Weesperstraat 107 1018 VN Amsterdam
Genealogy and brief vita, describing Hersz Hanfling's experiences during the occupation of Poland. Also included are copy prints of vintage photos from his hometown of Rozwadow.
Contains seven documents: two pieces of stationery, one ration card, one magazine clipping, one copy of "Yank" magazine, one copy of "Warweek" newspaper, and one partial 1 scrapbook.
Two diplomas issued to Chaje Vladislavovskyte (donor's mother) and Chakeli Aleksotskiu (donor's father) at the Jewish Gymnasium in Virbalis, Lithuania, in 1923.
Contains photocopies of official documents and personal letters written mostly by Abram Segal, who was evacuated to Tashkent during the War.
Photocopies of three identification documents for Arthur Grossman, originally of Plock, Poland, who was interned at Buchenwald, and then post-liberation lived at the Landsberg displaced persons camp.
Copy papers re John Davey's attempt to prove that Hitler was alive in 1953. (1990s)
The papers consist of a letter and a postcard written by Otto Menczer from the Dachau concentration camp to his parents and brother in Vienna, Austria, and a passport issued to Otto Menczer in Vienna, Austria, after his release from the Dachau concentration camp.
Contains the family papers of the Sklar family, principally, Boris Moiseevich Sklar. Included are personal letters, stamped certificates, and postcards. Also included is a photocopy of a brief, handwritten autobiographical statement written by Tsipa Yankelevna Shvidkaya (another family member) in 1946.
The papers consist of certificates, work permits, identification cards, receipts, and correspondence relating to the Spielmann family and their experiences in Theresienstadt (Terezín) concentration camp in Czechoslovakia during the Holocaust and immediately following liberation.
Contains six photographs, mostly of a memorial site in former Soviet Union where 8,000 Jews were murdered by Nazis in August 1941.