Weesperstraat 107 1018 VN Amsterdam
The collection consists of posters and a flier advertising Zionist and Socialist events in post-war France as well as a commemoration for the Warsaw ghetto uprising.
Consists of photographs taken upon the liberation of the Mauthausen concentration camp; includes photographs of prisoners standing outside barracks as well as photographs of corpses.
"In the autumn of 1987, a small bundle containing photographs and newspaper clippings, which used to belong to Charlotte Kaletta, was found by an employee of the Anne Frank Foundation on the Amsterdam flea market. This sensational discovery led her to another set of photographs and letters among Kaletta’s belongings. Charlotte Kaletta had been the lover of Fritz Pfeffer, a German born Jewish dentist, ...
The collection consists of a photograph of a woman carrying another woman, as well as a piece of Łódź ghetto scrip, (10 mark coin), and a Nazi pin.
Contains Bisicka family photographs as well as a photograph of Augusta Reiterova working in Terezin.
The collection consists of a painting, a portrait of a seated woman, created by Josef Oppenheimer, 1922-1923, Berlin, Germany, as well as a prayerbook, "Gebete der Israeliten."
Contains records of the Jewish community of Tunisia pertaining to the spoliation of its members by the German authorities from December 1942 to April 1943 and subsequent efforts to recover confiscated assets. These records include reports detailing the chronology and extent of the spoliation of Jews in Tunisia by the SS as well as the attempt by the French colonial authorities from 1944 to 1947 to ...
The collection's contents are described in one inventory. The documents are catalogued by type. Featured among the collection's documents are reports on association activities for 1933-40, as well as reports of the constituent session of the association's finance commission for 28 November 1939; minutes of the general assembly of association members from 4 February 1940; lists of members of the Association ...
Following the First Vienna Award the town of Levice (Hungarian: Léva) was occupied by Hungarian forces on 10 November 1938. Based on the order of the military command Hungarian army established the mayor of the town. On 9 March 1939 the municipality council of Levice discussed and agreed upon the decision to change the town of Levice to the city with the Municipality Office, the County City (Hungarian: ...
The envelope is addressed to Mrs. Martin Stern in Lansdale, Pa., from her stepmother, Rebos Markusz, in Hungary. Three Hungarian stamps are adhered as well as two censor labels. The envelope also bears the stamp of the British censor.