Weesperstraat 107 1018 VN Amsterdam
Consists of copies of letters, dated 1939-1941, in Hebrew and Hungarian, to Eliezer Rozenfeld, who was living in Palestine, from friends and family in Hungary. The original letters are believed to have been destroyed.
Consists of a collection of letters written between 1937 - 1941, by the family of Meyer and Bajla Taubenblat of Staszów, Poland, to family in the United States. In the letters, they describe their lives and fears in pre-war and wartime Poland. The authors of the letters (with the exception of Meyer, who passed away in 1938) perished in the Holocaust. Selig Taubenblatt provides translations of the ...
One letter with typed text on US Department of State letterhead; addressed to Ruth Wasserberger from Pierrepont Moffat, Chief, Division of Western European Affairs.
Contains one photocopy of a postcard, one photocopy of a photograph of Alex and Hermine Lowenthal, and three letters, addressed to Egon Lowenthal pertaining to his efforts to locate his father, Alex Lowenthal who was deported to Theresienstadt.
Teksten in het Fries en Nederlands. 52 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
Collectie 039: Generalkommissariat für Finanz und Wirtschaft > Abteilung Preisbildung > Metaalindustrie > Stukken betreffende de vaststelling van de prijzen, 1940-1944.
Contains the photocopied official documents, personal letters, postcards, and handwritten poems of the Ushomirsky family. The letters span the 1940s through the 1950s, while the official documents are primarily from before the Second World War.
Contains one letter written by Cesare Lombroso stating that there was "a criminal type."
Contains a typewritten letter by Mr. Grunwald's late sister Meta in which she describes how they survived the Holocaust and the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands.
Consists of one letter, written by Hassia Gilman to her brother and sister's family on October 15, 1944. In the letter, she describes wartime life in Leningrad and hearing about what happened to Jewish relatives in the town of Beshenkowitz, Russia.