Weesperstraat 107 1018 VN Amsterdam
Typescript, titled "Letters Out of Terezin: Never sent and hidden….", a compilation of letters that Eva Sachs originally wrote between 1941 and 1943 in Brno and Theresienstadt, translated into English with an introduction, 1993.
Contains a letter, possibly a form letter, with envelope, signed by Sasha Kaufman in the Landsberg DP camp, addressed to UN Secretary General Trygve Lie. The letter appeals to the United Nations to help open Palestine to Jewish refugees who had suffered in Nazi concentration camps.
The letter was written by an anonymous prisoner at Sachsenhausen concentration camp.
Consists of one letter sent by Dachau prisoner Franz Süss to a relative named Ludmila Süss in Prague on October 1, 1944. The letter, in German, was written on Dachau stationery. In the letter, Mr. Süss describes life in Dachau and the rations he received.
Consists of one letter, four pages, containing a lengthy poem written by Hans Wolff in Berlin, Germany, in 1939. The letter was sent to family in the United States. Mr. Wolff perished in the Holocaust.
Includes bibliographical references and indexes. xlvii, 755 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Contains an antisemitic letter, with envelope, addressed to William Ries in Pittsburgh, PA from his cousin Ernst Ries in Köln, Germany; dated January 6, 1936, In the letter, Ernst writes about how things are "looking up" for Germany thanks to the Führer and the "cleansing" of the population of Jews.
Consists of one letter, dated September 24, 1944, written by Josef Jasny, prisoner number 22088 from Sachsenhausen/ Oranienburg, to his wife Gertrud and their children, who were living in Toruń, Poland,
Contains photocopies of three camp letters sent from Max Fossner to his family in Slovakia, from Majdanek (1942) and Sachsenhausen (April 1944).
Consists of one letter, 12 pages, from Gertrude Philipp, of Germany, to the Salberg family in Pennsylvania on August 17, 1939. In the letter, she gives extensive description of her experiences on Kristallnacht and how difficult life had become as a result of the anti-Jewish laws and of popular sentiments.