5 382 résultats
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)
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 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)
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 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)
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)
8vo; 154 pages; Inscribed by the author. Researched personal memoir/history of this Polish-Ukranian- Jewish community wiped out in the Holocaust. Jacket has some stains, Very good condition in Very good- jacket. (HOLO2-98-24) xx
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. Nice, clean copy in very good condition. (HOLO2-19-45).xxxxxxxxxx
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. Some tape along spine, otherwise a nice, clean copy in very good condition. (HOLO2-62-6)
Original illustrated Paper Wrappers, 8vo, 192 pages. Includes Picutre cover with Antisemitic Jewish charicature on gold-colored foiled paper. Claims that low-life Jewish "Lumpen-traders" are taking over the Scandinavian economy (i. E. Moses Smith instead of Adam Smith) ; Brandt includes Bonniers publishing company as an example.Light wear, about Very Good Condition. (Holo2-139-18A)
Paper wrappers, 4to. , 32 pages. On cover: Views of some distinguished contemporaries and of leaders of public opinion of earlier days on asylum, and their application to German Political and religious refugees. Prepared for [the] Committee of Ten. Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, chairman. The committee of ten included Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, Miss Mary Dreier, Miss Elizabeth Eastman, Mrs. Kendall Emerson, Mrs. John Finley, Mrs. Alexander Kohut, Mrs. James Lees Laidlaw, Mrs. Jacob A. Riis, Mrs. Charles Cary Rumsey, and Mrs. F. Louis Slade. SUBJECT (S) : Asylum, Right of. Political refugees. Emigration and immigration law -- United States. Light staining to cover, small piece missing to edge of cover, pages lightly tanned. Good + condition. (HOLO2-78-9)
Original blue publisher's boards, 12mo; 1240 pages; Singerman lists the translation (#67) , quoting Norman Cohn: "[The] Bible of the whole voelkisch-racist movement" Singerman calls this book "Of the utmost importance for its influence on Adolf Hitler [and, by the way, Alfred Rosenberg]" Singerman continues (citing Cohn) : "Here all history was presented as a bitter struggle between spirituality, embodied in the German 'race, ' and materialism, embodied in the Jewish 'race'--the only two pure races for all the others were but 'chaos of peoples. ' In Chamberlain's view the Jewish 'race' had been relentlessly striving, down the ages, to secure absolute dominion over all other nations. If once [sic] this 'race' were decisively defeated, the Germanic 'race' would be free to realize its own divinely appointed destiny--which was to create a new, radiant world, transfused with a noble spirituality and mysteriously combining modern technology and science with the rural, hierarchical culture of earlier times. " The author was also the husband of Richard Wagner's daughter. A very important book. This edition, issued on the eve of the Nazi siesure of power in Germany, is issued as an "ungekürzte Volksausgabe"--an unabridged, complete, popular edition. Slight wear & rubbing to covers, Good Condition both Volumes. (AS-2-5A)
Cloth. Vi, 542 pages. 8vo. Vol. 32 in Symposium Series. Proceedings of the Annual Scholars Conference on the Holocaust and the Churches, held in Galloway Township, N. J. , March 3-5, 1991. The Conference has been devoted to remembering, learning and teaching the lessons of the Holocaust in tandem with the study of the churches struggle and failure to confront Nazi anti-Semitism and the Final Solution. Contains 32 papers and articles by various international contributors from many of the relevant disciplines. SUBJECT (S) : Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Influence Congresses; Holocaust (Christian theology) Congresses; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Netherlands Congresses; Jews -- Persecutions -- Netherlands Congresses; Christianity and other religions -- Judaism Congresses; Judaism -- Relations -- Christianity Congresses; Netherlands -- Ethnic relations -- Congresses. Most entries include bibliographical references. ISBN: 0773495169. From the library of Professor Samuel Abrahamsen (founder and former chairman of Brooklyn College department of Judaic Studies) , a contributor to the volume. Gold lettering on cover, considerable pencil markings by Abrahamsen, including corrections to his own entry. Very good condition. (Holo2-30-15)
Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. 8 pages. 21 cm. In English and Hebrew. For Victory in Europe Day, a very important celebration in any American Synaogogue, for it's members as Americans and as Jews. SUBJECT (S) : Jewish occasional sermons. OCLC lists one copy worldwide (Brandeis University Library) . Nice clean copy in very good condition. (HOLO2-64-20)
1st edition, original cloth, 8vo. 518 + 96 pages. In Hebrew and Yiddish with an English section. Eight years have gone by since we first began preparations for this book on the Jewish community of Rozhan, until at long last it can be published now. It was a great effort made by a number of people devoted to the weighty and difficult task to erect a fitting memorial to our community. It is what other communities of Israel have done and no doubt it is the right thing to do for the people of the book. Rozhan was no different from other Jewish townships in Poland that are no more, but to us, who were born and grew up there, she has something unique. It is not only the landscape, the topographic situation on the high bank of the River Narew. It was also the Jews, who had been living at the place for generations, rebuilding it stubbornly and assiduously many times. In fact after each of the many wars that swept over the region, that lies on the road from Russia to Warsaw. Those were homely Jews of all social strata, orthodox and freethinkers, Zionists and anti-Zionists. Above all we have at heart the Jewish youth of Rozhan that took upon itself the task to redeem the world and the nation - and only few of them have reached the final haven of rest here in Israel, while others, of the few who did survive, have found shelter in the West and built their homes there. It is the intention of this book to keep our past alive and to preserve the shining memory of those who lived and were active there, to show that they were not anonymous and to describe their striving and struggling to maintain a definitely Jewish, religious, social and political existence. This book wants to tell future generations how the Jews of Rozhan created Jewish life in the midst of a hostile environment, how they built for themselves the framework of a society and filled it with deep-rooted national values, how they created their own institutions, that were able impose their authority - after democratically arrived at decisions with no governmental powers behind them. The book also wants to keep alive the old Jewish spirit maintained by our people everywhere, the rule Jews stand by each other that found its expression in individual help as well as in organized assistance such as various mutual funds. The book is also meant as a memorial to the tragedy of our people. Jews of Rozhan had to run for their lives during the very first days of the war, and one after the other they fell as victims on the bloodstained roads of Poland. Some survived after having passed through the hell of exile in the vastness of Russia and Siberia and back; only a few were lucky enough to reach Israel and to build new homes here. The book contains about 600 pages and it reflects a collective effort. It was not easy to obtain the material, as there are next to no writers among our people. So we had to apply to as many of our townsfolk as possible in order to make them talk or write - those who did write were a minority and most contributions were given orally and had to be taken down. We endeavoured to get in touch with as many as possible and to give a rounded out picture of the town, its history, people and folklore, but we feel that in spite of all our efforts we could not note everything worth remembering. All we can say is that we have done our best to present a many-sided picture of everything that was human and Jewish and good. (from English preface) SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Poland -- Ro´z? An -- History. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Ethnic relations.
Original wrappers. 4to. 21 pages. 28 cm. First Edition. About Jews in the Holocaust. "Jewish New Year Broadcast auspices of the American Jewish Committee. 2: 00 - 2: 30 P. M. (EWT) . September 17, 1944. Sunday. Tonight at sundown Americans of the Jewish faith and Jews the world over will begin the traditional services of Rosh Hashonah, the Jewish New Year, ushering in the Year 5705. This afternoon the National Broadcasting Company in cooperation with the American Jewish Committee brings you a special Rosh Hashonah broadcast. You will hear a dramatization of "Behold the Jew, " written by one of Britain's foremost poets, Ada Jackson. This poem, which was awarded Britain's Greenwood Poetry Prize for 1943, was adapted for radio by Milton Geiger. The dramatization will star Miss Florence Eldridge of the stage and screen, as narrator. (Page 1) Subjects: Radio Play WWII. Rosh Hashonah. OCLC lists 3 copies worldwide. (Spertus Institute, Boston Anthenaeum, UPenn) Crease from original horizontal fold, with opened paper seal. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-112-19)
First separate edition. Original black boards. 4to. 204 pages; 30 cm. Written in Hebrew. Title translates to Questions and Responses Avne Hefetz. A book of responsum by Aharon Levin, a rabbinic scholar who died in the Holocaust. Contains texts from the Talmud, Midrash, Zohar, and Targum. The Vaad Hatzalah was an organization to rescue Jews in Europe from the Holocaust. It was founded in November 1939 by the Union of Orthodox Rabbis of the United States and Canada (Wikipedia) . After the war, the Vaad Hatzalah printed a select number of Jewish texts for the survivors living in the DP camps. Additional title page in Polish. SUBJECT(S) : Rabbinic literature, Responsa. OCLC lists 1 holding worldwide (UCLA) . Original cover peeling of cover board with chunks missing that do not affect text. Library markings. Browning to pages. Good + condition. (Holo2-134-10)
(FT) Hardcover, 98, vi pages, 8vo, 25 cm. In Hebrew. SUBJECT(S) : Judaism -- Customs and practices. Marti, Ramon, d. Ca. 1286. Pugio fidei. Includes bibliographical references and index. Other Titles: Shkiin "A few words on some Jewish legends, customs and literary sources found in Karaite and Christian works (including an index of the Jewish books cited in Pugio Fidei of Raymund Martini) ". OCLC lists 17 copies worldwide. Ex-library. Chipping to edges of jacket. Otherwise, very good condition in the scarce dust jacket. A beautiful copy (Holo2-19-53)
Moskve [Moscow]: Melukhe-farlag "Der Emes", 1946. Cloth, 8vo, 167 pages. Includes portraits. 20 cm. In Yiddish. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Persecutions -- Belarus -- Minsk. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Belarus -- Minsk -- Personal narratives. World War, 1939-1945 -- Jewish resistance -- Belarus -- Minsk. OCLC: 12284925. Backstrip replaced. Very Good Condition. (YID-17-15A-ALEX)
Newsletter, Legal Sized. 2 pages. The Seven Arts Feature Syndicate was a weekly, New York-based, Ango-Jewish weekly periodical in the 1930s. This article, presenting the standpoint of one individual is published because it presents a point of view which is of unusual significance at this juncture. Mr. Montors stand has the support of many leaders in this country and is as fervently opposed by other outstanding personalities. Joseph Brainin, who disagrees with many of the arguments advanced by Henry Montor, will answer this article in our next issue. Leaders [sic] are invited to express their reaction to this interesting debate. Editor. OCLC lists one copy (National Library of Israel) , although which issue is unclear. Crease through middle of sheets and some light blurring of type, but all text is legible. Very good condition. (HOLO2-37-28)
No Date (1937). 1st edition. Original Wrappers; 8vo. 58 pages. Dutch Antifascist pamphlet. E. D. D. -Serie. No. 4. Second edition. In Dutch. Contains much material on anti-Semitism. "Facts and data concerning the goals of the N. S. B. Collected by the press service of the Dutch movement for Unity and Democracy. " Very good condition. (H-35-7)
Paper Wraps. 8vo. 40 pages. In German. Title translates to English as: Youth at Risk. Nazi-era publication warning of the degeneracy of youth brought about by the disintegration of society and reflecting the fear that Germany and German culture were on the brink of disaster. OCLC lists 6 libraries worldwide. Front cover detached, but included, with small stains, darkening and ripping on some corners. Lacks backstrip. Pages have some darkening but text is clear and internal binding is in tight. Good condition with gorgeous period cover. Scarce. (HOLO2-29-20)
Original Wrappers. 8vo. 166 pages. 21 cm. First Edition. In Ukrainian. "Although his first poems were written in 1916, Osmachka began his literary career while he was a student at the Kyiv Institute of People's Education from 1920 to 1923. He belonged to the literary organizations Aspys and Lanka [Later known as 'Maisternia Revoliutsiinoho Slovaâ' (Workshop of the Revolutionary Word) or MARS] and published his first collection of poetry, Krucha (The Precipice) , in 1922; it was followed by two more collections, Skytski vohni (The Scythian Fires, 1925) and Klekit ([Crane's] Clacking, 1929) . Like other members of MARS he was attacked and arrested for his 'unpolitical' literary works, but managed to save himself from execution by feigning insanity. During the 1930s he faced constant persecution by the authorities and was unable to publish any works. During the Second World War he fled to Western Ukraine, then to displaced persons camps in Germany, and finally to the United States. Osmachka's personal ordeal had lasting effects on him, and until his death he suffered from a persecution complex. Nonetheless he resumed his literary career in 1943 in Lviv with the publication of his fourth collection of poetry, Suchasnykam (To My Contemporaries) . In the displaced persons camps, where he was a member of the MUR literary organization, he published his epic poem, written in octaves, Poet (Poet, 1946) , as well as his first prose work, Starshyi Boiaryn (The Best Man, 1946)." (Encyclopedia of Ukraine. ) Subjects: Ukraine; Fiction; Short Stories. OCLC lists 2 copies worldwide. (Cleveland Pub. Libr. , Toronto Pub. Libr. ) Light age toning and edgewear. Very good contion. Scarce and important (UKR-1-29)xx