocational education - Poland - Warsaw. World ORT Union - Reports. OCLC lists one copy (NYPL) . Light wear to edges, otherwise fresh. Good + condition. (HOLO2-113-27)
1989100147721Fallois / L'age d'homme 1989 624 pages in4. 1989. broché. 624 pages.
1st edition. Original illustrated paper wrappers. 8vo. 11 pages, 23 cm. In English. A visitors guide for Toledos Holocaust Memorial, created by Lois Dorfman, whose poetry appears in this guide. SUBJECTS: Holocaust memorials -- Ohio -- Toledo. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Poetry. No copies in OCLC. Very good condition. Rare. (HOLO2-142-13-A)
First edition. Original green illustrated wrappers with painting of abstract faces. 4to. 10 pages; 21 cm. In German and English. Tile translates to Visions from the Inferno. A program from a museum exhibition of Adolf Frankls work featuring 8 pages of color facsimiles of his paintings. Adolf Frankl was a Czechoslovakian artist. In 1944, on Yom Kippur his family was transported to the Sered camp. His wife and two children escaped from the transport. In November 1944, he was transported to Auschwitz; received prisoner number B-14395. On January 18 1945, during the death march to Gleiwitz, he escaped to a forest and to the Althammer camp where he hid. In 1945, after his liberation he moved to Krakow and from there to Bratislava, where he was reunited with his family (Yadvashem.org 2017) . For years he was haunted by memories of the time he had spent suspended between life and death, by visions which would not let him sleep. A doctor friend suggested that he should try to get rid of these oppressive memories by expressing in pictorial terms the horrors he had known. This led the painter to produce a series of works which are unique in the history of art. SUBJECT(S) : Art, Holocaust art, Jewish art. OCLC lists 3 holdings worldwide (HUC, US Holocaust Mem Mus, National Libr of Israel) . Slight rubbing. Slight toning. Very minimal markings. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-134-26)
1st edition. Original cloth with dust jacket. 4to, 316 + 48 pages. Illustrations throughout. Hebrew with English section in back. In our present research we are interested in the Jewish settlement in Vishogrod, its beginnings, its roots, its social image up from the beginning, its transformations until assuming Hassidism as its main aspect, and also in the period of revival before the destruction.
Ha-'orekh, Hayim Rabin. Tel Aviv, 1970. Very good condition. (YIZ-3-7)
199525218South San Francisco : Edu-Comm. Plus 1995. cloth hardcover in dust jacket. a few minute dust-spots to top edge. no other flaws or wear. clean. no markings. no bumps tears creases. strong binding.; giftinscribed by author and also by translator.; english text. xv-167pp. b/w photos. Signed by Author. Pre-Publication Copy . Hardcover. Near Fine/Fine. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Edu-Comm. Plus Hardcover
8vo; 238 pages; 24 cm. 1st edition. In Yiddish. Personal narrative of life in the Ghetto, including the authors' role as a leader in the resistance. 11 photo plates. The US Holocaust Memorial Museum keeps their copy of this book in their Rare Book Collection. Chip to corner of of front cover, no text affected, otherwise Good Condition. (YIZ-3-5A)
(FT) Hardcover, 8vo, 319 pages, illustrated, 21 cm. In Yiddish. Series: Dos Poylishe Yidntum; bd. 78; Variation: Poylishe Yidntum; bd. 78. SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Lithuania -- Vilnius -- History. Vilnius (Lithuania) -- Ethnic relations. Also issued online. Other Titles: Title on title page verso: Wilno; memorias. Charney (1888-1959) was a Yiddish autobiographer, poet and journalist; brother of Samuel Niger (Charney) and Baruch Charney Vladeck. Born in the shtetl of Dukor, near Minsk, Charney suffered from illness from his early childhood, a theme presented in his literary work, particularly in his various memoirs. Following his poetic debut in 1907, he spent his early years in journalism and in welfare work, especially during World War I. In 191824 he was a central figure in Moscow Yiddish literary circles. At the end of 1925 he immigrated to the U. S. But was refused entrance because of his ill health and returned to Europe. He assisted David Bergelson in 1926 in Berlin with his pro-Soviet periodical, In Shpan, and from 192729 edited the Yidishe Emigratsye along with Elias Tcherikower . After a long trip in 1929 to outlying Jewish communities in Lithuania, Latvia, and Poland he published a series of articles in the New York Yiddish daily Der Tog and other American and European Yiddish periodicals on the conditions of Jews there. Leaving Germany at the rise of Nazism, he lived in Paris until 1941, when he gained permission to enter the U. S. And settled in New York. He was appointed secretary of the I. L. Peretz Writers Club. Though confined to sanatoriums for long periods, he continued his literary work. His stories, poems, fables, and articles were printed in Yiddish newspapers all over the world. Among his most important works are Barg Aroyf and his memoirs A Yortsendling Aza: 191424 (Bickel and Estraikh in EJ, 2007) . Chipping to edges and corners of dust jacket. Light wear. Otherwise, good condition. (HOLO2-68-10); Signed by Author
1941204434Los Angeles: Jewish People's Committee of Los Angeles 1941. Folded once horizontally fine. Broadsheet printed on both sides of single leaf 9-1/4 X 12-1/4 inches. Rare bilingual broadsheet appeal to the Jewish community printed in English and Yiddish and quoting the statement from the Vilna Rabbinical Council sent to the world August 26 1941 via Moscow begging for help after the nazi invasion and praising the Russian Red Army and "our redeemer Joseph Stalin." This sheet is slightly larger than one printed by the Daily Worker in New York of which OCLC locates only a single copy. The summer of 1941 saw the mass executions of Lithuanian Jews by German einsatzkommano forces. This appeal emerged in the midst of the horror and months before the U.S. entry into the war. Jewish People's Committee of Los Angeles unknown books
21x16.5 cm. Unnumbered pages. Softcover. In good condition.
Softbound. 8vo. [52] pages. 21 cm. Illustrated. First edition. Text in English, introduction also in Yiddish and Lithuanian. A unique archival collection of 16 authentic posters from the Vilna-Vilnius Ghetto. Includes a time line of the Vilna ghetto with 3 black and white period photographs of streets. 16 high quality reproductions of posters with English translations and descriptive captions. While the Gestapo dogs were searching for hidden Jewish children, the posters exhibited here, announcing the events of a living culture, were witness to the fact that the Ghetto inmates had not been turned into slaves. (Page [1]) Subjects: Jews -- Lithuania -- Vilnius -- Intellectual life -- Posters -- Exhibitions. Jews -- Lithuania -- Vilnius -- History -- 20th century -- Posters -- Exhibitions. OCLC: 52880083. Light shelfwear, very good + condition. (HOLO2-107-38-XLDPABFCCVOR)
1975162863Villejuif: the municipality 1975. 241p. b&w photo section mostly archived period images first edition green oilcloth boards gilt titling a bit rubbed long ink inscription signed by a resident of Villejuif a very good copy. Laid in find a color brochure of the antifacist museum consisting of six 4x8 inch panels showing exhibits. --Caveat emptor: volume is very faintly musty. Aka Vassieux-en-Vercors. "A la occasion du cinquantieme anniversaire de la Municipalite Communiste de Villejuif." Marchais was at writing the secretary-general of the French Communist Party. the municipality unknown books
SIGNED BY AUTHOR. Contains b&w and color plates. 230x155 mm. 192 pages. Gilt hardcover with dust-jacket. Cover edges slightly bumped and rubbed. Spine edges slightly bumped. Ex-Library copy with the usual marks. Else in good condition.
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.
270827Köln: Böhlau 2021. 206 S. Br. *sehr gutes Expl.*.
[IN HEBREW]. [SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR]. 210x140 mm. 194 pages. Hardcover. Cover corners slightly bumped. Spine top edge slightly bumped. Else in good condition.
Original blue cloth, 12mo; 557 pages. As Hitler's power in Germany grew, it was important for Jews in Europe and America to assert the proud history of Jewish communities throughout Europe, but especially in the German-speaking lands. Part of the Jewish Communities Series. A very nice copy with bright gilt on spine. Very Good Condition (Comhist1-6) xx
1st edition. Original Wraps. 8vo. 176, [15] pages. 24 cm. In Yiddish. 'Resistance and Destruction in the Czestochowa Ghetto. ' Title page verso: Martyrologia I walka w getcie czestochowskim. Important history of the Czestochowa Ghetto, with maps, illustrations, and reproduction of documents. Published by The Jewish Historical Institute of Poland, written by Liber Brener based on the diary which he continued for a long time in the ghetto and in the camp. After the liberation, L. Brener restored his memories and verified and completed them with a series of German, Polish and Yiddish documents as well as testimony from other Jewish survivors of the Czenstochower ghetto. Subjects: Jews - Poland - Czestochowa. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Poland - Czestochowa. Ethnic relations. Jews. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) 1939 - 1945 Czestochowa (Poland) - Ethnic relations. (OCLC)19307926. Ex-library with only pencil on title page. Other than slight browning of pages, this is in near fine condition. (HOLO2-117-47B-+)
8vo. X, 201 pages. Illustrated. First edition. SUBJECT (S) : Jews - Germany - Rhineland-Palatinate; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Germany - Rhineland-Palatinate; Holocaust survivors - Germany - Rhineland-Palatinate; Rhineland-palatinate (Germany) - ethnic relations. CONTENTS: The history of Sonderburg: Jews in Sonderburg; The Nazi power structure in Sonderburg; Ethnic relations between Jews and gentiles before 1933; Jewish reactions to Nazi victimization; German reactions to the persecution of Jews; Sonderburg Jews and gentiles today; An analysis of interethnic relations in Sonderburg; Conclusion: the myth of assimilation. ISBN: 0897890477. Spine sunned, edges tanned, top corner bumped, good condition. (Holo2-12-23)
8vo. X, 201 pages. Illustrated. First edition. SUBJECT (S) : Jews - Germany - Rhineland-Palatinate; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Germany - Rhineland-Palatinate; Holocaust survivors - Germany - Rhineland-Palatinate; Rhineland-palatinate (Germany) - ethnic relations. CONTENTS: The history of Sonderburg: Jews in Sonderburg; The Nazi power structure in Sonderburg; Ethnic relations between Jews and gentiles before 1933; Jewish reactions to Nazi victimization; German reactions to the persecution of Jews; Sonderburg Jews and gentiles today; An analysis of interethnic relations in Sonderburg; Conclusion: the myth of assimilation. ISBN: 0897890477. Spine sunned, edges tanned, top corner bumped, good condition. (Holo2-12-23)