Archival Descriptions

Displaying items 10,001 to 10,020 of 55,832
  1. "Non Omnis Moriar"

    Consists of one memoir, two copies (in English and Spanish), of "Non Omnis Moriar," by Irene Birnbaum, originally of Warsaw, Poland. In her memoir, she describes her life in the Warsaw ghetto, including her memories of the deportations of friends and loved ones, and how she resisted deportation while living in the ghetto. She escaped the Warsaw ghetto in February 1943, and hid, first in Warsaw and then as a Polish Catholic worker in the countryside.

  2. Commemoration material

    Consists of one postal commemoration envelope with stamp honoring the victims of the Shoah and the 60th anniversary of the Allied victory in World War II; first day issue of May 9, 2005.

  3. Muenz family correspondence

    Consists of correspondence to Eleanor Muenz from family members and friends in Vienna, Austria, between 1938 and 1941. While Mrs. Muenz was able to emigrate to the United States in 1938, the family and friends who authored this correspondence perished in the Holocaust.

  4. Zina Jakuschewa deToll collection

    Consists of one set of working papers for Zina (Sina) Jakuschewa (now deToll), originally of Podolsk, Russia. Includes one work card and one work book (each with a photograph) identifying Zina Jakuschewa as a non-Jewish forced laborer assigned to Ravensburg, Germany, in 1943 and 1944.

  5. Goldman family collection

    Consists of photographs and documents relating to the wartime experiences of Dmitry Goldman, originally of Chisinau, Moldova, and of Nesya Goldstein Goldman. Includes Soviet Russian work papers and ration cards, as well as pre-war, wartime, and post-war photographs for Dmitry, who fought in the Red Army, and for Nesya, who was a forced laborer.

  6. Ohrdruf liberation photographic negatives

    Consists of photographic negatives taken of the Ohrdruf concentration camp by James Howard Hartley Blackmore, a professional photographer and member of the 80th infantry division. Photographs mainly depict the bodies of victims.

  7. Hannah Weill photographs

    Consists of 13 pre-war, wartime, and post-war photographs related to the Holocaust experiences of Hannah Mansbacher Weill, originally of Berlin, Germany. She and her family immigrated to Shanghai, China in May 1939 in order to escape the Holocaust. They immigrated to the United States in 1947. Photographs depict Hannah in Berlin, life in post-war Shanghai, and photographs of the family's immigration to California.

  8. Evelyn Arzt Bergl papers

    Papers consist of three documents, two passports, and two letters illustrating the efforts of Hermine and Eduard Artz [donor's parents] and their children, Heinz and Evelyne [donor], to flee Vienna, Austria following Eduard's arrest and subsequent internment in concentration camp Buchenwald; his release and the family's flight to Italy; their internment in the Ferramonti-Tarsia camp; and then in hiding, where they survived.

  9. Ration stamps for occupied France

    Consists of two sheets of ration stamps issued in German occupied France in 1944. One set of blue stamps entitled the bearer to cheese, meat, and fats, while a set of red stamps entitled the bearer to bread. The stamps are marked for use by family and friends of members of the Wehrmacht.

  10. "My Grandma, Frau Masha"

    Consists of one DVD containing an interview by Yonatan Weinstein with his grandmother, Frau Masha (Masha Porozowski Klementinowski Weinstein) regarding her Holocaust experiences.

  11. Leslie Aigner photograph collection

    The collection consists of three photographs of Leslie (Laszlo) Aigner with his immediate family in Nové Zámky, Czechoslovakia, in May 1944. Soon afterwards, Leslie was deported to Auschwitz where his mother and little sister, Marika, were murdered, was transferred to Landsberg-Kaufering, and was liberated from Dachau. His father and sister, Elisabet, were taken to a forced labor camp in Hungary, where they survived the war. In the photographs, Leslie is wearing the Star of David.

  12. Bernard and Faigla Fischel Moncznik photographs

    Consists of family photographs from the collection of Bernard (Berl) Moncznik, originally of Niwka, Poland, and of Faigla (Fajgl or Fela) Fischel (Fiszel) Moncznik, originally of Be̜drin, Poland. Includes pre-war photographs of Bernard and Feigla with their respective families, some of whom perished in the Holocaust. Also includes post-war photographs of Bernard and Faigla, who met at the Weiden displaced persons camp, as well as an invitation to their May 27, 1948 wedding.

  13. Aleksander Kulisiewicz photographs

    Consists of 13 large black and white publicity photographs of Aleksander Kulisiewicz, probably taken during the 1970s.

  14. "The Upside of Memory"

    Consists of two copies of a DVD-ROM entitled "The Upside of Memory," by Jeanette Lerman-Neubauer, which follows her parents, Chris and Miles Lerman (a founder and Chairman Emeritus of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Council) on a trip to Poland in 2004, to dedicate the new Belzec Memorial and for Miles to receive the Polish Commander's Cross medal from President Aleksander Kwaś́niewski. The Lerman family also visits Tomaszów-Lubelski (birthplace of Miles and his brother, Jona Lerman) and the Auschwitz concentration camp. Chris, an Auschwitz survivor, guides her grandchildren t...

  15. Bronka Harz Kurz memoir

    Consists of one memoir, 3 pages, in English, by Bronka Harz Kurz, originally of Nadvirna, Poland. The family moved to Kolomyja, Poland, before the war and after the German occupation in 1941, were forced to wear a Star of David and move into the ghetto. Bronka and her mother tried to escape the ghetto multiple times, but were caught and sent back. In one instance, upon their return they learned that Bronka's father and other relatives had been deported and killed in Belzec. Bronka and her mother finally escaped to Lwow, where, until their liberation by the Russians in 1944, they lived in co...

  16. Arbeiter family papers

    The Arbeiter family papers consist of wartime correspondence, a newspaper clipping, and pre-war family photographs relating to the Arbeiter family, originally of Płock, Poland. The later correspondence relates to inquests into the fate of Elek Arbeiter, born in 1919, who escaped to the Soviet Union, but had not been heard from since 1941.

  17. Shlomo Krause collection

    Consists of copies of poems written by Shlomo Krause between 1940 and 1943 about the experience of refugees. Mr. Krause, originally from Poland, immigrated to France in 1926, where he opened a Yiddish bookstore. After the German invasion, Mr. Krause went into hiding in Nice and wrote these poems. He died in 1943. Also contains information about Shlomo Krause's son Maurice's experiences during the war in Russia and information about Shlomo's nephew, Yanek, who fought in the underground in Czȩstochowa and perished in the Holocaust.

  18. Schipkau commemoration collection

    Consists of photographs and copyprints of the April 18, 2005 dedication of a memorial to the victims of the Holocaust, specifically the victims of the "Lost Transport" in Schipkau, Germany. The "Lost Transport" carried Jews from Bergen-Belsen in the direction of Theresienstadt from April 10-25, 1945. This transport never arrived at Terezin, and the few survivors were discovered and liberated by the Red Army in the yard of a coal factory near Tröbitz on April 25, 1945. During the transport, the dead were buried along the train tracks at each stop, the train was frequently the target of bomb...

  19. "Ein Amerikaner" : Harry L. Ettlinger memoir

    Contains one memoir, 127 pages, entitled "Ein Amerikaner: Anecdotes from the Life of Harry Ettlinger," written by Harry L. Ettlinger, originally of Karlsruhe, Germany, in 2002. In his memoir, Mr. Ettlinger describes his childhood in Germany, his family's immigration to the United States in 1938, his experiences as a soldier in World War II, and his post-war life. Includes copies of family photographs.

  20. "The Clan of the Komonyies: The Descendants of Marton Lebovics, 1787-2000"

    Consists of a family history entitled "The Clan of the Komonyies: The Descendants of Marton Lebovics, 1787-2000" and a family tree tracing the family from 1787-2000. Written by Michael Shanyi, originally of Nagydobrony, Hungary, the history describes the family's pre-war experiences in Hungary and post-war lives in Israel, the United States, France and Ukraine. Many members of the family perished during the Holocaust.