Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
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Displaying 25 - 36 of 47
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $100
Unsold
"Vezot Lakarov VeLarachok", a newsletter published by the Search Bureau for Missing Relatives of the Jewish Agency (in conjunction with Va'ad haHatzalah). Issue 6. Tel-Aviv, August 1945.
Issue 6 of the newsletter "Vezot Lakarov VeLarachok" published by the Search Bureau for Missing Relatives of the Jewish Agency. The newsletter was published during the years 1945-1947 and contained many articles about She'erit Hapletah around the world, lists of names of survivors according to towns, camps and more, and lists of illegal immigrants to Palestine. In order to override the license requirement imposed by the British Mandate authorities on regularly publishing a newspaper, the first twenty issues of the newsletter were published under different titles, each presented as a "One-time issue".
8 pp, 47.5 cm. Fair-good condition. Detached leaves. Fold lines. Stains. Creases, tears and several open tears, mostly along the edges and fold lines. Penned notations on the margins of the last page.
Issue 6 of the newsletter "Vezot Lakarov VeLarachok" published by the Search Bureau for Missing Relatives of the Jewish Agency. The newsletter was published during the years 1945-1947 and contained many articles about She'erit Hapletah around the world, lists of names of survivors according to towns, camps and more, and lists of illegal immigrants to Palestine. In order to override the license requirement imposed by the British Mandate authorities on regularly publishing a newspaper, the first twenty issues of the newsletter were published under different titles, each presented as a "One-time issue".
8 pp, 47.5 cm. Fair-good condition. Detached leaves. Fold lines. Stains. Creases, tears and several open tears, mostly along the edges and fold lines. Penned notations on the margins of the last page.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $150
Unsold
Bulletin, the Rescue Committee of the Jewish Agency for Palestine. [Jerusalem], February 1946. Mimeographed typescript.
The issue contains articles about the fate of the Jews during the Holocaust and information about the state of She'erit Hapletah in Europe after the Holocaust: "A Letter from Vilnius", "From a Letter about the State of the Jews of Poland", "The State of the Jews in Vienna after the War", "The State of the Jewish Refugees Coming to Austria", "A Story by a Member of the Jewish Underground Organization in France, who was in the Glinice camp" and more.
[1] leaf, 13 pp, 26.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Foxing (many stains on some of the leaves). Fold lines. Creases to margins. Several pinholes to the first two leaves. The first leaf is detached.
The issue contains articles about the fate of the Jews during the Holocaust and information about the state of She'erit Hapletah in Europe after the Holocaust: "A Letter from Vilnius", "From a Letter about the State of the Jews of Poland", "The State of the Jews in Vienna after the War", "The State of the Jewish Refugees Coming to Austria", "A Story by a Member of the Jewish Underground Organization in France, who was in the Glinice camp" and more.
[1] leaf, 13 pp, 26.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Foxing (many stains on some of the leaves). Fold lines. Creases to margins. Several pinholes to the first two leaves. The first leaf is detached.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $100
Unsold
Four paper receipts issued by the Organization of Central European Immigrants and the Institute for Foreign Trade Ltd., dealing with the delivery of packages sent by a resident of Haifa to her relative in the American Occupation Zone in Munich after World War II. Haifa, 1946-1947.
The receipts document deliveries of a raincoat, shoes, food and two hundred cigarettes.
Size varies. Fair-good condition. Stains. Filing holes.
Provenance: The Rimon Family Collection.
The receipts document deliveries of a raincoat, shoes, food and two hundred cigarettes.
Size varies. Fair-good condition. Stains. Filing holes.
Provenance: The Rimon Family Collection.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $150
Sold for: $188
Including buyer's premium
Five paper items related to the search for relatives during World War II and after it:
* An airograph sent from a branch of the Jewish Agency in London to the representative of the Agency in Jerusalem, containing information about Holocaust survivors in Europe whose relatives were searching for, July 1944. * Letter by the Chief Rabbi's Religious Emergency Council, with a request to track down a Holocaust survivor's sister, who is alone in Belsen, August 1945. * A telegram on a form of the Hungarian Red Cross, which was sent from Újpest, Budapest, to Kibbutz Tel-Yosef, by a father who had not heard from his son for nine months, December 1941. * A typewritten note, which was sent from Palestine to an envoy in Italy, about the search for a man in a camp in the area of Torino (undated). * A printed leaflet, "Telegrams, letters and regards from the survivors among the Jews of Poland who were accepted by the United Committee for Aiding the Jews of Poland, Jerusalem" (Hebrew), Jerusalem, the year of printing is not indicated [ca. 1945-1946].
Size and condition vary. The printed leaflet has tears reinforced with tape.
Provenance: The Rimon Family Collection.
* An airograph sent from a branch of the Jewish Agency in London to the representative of the Agency in Jerusalem, containing information about Holocaust survivors in Europe whose relatives were searching for, July 1944. * Letter by the Chief Rabbi's Religious Emergency Council, with a request to track down a Holocaust survivor's sister, who is alone in Belsen, August 1945. * A telegram on a form of the Hungarian Red Cross, which was sent from Újpest, Budapest, to Kibbutz Tel-Yosef, by a father who had not heard from his son for nine months, December 1941. * A typewritten note, which was sent from Palestine to an envoy in Italy, about the search for a man in a camp in the area of Torino (undated). * A printed leaflet, "Telegrams, letters and regards from the survivors among the Jews of Poland who were accepted by the United Committee for Aiding the Jews of Poland, Jerusalem" (Hebrew), Jerusalem, the year of printing is not indicated [ca. 1945-1946].
Size and condition vary. The printed leaflet has tears reinforced with tape.
Provenance: The Rimon Family Collection.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $150
Unsold
Two letters sent by Holocaust survivors, displaced persons, to the Secretary-General of the United Nations Trygve Lie. Germany, April-May 1947. English.
Two mimeographed letters, of identical content, which were sent by Holocaust survivors in DP camps in the American Zone of Germany. At the beginning of the letter, which is addressed in advance to the Secretary-General of the United Nations, there is space for filling-in the personal details – the survivor's name and the camp he is staying in. In the letter, the survivors request that the UN examine the question of Palestine and enable them to immigrate to Palestine.
Enclosed are the original envelopes in which the letters were sent, addressed to the Secretary-General of the United Nations, and stamped with postmarks from Munich, May 1947, and from Kassel, April 1947.
[2] leaves, 28 cm. Good condition. Fold lines.
Two mimeographed letters, of identical content, which were sent by Holocaust survivors in DP camps in the American Zone of Germany. At the beginning of the letter, which is addressed in advance to the Secretary-General of the United Nations, there is space for filling-in the personal details – the survivor's name and the camp he is staying in. In the letter, the survivors request that the UN examine the question of Palestine and enable them to immigrate to Palestine.
Enclosed are the original envelopes in which the letters were sent, addressed to the Secretary-General of the United Nations, and stamped with postmarks from Munich, May 1947, and from Kassel, April 1947.
[2] leaves, 28 cm. Good condition. Fold lines.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $300
Unsold
Der Bericht des Jüdischen Rettungskomitees aus Budapest 1942-1945, Vorgelegt von Dr. Rezsö Kasztner [The report of the Jewish Rescue Committee in Budapest 1942-1945, Submitted by Dr. Rezsö Kasztner] [Switzerland or Budapest?]: Vaadat Ezra Vö-Hazalah Bö Budapest, [1946]. German.
Report (mimeographed typescript) on the activity of the Jewish Aid and Rescue Committee in Budapest during World War II, submitted by Rezsö (Israel) Kastner to the first Zionist congress after the Holocaust in Basel, 1946. Classified "Confidential" on the top of the cover.
The report was written by Kastner shortly after World War II and it contains an extensive description of the events of the Holocaust in Hungary, a review of the activity of the Jewish Aid and Rescue Committee and a documentation of the efforts to organize the departure of the "Rescue Train" from Hungary to Switzerland. Appearing at the end of the report are several copies of affidavits and letters of recommendation in favor of Kastner, describing his activity for the Jews of Hungary and the financial help he gave the Jews of the Theresienstadt Ghetto.
The report aided Kastner's acquittal after a court decision in 1955 stated that "Kastner sold his soul to the devil" and collaborated with the Nazis and after he was assassinated in Tel-Aviv in March 1957. The report was translated to Hebrew and published in the early 1980s by the "Society for the Commemoration of Israel Kastner".
[1], XIII, 191, [6] leaves, approx. 30 cm. Bound with a string. Good condition. Stains. A few creases and small tears to the margins. Tears and blemishes to cover.
Report (mimeographed typescript) on the activity of the Jewish Aid and Rescue Committee in Budapest during World War II, submitted by Rezsö (Israel) Kastner to the first Zionist congress after the Holocaust in Basel, 1946. Classified "Confidential" on the top of the cover.
The report was written by Kastner shortly after World War II and it contains an extensive description of the events of the Holocaust in Hungary, a review of the activity of the Jewish Aid and Rescue Committee and a documentation of the efforts to organize the departure of the "Rescue Train" from Hungary to Switzerland. Appearing at the end of the report are several copies of affidavits and letters of recommendation in favor of Kastner, describing his activity for the Jews of Hungary and the financial help he gave the Jews of the Theresienstadt Ghetto.
The report aided Kastner's acquittal after a court decision in 1955 stated that "Kastner sold his soul to the devil" and collaborated with the Nazis and after he was assassinated in Tel-Aviv in March 1957. The report was translated to Hebrew and published in the early 1980s by the "Society for the Commemoration of Israel Kastner".
[1], XIII, 191, [6] leaves, approx. 30 cm. Bound with a string. Good condition. Stains. A few creases and small tears to the margins. Tears and blemishes to cover.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $300
Unsold
Collection of photographs and documents that had belonged to Joseph Bande and his son David, who were students of the first yeshiva that opened in Europe after the Holocaust – "Chachmei Tzarfat Yeshiva". Landsberg (Germany) and Aix-les-Bains (France), mid-late 1940s. French, a little Hebrew and English.
The documents reveal that before joining the "Chachmei Tzarfat Yeshiva" in Aix-les-Bains, Joseph and David stayed at the Landsberg DP camp (where Joseph served as the Head of the Religious Committee).
The collection contains: * Photographs of rabbis and students of the "Chachmei Tzarfat Yeshiva" in Aix-les-Bains. * Photograph of a group of survivors in Landsberg (alongside a sign of "Poalei Agudat Yisrael") and additional photographs (possibly, some of them are from Landsberg). * Four certificates that were issued to Joseph Bande: certificate issued by the Polish Red Cross – indicating Joseph had been in the camps of Auschwitz, Theresienstadt, Stutthof and Flossenbürg; certificate issued by the Joint organization in Landsberg – indicating Joseph was the Head of the Religious Committee at the DP camp; certificate of occupancy, indicating he lived in Paris, with his picture; certificate of occupancy, indicating he lived in Aix-les-Bains, signed by the mayor of the town. * Two letters that Joseph sent to David after the two immigrated to Palestine (in official envelopes, with Joseph's old address in Aix-les-Bains); envelope of a letter that was sent from London to the "Chachmei Tzarfat Yeshiva" in 1946.
A total of approx. 40 items. Size and condition vary. Good-fair overall condition.
The documents reveal that before joining the "Chachmei Tzarfat Yeshiva" in Aix-les-Bains, Joseph and David stayed at the Landsberg DP camp (where Joseph served as the Head of the Religious Committee).
The collection contains: * Photographs of rabbis and students of the "Chachmei Tzarfat Yeshiva" in Aix-les-Bains. * Photograph of a group of survivors in Landsberg (alongside a sign of "Poalei Agudat Yisrael") and additional photographs (possibly, some of them are from Landsberg). * Four certificates that were issued to Joseph Bande: certificate issued by the Polish Red Cross – indicating Joseph had been in the camps of Auschwitz, Theresienstadt, Stutthof and Flossenbürg; certificate issued by the Joint organization in Landsberg – indicating Joseph was the Head of the Religious Committee at the DP camp; certificate of occupancy, indicating he lived in Paris, with his picture; certificate of occupancy, indicating he lived in Aix-les-Bains, signed by the mayor of the town. * Two letters that Joseph sent to David after the two immigrated to Palestine (in official envelopes, with Joseph's old address in Aix-les-Bains); envelope of a letter that was sent from London to the "Chachmei Tzarfat Yeshiva" in 1946.
A total of approx. 40 items. Size and condition vary. Good-fair overall condition.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $200
Unsold
Diary written by an emissary of Mizrachi – Tora VeAvoda and Bne Akiva in Displaced Persons Camps in Germany. Hasenhecke, Fritzlar, Aschau and elsewhere, 1946-1947. German and some Hebrew.
The diary is typewritten on separate leaves (some printed on both sides) and it describes the experiences of the writer between December 1946 and September 1947. Mentioned in the diary are, among other things, a meeting with the camps' directors and representatives of UNRRA; the difficulty to find Kosher food; Jewish education in the camps; conflicts with Polish displaced persons in Fritzlar; riots by inmates protesting against the rationing of food, clothing and cigarettes; Psalms reading in a Jewish cemetery which survived the war; searching for volunteers for an agricultural training farm of Bne Akiva in Aschbach; numerous descriptions of the tough life in the camps; and other subjects. One of the diary's pages is printed in Hebrew, describing a spontaneous festivity in Aschau camp. On top of the leaf appears the title "the entire camp dances", and on the bottom - "Yosef Mayer" (presumably the author of this diary).
Enclosed: * A long letter (six pages), typewritten (with handwritten additions) on official stationery of "'Relig. Cion. Org. Mizrachi' – 'Tora W'Avoda' in Germany" and the Jewish Agency, by Yosef Mayer to his mother, dated 23.10.1946, branch of the Jewish Agency in B.A.O.R. (British Army of the Rhine) in Frankfurt. * Circular letter on behalf of "World Organization of 'Tora W'Avoda' Movement" addressed to emissaries of the movement asking them to submit material about the mission for the publication of a book. Dated 19.2.1950.
[20] leaves (32 printed pages, with mispagination), approx. 30.5 cm (some leaves are smaller). Good condition. Small tears at margins. Minor creases, stains and blemishes. A number of handwritten notes, some in Hebrew.
The diary is typewritten on separate leaves (some printed on both sides) and it describes the experiences of the writer between December 1946 and September 1947. Mentioned in the diary are, among other things, a meeting with the camps' directors and representatives of UNRRA; the difficulty to find Kosher food; Jewish education in the camps; conflicts with Polish displaced persons in Fritzlar; riots by inmates protesting against the rationing of food, clothing and cigarettes; Psalms reading in a Jewish cemetery which survived the war; searching for volunteers for an agricultural training farm of Bne Akiva in Aschbach; numerous descriptions of the tough life in the camps; and other subjects. One of the diary's pages is printed in Hebrew, describing a spontaneous festivity in Aschau camp. On top of the leaf appears the title "the entire camp dances", and on the bottom - "Yosef Mayer" (presumably the author of this diary).
Enclosed: * A long letter (six pages), typewritten (with handwritten additions) on official stationery of "'Relig. Cion. Org. Mizrachi' – 'Tora W'Avoda' in Germany" and the Jewish Agency, by Yosef Mayer to his mother, dated 23.10.1946, branch of the Jewish Agency in B.A.O.R. (British Army of the Rhine) in Frankfurt. * Circular letter on behalf of "World Organization of 'Tora W'Avoda' Movement" addressed to emissaries of the movement asking them to submit material about the mission for the publication of a book. Dated 19.2.1950.
[20] leaves (32 printed pages, with mispagination), approx. 30.5 cm (some leaves are smaller). Good condition. Small tears at margins. Minor creases, stains and blemishes. A number of handwritten notes, some in Hebrew.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $500
Unsold
Approximately 60 documents, letters and paper items, which belonged to the secretary of Ferramonti di Tarsia Displace Persons Camp, Philipp Kanner. 1944-1945 (a number of items are from 1943). German, English and Polish.?* A notebook with duplicates of 56 notices handwritten by Kanner to the Welfare Committee of the camp: orders of food, maintenance instructions, notices from the camp police, Kashrut, dwelling, and other notices. Most notes are signed by Kanner and a small part is signed by the camp commander (Jan Hermann?).?* Letters and drafts, written by hand and typewritten, sent to and by Kanner. Including: a long and interesting letter by Kanner to one of the camp's officers, informing him that he intends to retire from his post. The letter brings a detailed report about the camp, failures of management, sanitation, deserting interns, state of inmates, and other subjects (two copies); a letter to the camp's commander, referring to the growing black market, to rising prices of products, and the urgent need to raise the inmates allowance; and more.?* Documents and various paper items, printed and handwritten, documenting the management of the camp. Including: list of rules and regulations for the camp's inmates; invoices, various lists of inmates (some are classified according to countries of origin, age and sex); lists of food rations; and more.?The Italian concentration camp Ferramonti di Tarsia was the largest among concentration camps established by Benito Mussolini in the summer of 1940. Most prisoners were Jewish. In September 1943, a few days before Italy surrendered to the Allied Forces, the prisoners were released. Many of the inmates stayed in the camp and it served as a Displaced Persons camp until its closure in December 1945.?Size and condition vary. Good-fair overall condition.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $200
Unsold
Two "Zionist Shekel forms used in refugee camps in Italy.
1. Provisional Shekel, 5704, 1943/1944. Zionist Organisation, Ferramonti (Cosenza, Ital[ia]).
The Ferramonti di Tarsia camp near Cosenza in south Italy was initially a concentration camp and after the liberation, from September 1943 until late 1945, served as a DP camp. The details that were added by hand to the form indicate that a refugee named Tibor Steinmann donated 5 Italian Liras in January 1944.
7X12 cm. Fair condition. Tears and open tears, some of them restored, affecting the text. Stains.
2. Shekel HaYovel (Jubilee Shekel), 1948.
The form indicates that a man named Nechemya Elbaum of refugee camp no. 82 in Cremona, Italy, donated 100 Italian Liras in March 1948. The form is attached to the original stub and both are stamped with the stamp of the "Central Shekel Committee Italy (Hebrew) / Commissione centrale dello shekel in Italia".
10X16.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Minor creases.
Provenance: The Rimon Family Collection.
1. Provisional Shekel, 5704, 1943/1944. Zionist Organisation, Ferramonti (Cosenza, Ital[ia]).
The Ferramonti di Tarsia camp near Cosenza in south Italy was initially a concentration camp and after the liberation, from September 1943 until late 1945, served as a DP camp. The details that were added by hand to the form indicate that a refugee named Tibor Steinmann donated 5 Italian Liras in January 1944.
7X12 cm. Fair condition. Tears and open tears, some of them restored, affecting the text. Stains.
2. Shekel HaYovel (Jubilee Shekel), 1948.
The form indicates that a man named Nechemya Elbaum of refugee camp no. 82 in Cremona, Italy, donated 100 Italian Liras in March 1948. The form is attached to the original stub and both are stamped with the stamp of the "Central Shekel Committee Italy (Hebrew) / Commissione centrale dello shekel in Italia".
10X16.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Minor creases.
Provenance: The Rimon Family Collection.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $200
Unsold
The first three issues of the journal "BaDerech" [On the Way], the journal of the "Merkaz Irgun HaPlitim" (Organization of Refugees) in Italy. Italy, August-September 1945. Yiddish.
The issues (mimeographed typescript) contain news about the fate of She'erit Hapletah, the number of refugees and the living conditions in the camps, the activities of the aid organizations and parties, congresses and meetings, educational and cultural activities, stories and poems written by Holocaust survivors and more.
On top of the title pages appear handwritten ownership inscriptions – names of Jewish soldiers of the CMF - Central Mediterranean Force of the British army in Italy.
Issue no. 1: 25 leaves; Issue no. 2: 29 leaves; Issue no. 3: 28 leaves, approx. 29 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains. Creases, tears and open tears to edges (mostly to the first and last leaves). Several leaves are detached.
The issues (mimeographed typescript) contain news about the fate of She'erit Hapletah, the number of refugees and the living conditions in the camps, the activities of the aid organizations and parties, congresses and meetings, educational and cultural activities, stories and poems written by Holocaust survivors and more.
On top of the title pages appear handwritten ownership inscriptions – names of Jewish soldiers of the CMF - Central Mediterranean Force of the British army in Italy.
Issue no. 1: 25 leaves; Issue no. 2: 29 leaves; Issue no. 3: 28 leaves, approx. 29 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains. Creases, tears and open tears to edges (mostly to the first and last leaves). Several leaves are detached.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $300
Unsold
"Tsum Zig" [To Victory], a one-time edition of the newspaper ("Einmalike Oisgabe") issued by the Union of Revisionist Zionists in the British Zone of Germany ("Der Faryinikter Zion.-Revisyanistisher Bavegung in der Englisher Zane fon Duetchland"). Editor: Yitzchak Kowalski. Bergen-Belsen (Germany), September 1946. Yiddish and a little Hebrew. Design and illustrations: B. Kasovsky.
The newspaper contains articles by prominent thinkers and leaders of the Revisionist Movement (Ze'ev Jabotinsky, Abba Achimeir, Joseph Klausner and others), alongside articles and reports about the fate of She'erit Hapletah in Europe, the struggle of the Jewish Yishuv in Palestine and the activity of the Revisionist Movement at the Bergen-Belsen DP Camp.
The booklet features seven illustrated portraits of leaders of the Zionist Movement and the Revisionist Movement (five of them large – Ze'ev Jabotinsky, Joseph Trumpeldor, Max Nordau, Herzl and Meir Grossman) as well as dozens of photographs documenting the activity of the Revisionist Movement and life at the camp: processions and parades, sport games and competitions, workshops, broadsides that were hung in the camp, and more.
71, [9] pp, 29.5 cm. Good condition. Stains and minor blemishes. Many stains on the margins of the cover. Inscriptions and stamps on the front cover. An open tear to the bottom of the spine.
Only two copies in OCLC.
The newspaper contains articles by prominent thinkers and leaders of the Revisionist Movement (Ze'ev Jabotinsky, Abba Achimeir, Joseph Klausner and others), alongside articles and reports about the fate of She'erit Hapletah in Europe, the struggle of the Jewish Yishuv in Palestine and the activity of the Revisionist Movement at the Bergen-Belsen DP Camp.
The booklet features seven illustrated portraits of leaders of the Zionist Movement and the Revisionist Movement (five of them large – Ze'ev Jabotinsky, Joseph Trumpeldor, Max Nordau, Herzl and Meir Grossman) as well as dozens of photographs documenting the activity of the Revisionist Movement and life at the camp: processions and parades, sport games and competitions, workshops, broadsides that were hung in the camp, and more.
71, [9] pp, 29.5 cm. Good condition. Stains and minor blemishes. Many stains on the margins of the cover. Inscriptions and stamps on the front cover. An open tear to the bottom of the spine.
Only two copies in OCLC.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue