Archival Descriptions

Displaying items 20,041 to 20,060 of 55,888
  1. 45th Division News [Newspaper]

    Given by an American soldier to Abe Speisman after his liberation, May 1945, Germany.

  2. "Shmai Israel" poem

    Consists of "Shmai Israel" ("Hear, O Israel") written by Olga Zaslavsky. The poem, in Yiddish, relates to the massacre of Soviet Jews at Babi Yar. The poem is accompanied by a typed English translation.

  3. "Arbeitslager marsch"

    Consists of a photograph copy of "Arbeitslager marsch" composed by Heinrich Krol in 1941 while imprisoned at Auschwitz. The piece includes parts for strings, woodwinds, brass, and percussion instruments.

  4. Records relating to children's art from Terezin at the University of Oregon Museum of Art

    Contains information about Thomas Ballinger's involvement in arranging for exhibit of childrens art from Terezin with the State Jewish Museum in Prague at the University of Oregon and various other institutions in the United States in 1969 and 1970.

  5. "We will never die" script

    "We will never die" script is a photocopy of a script for the play "We Will Never Die," written by Ben Hecht and performed at various locations across the United States in 1943 to raise awareness of atrocities being committed against Jews in German-occupied Europe. Handwritten annotations may be from Kurt Weill, whose name appears on the title page.

  6. SS dagger and sheath

    The dagger and sheath were found by Bert Sherman in a German jeep, March 1944, Devonshire, England.

  7. Gomel Oblast Archive records

    Consists of microfilmed documents relating to the activities of various oblast government offices in the vicinity of Gomel. Included is information concerning reprisal actions by Germans against partisan activity, the liquidation of the ghetto at Monastyrek, the confiscation of Jewish property and livestock, and arrests of Roma.

  8. Mogilev Oblast Archive records

    These files relate to the activities of various Mogilev city administration offices and German occupation agencies in the Mogilev area during World War II. Included is information about criminal proceedings, the persecution of Soviet Jews, the confiscation of Jewish property, reprisals against Jewish and partisan resistance, regulations for mixed marriages, the Mogilev ghetto, the transit of refugees, Einsatzkommando activities, forced labor, census statistics, and partisan clashes with police forces.

  9. Records relating to crimes against Serbs, Jews, and other Yugoslav peoples during World War II

    Contains information concerning the persecution of Serbs and Yugoslav Jews, atrocities committed by the Ustaša (Ustashi), the forced resettlement of Yugoslavs, and the killing of Orthodox priests.

  10. Records of the Institut für Deutsche Ostarbeit (Sygn.113)

    Contains information about German annexation of Polish land through the years; German colonization in Poland and Eastern Europe; "race science"; population statistics for Kraków, Poland, through the years; birth statistics for several Polish towns and villages; activities of Einsatzgruppen; statistics for Catholic churches in the Kraków area; and the history of the Polish nobility from circa 1300 to circa 1600.

  11. Records fo the Waffen SS - SS Standortverwaltung Kraków (Poland) (Sygn.114)

    Records about uniform and dress regulations for SS and Wehrmacht personnel, the distribution of clothing in the Kraków area, and transports of clothing from Auschwitz and other camps to Kraków.

  12. Johannes Schindler autobiography

    Consists of an autobiography by Johannes Schindler covering his life as a Jehovah's Witness after World War I, persecution and imprisonment under the Nazis, and subsequent persecution and imprisonment in East Germany.

  13. Coenraad Rood papers

    Includes photocopies of documents from the Dutch Red Cross and the International Tracing Service relating to Coenraad Rood's efforts to trace the fate of relatives who were victims of the Holocaust. Also included is a copy of "Report, 1942-1945" by Coenraad Rood. The memoir describes Rood's experiences of persecution, imprisonment, and survival during the Holocaust. See collection list for titles for RG-02.05901 through RG-02.059*02.

  14. Homeless in exile : days of persecution in fall and winter 1938-39

    Consists of a copy of a typed manuscript entitled "Homeless in exile: days of persecution in fall and winter 1938-39." It is an English translation, prepared by Peter Loewenberg, of the original, handwritten in German by his father Harry Richard Loewenberg. The narrative begins in 1930 and includes descriptions of the Nazi rise to power in 1933, persecution of German Jews, the aftermath of Kristallnacht in which the writer went into hiding under protection of members of the Confessing Church, and the writer's flight to Britain. The original "Homeless in exile: .." was handwritten by Harry R...

  15. Lʹviv Oblast Archive records

    Contains information about the German occupation of Lemberg (a.k.a. Lʹviv, Lwow, or Lʹvov), Poland, the establishment of the Lʹviv ghetto, and Jews involved in public work programs and industry.

  16. My life during the war

    Consists of a copy of "My life during the war" written in Polish by Bernadette Dukas (born Bronislawa Alland) from December 1945 to March 1947. The memoir was translated into English in 1989 by Dukas' brother, George Alland. The memoir describes Dukas' life in Warsaw, Poland, at the beginning of World War II, her life in hiding under an assumed identity, her experiences of forced labor in an airplane engine factory at Braunschweig, her liberation in April 1945, and her experiences of antisemitism in Poland after the Holocaust.

  17. Leonard T. Zawacki, Auschwitz prisoner no. 13390

    Contains information about Leonard Zawaki's experiences during the German invasion and occupation of Poland, his incarceration at Pawiak prison and Auschwitz concentration camp, his escape from Auschwitz, and his activities with a resistance movement.

  18. "The bleeding sky : my mother's journey through the fire"

    Relates to the early life of Mala Goldrat Brandsdorfer (née Liss) in Poland; life for Jews under German occupation; experiences and observations in the Warsaw Ghetto, Majdanek, and Auschwitz-Birkenau; evacuation from Auschwitz; incarceration at Neustadt-Glewe; and liberation.

  19. This small piece of history: the escape from Germany and three years later the successful immigration to the United States

    Account of the Lenkway family’s life in Cologne, Germany: persecution under the Nazis, escape from Germany in 1938, their odyssey through several European countries before emigrating to the US in 1941.

  20. Five Cities

    Yiddish titles. English title, "Jewish Life in Vilna" Pan, overview of the city of Vilna, showing broad streets, traffic, large buildings, pedestrians. Shows Vilna's famous landmarks: the Strashun Library, Shnipeshiker Cemetery, and the YIVO Institute. Elderly woman prays. In Jewish quarter, clocks displayed on EXT of buildings, Yiddish signs, narrow streets with shops, people engaged in the rituals and realities of daily existence at work selling wares on the street, resting. Men with horses and buggies wait for passengers at square. CUs, children. Street scenes, pedestrians, shops, signs,...