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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. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Soviet Union -- Political and social conditions. OCLC: 7431478. Ex- library with usual marks, heavy wear on spine, some wear on cover, Good Condition Overall. (YIZ-16-12)
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)
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)
4to; 1st edition. 4to, Volume 1 and 2 cloth, Volume 3 softcover, all as issued. An outstanidng photgraphic memorial to the Jewish Vilna, "The Jerusalem of Lithuania. " with well over 2000 photos and facsimiles. Folding map of Vilna, often missing, is present in the pocket of volume I, as issued. Title and all text and captions in Russian, English, Hebrew, and Yiddish. Includes indexes. SUBJECT(S): Jews -- Lithuania -- Vilnius -- Pictorial works. Juifs -- Lituanie -- Vilnious -- Ouvrages illustre´s. Juden. OCLC: 970933020. Very Good Condition. (YIZ-12-15)
1974List3157St. Petersburg Florida: unpublished 1974. Ninety-four typed and photocopied pages measuring 8 ½ x 11 inches in a soft binding. Binding with wear; pages generally excellent to Near Fine. Overall excellent to Near Fine. Annemarie Bliwernitz 1905–2005 née Entz was born in Notzendorf East Prussia. In 1952 after surviving both World Wars she and her husband Bruno 1900–1992 immigrated first to Canada and then to the United States. Offered here is Annemarie’s unpublished memoir written between 1972 and 1974.<br /> <br /> Bliwernitz grew up in a wealthy land-owning country family which she remembers lived far west enough that they did not have to flee the Russians during World War I and was less affected by the postwar economic situation than were city residents. Most of the memoir is taken up by Bliwernitz’s remembrances of World War II and life leading up to it. Of Hitler’s rise she writes:<br /> <br /> “During these years conditions got worse in Germany . A new name came up ‘Adolf Hitler.’ – It was not hard for him to find followers now by the thousands and soon by the millions. He dared to stand up against the Communists with his brown uniformed S.A. men and a new wind seemed to blow over our illfated land. No wonder young people looked up to him and followed the new star nobody had much to lose. . Bruno and brother-in-law Willy after some meetings attended showed up in the new brown uniform also and farmers and laborers seemed to be united in that new idea. – It really changed Germany in a short time nobody could deny that unemployment ceased people got jobs again and housewives and mothers could buy the necessities of life for their families especially food. And it brought us to our feet again also.â€<br /> <br /> Though of course Bliwernitz maintains that the “Concentration Camps and what happened in them was not known to the German people" she mentions that Bruno quickly became an Arbeitsdienstführer—essentially a labor camp overseer—and remembers dissenters being disappeared:<br /> <br /> “As an example I will tell about Bruno’s oldest brother Alfred. He was all against Hitler from the beginning. One day he came home and picked up his neighbor’s paper at his frontdoor and wrote his ideas about Hitler and his lies down with pencil. This neighbor reported him they picked him up and that was the last his family saw of him. They were told ½ year later that he had died in Stuhm West Prussia a Concentration Camp. No explanation to his wife whatsoever. The same destiny happened to my co-worker a highly educated person at the Translation Office. She said in the lavatory where many ladies could hear: Hitler’s big picture in the office should be placed here in the toilet-rooms where it belongs. One of the ‘kind’ co-workers reported her and she came next day only to pick up her belongings and was not seen any more.â€<br /> <br /> While Bruno is sent to the Eastern Front Bliwernitz and their children flee the Russians trying to reach the Americans on the Western Front. Along the way they encounter deserting German soldiers and near Hamburg liberated camp inmates:<br /> <br /> “Shooting started close to us and we heard bombs exploding would we be hit We found out that the Concentration Camp near us had been opened and those freed inmates had shot their guardians. At daybreak we met the first one still in his black and white striped prison-suit kneeling on the ground by the chicken-coop and with his both hands feeding himself out of the bowl with the chicken food. . They came to us begging for a little bit of salt to cook the horse-meat they had cut out of the dead horses lying along the ditches . We talked to them and I remember one told me he was imprisoned because of his religion not to go to any war. He was from Elbing where I had gone to school as a young girl.â€<br /> <br /> The family are reunited with Bruno and shortly before they surrender to the Americans they destroy the evidence of their party involvement: “Bruno’s N.S.D.A.P. membership-card my certificate for the ‘mother’s cross’ the passports of Horst and Juergen showing that they had been students of the Nazi-school in Stuhm etc.†After the German surrender the family is sent back east where they struggle to avoid starvation then return west where they are sent to live in Hardegsen. They finally decide in 1951 to emigrate as life in postwar Germany is simply too difficult but make the mistake of being honest about their history:<br /> <br /> “Another big obstacle for us was that Bruno had been in a member in a Nazi-party though not an active one. But it was still a handicap in those days for any undertaking. We had not kept it secret in our immigration papers and they wanted a detailed description about our political involvement. That we did wrote a long letter in German didn’t have the money for an interpreter and never got an answer. . That was a bitter pill to swallow.â€<br /> <br /> After this they decide to try for Canada instead and this time savvily “didn’t mention any Nazi-party attachmentâ€. This is a success; the family moves to Winnipeg and eventually to St. Petersburg Florida where the narrative was written. Bliwernitz recalls working as a housekeeper which she contrasts with her previous life in which she and her family would not allow maids farm hands or tradesmen to eat at their table with them.<br /> <br /> Of interest to historians of the German civilian experience during the Second World War especially that of women and children. unpublished unknown
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)
19762090502113709065Not Available 1976. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Not Available paperback
saggi e testimonianze di: Gino Amato, Gaetano Arfè, Jaurès Busoni, Giovan Battista Canepa, Centro Studi, Pompeo Colajanni, Adriano Del Pont, Pietro Fabbri, Mario Ferrari Aggradi, Giovanni Ferro, Aldo Garosci, Mario Mammuccari, Leoluca Orlando, Aldo Rosselli, Leo Valiani, Giuliano Vassalli, Luigi Villani - bross. edit. ill. con bandelle - prima edizione - prefazione di Nino Paino - illustrazioni in b.n. nel testo
Il Gruppo di Lavoro: Antonio Pagnozzi, Massimo Occello, Attilio Ercolani, Nunzio Chieco, Alberto Alberti, Giuseppe Scandone, Feliciano Marruzzo, Gianfranco Zuccheddu, Gaspare Caliendo, Antonio Fusco, Antonella Ferrante e Vincenzo Granato - cartone edit. con sovrac. ill., lievi tracce d'uso alla sovrac. - corredato di lettere d'accompagnamento della Postulazione romana, del Capo della Polizia e di tre santini - prima edizione - presentazioni di Camillo Ruini, Claudio Scajola. Amos Luzzatto, Giovanni De Gennaro - numerosi facsimile e illustrazioni in b.n. nel testo
bross. edit. ill. con sovrac. ill., gravi mancanze e rotture alla sovrac., fioriture e bruniture - prima edizione - illustrazioni in b.n. fuori testo
LEGATURA IN BROSSURA EDITORIALE CON IMMAGINE DI HITLER numero pagine: 56 formato: 22X16 stato conservazione: BUONO, PIEGA AD ANGOLO DI COPERTINA collana: COLLEZIONE DEI GRANDI DISCORSI
LEGATURA IN BROSSURA EDITORIALE ILLUSTRATA CON IMMAGINE DI HITLER numero pagine: 40 formato: 21.6X15.4 stato conservazione: BUONO collana: COLLEZIONE DEI GRANDI DISCORSI
LEGATURA IN BROSSURA EDITORIALE CON IMMAGINE DI HITLER numero pagine: 31 formato: 21.6X15.8 stato conservazione: BUONO, PIEGHETTA AD UN PAIO DI FOGLI AGLI ANGOLI collana: COLLEZIONE DEI GRANDI DISCORSI - DOCUMENTI DEL TEMPO
LEGATURA IN BROSSURA EDITORIALE CON IMMAGINE DI HITLER numero pagine: 28 formato: 21.9X15.7 stato conservazione: BUONO collana: COLLEZIONE DEI GRANDI DISCORSI - DOCUMENTI DEL TEMPO
LEGATURA IN BROSSURA EDITORIALE CON IMMAGINE DI HITLER numero pagine: 75 formato: 21.9X16 stato conservazione: BUONO, LIEVE TRACCE D'USO IN COPERTINA ED UN PAIO DI PIEGHE AGLI ANGOLI ALL'INTERNO collana: COLLEZIONE DEI GRANDI DISCORSI
LEGATURA IN BROSSURA EDITORIALE CON IMMAGINE DI RIBBENTROP numero pagine: 38 formato: 21.5X15.6 stato conservazione: BUONO, PIEGHETTA AD ANGOLI DELLE PAGINE collana: COLLEZIONE DEI GRANDI DISCORSI - DOCUMENTI DEL TEMPO
Seconda edizione.<BR>In 8°; pp. VIII -142; illustrato con numerose fotografie e riproduzioni di documenti in nero fuori testo; brossura muta con sovraccoperta editoriale illustrata; cucito.<BR>Complessivamente discreto: carta ingiallita, legatura lenta, strappi e perdite alla sovraccoperta.
bross. edit. ill., dorso muto - illustrazioni in b.n. nel testo
in 4°, bross. edit. con sovrac. ill., rotture e tracce d'uso alla sovrac., residuo di etichetta al retro della sovrac. - prima edizione - riccamente illustrato in b.n. e a colori nel testo
in testa al front.: Archivio Centrale dello Stato - cartone edit. ill., minime bruniture in cop. - prima edizione
in testa al front.: Archivio Centrale dello Stato - cartone edit. ill., minime bruniture in cop. - prima edizione
in testa al front.: Archivio Centrale dello Stato - due volumi, cartone edit. ill., minime bruniture in cop. - prima edizione
in testa al front.: Archivio Centrale dello Stato - due volumi, cartone edit. ill., minime bruniture in cop. - prima edizione
in testa al front.: Archivio Centrale dello Stato - due volumi, cartone edit. ill., minime bruniture in cop. - prima edizione
in testa al front.: Archivio Centrale dello Stato - cartone edit. ill., lievi macchie in cop. - prima edizione