Archival Descriptions

Displaying items 10,741 to 10,760 of 55,852
  1. Raphael Aronson photograph collection

    The collection consists of a collection of 22 photographs which Raphael Aronson found in an apartment in Linz, Austria, in 1946. The photographs depict Jews in the ghettos in Łod́ź and Warsaw, Poland, as well as pre-World War II photographs of antisemitic graffiti on Jewish establishments.

  2. Harold Goldstein photographs

    Consists of six photographs taken by Harold Goldstein, a member of the 45th Division of the United States Army, during World War II. Photographs depict a warehouse of Nazi plunder, German prisoners and Armistice Day in France, and a memorial service in Munich, Germany.

  3. Sigmund Klausner collection

    Consists of newspaper clippings, photoprints, and photocopies related to the family of Sigmund Klausner, originally of Frankfurt, Germany. Includes a copy of a pre-war photograph of Mr. Klausner's family, a photograph of Mr. Klausner in the Pithiviers, France, concentration camp, and an article about the family written by Mr. Klausner's nephew, Leon Rubinstein. Also includes a photocopy of a document verifying the deaths of Mr. and Mrs. Klausner and their sons, Edgar and Leo, in the Holocaust.

  4. "The Romanian Jews During W.W. II"

    Consists of one manuscript, 46 pages, entitled "The Romanian Jews During W.W.II," by Neha Weinstein Voigt, originally of Iasi, Romania. In the manuscript, Weinstein describes the history of the Holocaust in Romania, including the destruction of Iasi's Jews. Also includes a folder of clippings and letters regarding Mrs. Voigt's Holocaust experiences and photographs of Mrs. Voigt and of her parents.

  5. Certificate of discharge

    The certificate ("Entlassungschein") issued for Kurt Gelles [donor's husband] from Buchenwald concentration camp in Weimar, Germany, dated December 23, 1938, stating that he was interned beginning June 1, 1938, and he was born on July 24, 1907, in Vienna, Austria, where he was arrested and released.

  6. Heinz-Egon Glass papers

    The papers consist of three letters written by Susi Cohn (later Susi Cohn Podgurski) in the United Kingdom to Heinz-Egon Glass in Shanghai. The letters describe school, her life in England, and asks Mr. Glass to tell her parents not to worry about her.

  7. Juda Wachisler registration record

    Consists of the A.E.F (Allied Expeditionary Forces) Displaced Persons Registration Record for Juda Wachisler, originally of Sztrikow, Poland. He was registered as an unaccompanied child, the only survivor of his family. Includes background information as well as a summary of his Holocaust experiences.

  8. "Alberto Cernogoraz; 1914-1946: Holocaust Survivor"

    Consists of one memoir, undated, entitled, "Alberto Cernogoraz; 1914-1946: Holocaust Survivor," by Genoveffa Cernogoraz Cook. Mrs. Cook writes about her childhood in pre-war and wartime Italy and her memories of her brother, Alberto, who was arrested in 1943 as a member of the Italian Underground and was presumed dead. After the war, however, the family learned that he had been imprisoned in the Dachau concentration camp. Though he recovered from his illnesses, Alberto Cernogoraz was murdered in 1946.

  9. Jewish sport organization Maccabi in Lithuania (Fond 349)

    The collection contains records relating to the activities of the Jewish sport organization, Maccabi, in Lithuania from 1920 to 1940. The collection includes minutes of board meetings, resolutions, regulations, announcements, bulletins of the Maccabi Central Board, correspondence with the local branches of the organization in Siauliai (Shavli) and Zagare, and Lithuanian government authorities ( Ministry of Education, City Council), bylaws of the organization and its branches, lists of members, donors' list, cashiers' books, financial reports etc. Files #96-354 contain personal files of memb...

  10. Registration Office in Biała Podlaska. Registration cards of Jews. Biuro Meldunkowe w Białej Podlaskiej. Karty meldunkowe ludności żydowskiej. (Sygn. 244)

    Contains 2844 registration cards of Jews in Biała Podlaska from 1930 until 1942, and from 1945-1946, indicating date of departure, death, or deportation to Mie̜dzyrzecz Podlaski on 26 September 1942. Each card contains the following personal data: name and surname, occupation, address, name of father and mother, date and place of birth, confession, identity card number, information about the children.

  11. Registration office of the city of Cze̜stochowa. Registration files of the Jewish inhabitants Biuro meldunkowe miasta Czȩstochowy. Karty rejestracyjne Ż̇ydów (Sygn.119)

    Contains 3,480 personal files. Documents are organized in alphabetical order by surname. Each file contains a photograph and application for identity card including number of the identity card, name, date and place of birth, parents’ names, occupation, address, and date of issuance. Some files include correspondence.

  12. Central Committee of Jews in Poland. Repatriation Department from USSR Centralny Komitet Żydów Polskich (CKŻP). Wydział Repatriacji z ZSRR (Sygn. 303/V)

    Contains legal regulations of the repatriation process of Jews from the USSR and Germany. Also contains summaries, reports of the activity of the Department and correspondence with other departments of the Central Committee and various Jewish organizations financing the Repatriation Department. Several files contain the list of Jews repatriated from the USSR and the people who helped them.

  13. Central Committee of Jews in Poland. Department of Jewish Compatriot Association Centralny Komitet Żydow Polskich (CKŻP). Wydział Ziomkostw (Sygn. 303/XIX)

    Contains records from regional Jewish compatriot associations in Poland and from some places currently behind the Ukraine border; organizational reports and bulletins; correspondence with foreign charity institutions; questionnaires and applications for help; and name lists of traced people. Also contains name lists of members of Jewish associations in the Warsaw district.

  14. Oster-Marcusohn family photograph collection

    Collection consisting of 46 photographs documenting the experiences of Blanchette Marcusohn [donor], Zvi Oster, and their families in Romania before World War II, during the war in Transnistria, and after the war in Cyprus and Palestine.

  15. Louis Croy manuscript

    Consists of one untitled manuscript, 74 pages, by Louis Croy. The manuscript relates a history of the Mauthausen concentration camp and of the Mauthausen trials; the author participated in the liberation of the camp and also assisted with the interrogation of the defendants in the subsequent trials.

  16. Central Committee of Jews in Poland. Department of Jewish Culture and Propaganda Centralny Komitet Żydow Polskich (CKŻP). Wydzial Kultury i Propagandy (Sygn. 303/XIII, previously Sygn. 308)

    This collection contains documentation concerning the activity of the Department of Culture and Propaganda of the Central Committee of the Jews in Poland (CKZP) headed by Henryk Szner (beginning in 1948), then by Hersz Smolar. The documents are mainly in draft form, such as reports and texts of radio broadcasts with hand-written corrections or censorship stamps. Accretion of digital images, files 71-75, contain radio broadcasts including texts of Yiddish broadcasts in 1945 from Lublin. Note: This collection changed Sygn. number in ŻIH from Sygn. 308 to Sygn. 303/XIII.

  17. Arie Ben Menachem photograph collection

    The collection consists of 19 vintage copy prints of images taken by Mendel Grossman in the ghetto in Łódź, Poland.

  18. Stahl-Grayower papers

    The papers consist of a letter, two certificates, a document, an identification card, and 18 photographs relating to the Stahl-Grayower family. The collection relates to Charlotte Stahl [donor], her father, who did not survive the Holocaust, and her mother and brothers who all survived numerous concentration camps in the Netherlands and Germany and the post-liberation immigration to Palestine of Charlotte and her brothers.

  19. Jakov Davetsky collection

    Collection includes postcards (1940-1941) from Tsilya Zhidovetskaya to Dina Zhidovetskaya regarding the situation for Jews in Russia, family photographs, a memorial book for the victims of the Babi Yar massacre, a newspaper commemorating the 50th anniversary of Babi Yar, and identification cards identifying Anatoli Oliker as a veteran of World War II.