426 records – page 1 of 22.

Identification card

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn45521
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Identification card : Cardstock : printed, handwritten : Ink : green-grey, black, red ; Ht: 11,6 cm x W: 15,2 cm
Date
1942
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Identification card : Cardstock : printed, handwritten : Ink : green-grey, black, red ; Ht: 11,6 cm x W: 15,2 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
1942
Physical Condition
Excellent
Language
Polish
French
Notes
Double-panel identity card with b&w photo portrait stapled on the the top left. Information has been filled in for Lonia Kawnik, giving her the false identity of Triasse and confirming that she is part of the resistance. There are two signatures at the bottom, as well as two circular red stamps from the Union des Polonais Anciens Résistants de France, Seine branch. Four pink paper stamps worth 5 francs are glued to the lower right side in the space provided. Blank on back. Narrative: Lonia Furstenberg was born on 1914-04-28 in Belchatow (Poland) to Meier Furstenberg and Asha Biblow. She left Poland at the age of 16 to study medicine in Paris (quotas in Poland made it hard for her to pursue her studies). Lonia’s family was German speaking; she also spoke Polish and Yiddish. She had no family in France. She lived in Nancy and Reims before establishing herself in Paris. She learned French while working as a laboratory assistant. She then studied medicine and took classes in all the specialties, but for military medicine. Military medicine required students to learn how to jump out of an helicopter which her father would not give her permission to do. During the Second World War, she was a medicine student and worked in a clinic requisitioned by the German army. She passed as a non-Jewish French citizen and had fake identity paper made to the name of Louise Triasse, supposedly born in Oran. Her resistance activities included caring for wounded resistant fighters, issuing fake disease certificated to young men so they could be exempt for the mandatory labour service (STO service du travail obligatoire) and issuing certificate of good health to prostitutes carrying venereal diseases who wanted to infect German soldiers. She became the first woman to own her own medical laboratory. Lonia was a Communist sympathizer, she was not religious and she eventually married a Gentile, a Polish RAF pilot named Zigmunt Kawnik (born in 1920). All the members of Lonia's family in Poland were deported and killed during the Holocaust.
Accession No.
2011.50.04
Name Access
Allio, Nicole
Places
Paris (Seine), France, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Identification card

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn45718
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Identification card : Ht: 12 cm x W: 16 cm
Date
January 5, 1944-July 13, 1944
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Identification card : Ht: 12 cm x W: 16 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
January 5, 1944-July 13, 1944
Physical Condition
Good
Language
French
Notes
beige cardstock card folded in two with stapled b&w identity picture on the front page. Printed in black with two handwritten signatures and one purple stamp on the front page. Dates of transfusions on the inside and dates of medical exams on the back page. Narrative: Lonia Furstenberg was born on 1914-04-28 in Belchatow (Poland) to Meier Furstenberg and Asha Biblow. She left Poland at the age of 16 to study medicine in Paris (quotas in Poland made it hard for her to pursue her studies). Lonia’s family was German speaking; she also spoke Polish and Yiddish. She had no family in France. She lived in Nancy and Reims before establishing herself in Paris. She learned French while working as a laboratory assistant. She then studied medicine and took classes in all the specialties, but for military medicine. Military medicine required students to lean how to jump out of an helicopter which her father would not give her permission to do. During the Second World War, she was a medicine student and worked in a clinic requisitioned by the German army. She passed as a non Jewish French citizen and had fake identity paper made to the name of Louise Triasse, supposedly born in Oran. Her resistance activities included caring for wounded resistant fighters, issuing fake disease certificated to young men so they could be exempt for the mandatory labour service (STO service du travail obligatoire) and issuing certificate of good health to prostitutes carrying venereal diseases who wanted to infect German soldiers. She became the first woman to own her own medical laboratory. Lonia was a Communist sympathizer, she was not religious and she eventually married a Gentile, a Polish RAF pilot named Zigmunt Kawnik (born in 1920). All the members of Lonia's family in Poland were deported and killed during the Holocaust.
Accession No.
2011.50.02
Name Access
Allio, Nicole
Places
Paris, France, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Identification card

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn45719
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Identification card : Ht: 12,7 cm x W: 8,9 cm
Date
1945-1946
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Identification card : Ht: 12,7 cm x W: 8,9 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
1945-1946
Physical Condition
Good
Language
French
Notes
beige cardstock identification card with b&w photograph of Lonia Furstenberg on the back page. Printed in black with two handwritten signatures on the front page (Lonia Furstenberg and the secretary of the faculty of medecine). School seal pressed onto the back page (faculté de médecine) and a short excerpt from the decree of July 21, 1897. Narrative: Lonia Furstenberg was born on 1914-04-28 in Belchatow (Poland) to Meier Furstenberg and Asha Biblow. She left Poland at the age of 16 to study medicine in Paris (quotas in Poland made it hard for her to pursue her studies). Lonia’s family was German speaking; she also spoke Polish and Yiddish. She had no family in France. She lived in Nancy and Reims before establishing herself in Paris. She learned French while working as a laboratory assistant. She then studied medicine and took classes in all the specialties, but for military medicine. Military medicine required students to lean how to jump out of an helicopter which her father would not give her permission to do. During the Second World War, she was a medicine student and worked in a clinic requisitioned by the German army. She passed as a non Jewish French citizen and had fake identity paper made to the name of Louise Triasse, supposedly born in Oran. Her resistance activities included caring for wounded resistant fighters, issuing fake disease certificated to young men so they could be exempt for the mandatory labour service (STO service du travail obligatoire) and issuing certificate of good health to prostitutes carrying venereal diseases who wanted to infect German soldiers. She became the first woman to own her own medical laboratory. Lonia was a Communist sympathizer, she was not religious and she eventually married a Gentile, a Polish RAF pilot named Zigmunt Kawnik (born in 1920). All the members of Lonia's family in Poland were deported and killed during the Holocaust.
Accession No.
2011.50.03
Name Access
Allio, Nicole
Places
Paris, France, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Letter

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn45720
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Letter : Ht: 22,2 cm x W: 14,3 cm
Date
June 1, 1947
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Letter : Ht: 22,2 cm x W: 14,3 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
June 1, 1947
Physical Condition
Good
Language
French
Notes
yellowing paper containing a handwritten message between Lonia Furstenberg and Docteur Paul Chevallier. Header printed in black with other writing in purple ink. Date of the letter in the top right corner of the front page (June 1, 1947). Letter testifies of the services of Madame Kawnik in the resistance. Narrative: Lonia Furstenberg was born on 1914-04-28 in Belchatow (Poland) to Meier Furstenberg and Asha Biblow. She left Poland at the age of 16 to study medicine in Paris (quotas in Poland made it hard for her to pursue her studies). Lonia’s family was German speaking; she also spoke Polish and Yiddish. She had no family in France. She lived in Nancy and Reims before establishing herself in Paris. She learned French while working as a laboratory assistant. She then studied medicine and took classes in all the specialties, but for military medicine. Military medicine required students to lean how to jump out of an helicopter which her father would not give her permission to do. During the Second World War, she was a medicine student and worked in a clinic requisitioned by the German army. She passed as a non Jewish French citizen and had fake identity paper made to the name of Louise Triasse, supposedly born in Oran. Her resistance activities included caring for wounded resistant fighters, issuing fake disease certificated to young men so they could be exempt for the mandatory labour service (STO service du travail obligatoire) and issuing certificate of good health to prostitutes carrying venereal diseases who wanted to infect German soldiers. She became the first woman to own her own medical laboratory. Lonia was a Communist sympathizer, she was not religious and she eventually married a Gentile, a Polish RAF pilot named Zigmunt Kawnik (born in 1920). All the members of Lonia's family in Poland were deported and killed during the Holocaust. All the members of Lonia's family in Poland were deported and killed during the Holocaust.
Accession No.
2011.50.05
Name Access
Allio, Nicole
Places
France, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Letter

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn45721
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Letter : Ht: 25,7 cm x W: 18,4 cm
Date
August 6, 1946
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Letter : Ht: 25,7 cm x W: 18,4 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
August 6, 1946
Physical Condition
Good
Language
French
Notes
brown paper containing a declaration of "Association nationale des officiers, sous officiers et cadres de la Résistance." Written in black ink on both sides of the paper. Date written in the top right corner of the front page (August 6, 1946) under the title. Signature of the secretary general on the middle of the back page with a black stamp from France. Letters testifies to the service of Mademoiselle Furstenberg in the resistance. Narrative: Lonia Furstenberg was born on 1914-04-28 in Belchatow (Poland) to Meier Furstenberg and Asha Biblow. She left Poland at the age of 16 to study medicine in Paris (quotas in Poland made it hard for her to pursue her studies). Lonia’s family was German speaking; she also spoke Polish and Yiddish. She had no family in France. She lived in Nancy and Reims before establishing herself in Paris. She learned French while working as a laboratory assistant. She then studied medicine and took classes in all the specialties, but for military medicine. Military medicine required students to lean how to jump out of an helicopter which her father would not give her permission to do. During the Second World War, she was a medicine student and worked in a clinic requisitioned by the German army. She passed as a non Jewish French citizen and had fake identity paper made to the name of Louise Triasse, supposedly born in Oran. Her resistance activities included caring for wounded resistant fighters, issuing fake disease certificated to young men so they could be exempt for the mandatory labour service (STO service du travail obligatoire) and issuing certificate of good health to prostitutes carrying venereal diseases who wanted to infect German soldiers. She became the first woman to own her own medical laboratory. Lonia was a Communist sympathizer, she was not religious and she eventually married a Gentile, a Polish RAF pilot named Zigmunt Kawnik (born in 1920). All the members of Lonia's family in Poland were deported and killed during the Holocaust.
Accession No.
2011.50.06
Name Access
Allio, Nicole
Places
Paris, France, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Letter

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn45722
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Letter : Ht: 27,8 cm x W: 21,7 cm
Date
August 6, 1946
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Letter : Ht: 27,8 cm x W: 21,7 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
August 6, 1946
Physical Condition
Good
Language
French
Notes
yellowing paper containing a declaration of "Association nationale des officiers, sous-officiers et cadres de la Résistance." Printed in black with no handwritten signatures or stamps (typed copy). Date written in the top right corner of the page under the underlined title. Fingerprints on the top of the back page (brown). Letters testifies to the service of Mademoiselle Furstenberg in the resistance; typed copy of handwritten letter 2011.50.06 Narrative: Lonia Furstenberg was born on 1914-04-28 in Belchatow (Poland) to Meier Furstenberg and Asha Biblow. She left Poland at the age of 16 to study medicine in Paris (quotas in Poland made it hard for her to pursue her studies). Lonia’s family was German speaking; she also spoke Polish and Yiddish. She had no family in France. She lived in Nancy and Reims before establishing herself in Paris. She learned French while working as a laboratory assistant. She then studied medicine and took classes in all the specialties, but for military medicine. Military medicine required students to lean how to jump out of an helicopter which her father would not give her permission to do. During the Second World War, she was a medicine student and worked in a clinic requisitioned by the German army. She passed as a non Jewish French citizen and had fake identity paper made to the name of Louise Triasse, supposedly born in Oran. Her resistance activities included caring for wounded resistant fighters, issuing fake disease certificated to young men so they could be exempt for the mandatory labour service (STO service du travail obligatoire) and issuing certificate of good health to prostitutes carrying venereal diseases who wanted to infect German soldiers. She became the first woman to own her own medical laboratory. Lonia was a Communist sympathizer, she was not religious and she eventually married a Gentile, a Polish RAF pilot named Zigmunt Kawnik (born in 1920). All the members of Lonia's family in Poland were deported and killed during the Holocaust.
Accession No.
2011.50.07
Name Access
Allio, Nicole
Places
Paris, France, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Letter

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn45723
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Letter : Ht: 27,8 cm x W: 21,8 cm
Date
March 13, 1947
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Letter : Ht: 27,8 cm x W: 21,8 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
March 13, 1947
Physical Condition
Good
Language
French
Polish
Notes
yellowing paper containing an attestation from "Union des polonais anciens résistants en France." Printed in black with a red stamp from Paris on the bottom right corner of the front page. Date written at the top right corner of the front page under the header (March 3, 1947). Letter testifies that Lonia Kawnik served in the resistance and recognizes her courage and patriotism. Narrative: Lonia Furstenberg was born on 1914-04-28 in Belchatow (Poland) to Meier Furstenberg and Asha Biblow. She left Poland at the age of 16 to study medicine in Paris (quotas in Poland made it hard for her to pursue her studies). Lonia’s family was German speaking; she also spoke Polish and Yiddish. She had no family in France. She lived in Nancy and Reims before establishing herself in Paris. She learned French while working as a laboratory assistant. She then studied medicine and took classes in all the specialties, but for military medicine. Military medicine required students to lean how to jump out of an helicopter which her father would not give her permission to do. During the Second World War, she was a medicine student and worked in a clinic requisitioned by the German army. She passed as a non Jewish French citizen and had fake identity paper made to the name of Louise Triasse, supposedly born in Oran. Her resistance activities included caring for wounded resistant fighters, issuing fake disease certificated to young men so they could be exempt for the mandatory labour service (STO service du travail obligatoire) and issuing certificate of good health to prostitutes carrying venereal diseases who wanted to infect German soldiers. She became the first woman to own her own medical laboratory. Lonia was a Communist sympathizer, she was not religious and she eventually married a Gentile, a Polish RAF pilot named Zigmunt Kawnik (born in 1920). All the members of Lonia's family in Poland were deported and killed during the Holocaust.
Accession No.
2011.50.08
Name Access
Allio, Nicole
Places
Paris, France, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Les Juifs dans la Catechese Chretienne

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn47545
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Booklet : printed, bound : grey, dark blue, black, beige ; Ht: 18,2 cm x W: 13,7 cm
Date
May 1952
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Booklet : printed, bound : grey, dark blue, black, beige ; Ht: 18,2 cm x W: 13,7 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
May 1952
Creator
-
Physical Condition
Good
Language
French
Notes
15 pages. Softcover, paper bound with staples. Faded grey cover, with dark blue text. The back cover is the same colour as the front, with 1 line of text printed in the bottom centre. Interior pages are beige; the 1st page is a typed copy of a letter, the remaining pages are text, broken into article numbers. An additional piece of paper, yellow with brown text, was inserted into the booklet separately. On it is written a summary of the booklet and it's publication details.
Accession No.
2011X.293.05
Name Access
Schryver, Samuel
Places
Paris, France, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Le procès des enfants Finaly: Cour d'appel de Grenoble

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn47546
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Booklet : printed, bound : beige, black ; Ht: 23,3 cm x W: 16,4 cm
Date
January 8, 1953
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Booklet : printed, bound : beige, black ; Ht: 23,3 cm x W: 16,4 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
January 8, 1953
Physical Condition
Good
Language
French
Notes
40 pages. Softcover, paper bound with staples. Beige cover with black title and text; back cover us plain beige. Interior pages are also beige, with black text. Some of the text is transcripts of letters.
Accession No.
2011X.293.06
Name Access
Schryver, Samuel
Places
Paris, France, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Undzere Farpainikte Kinstler

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn47564
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound, photography, embossed, gilded : beige, gold, black ; Ht: 32 cm x W: 24,8 cm
Date
1951
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound, photography, embossed, gilded : beige, gold, black ; Ht: 32 cm x W: 24,8 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
1951
Creator
0
Physical Condition
Good
Language
French
Yiddish
English
Notes
262 pages; hardcover, cardboard bound. Beige fabric cover with gold embossed title on front cover and spine. Beige pages with black text; consist of b&w photographs and drawings; red thread book mark attached to spine. Narrative: A series of biographies of French-Jewish artists killed by the Nazis.
Accession No.
1999.18.01
Name Access
Bultz, Paula
Places
Paris, France, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
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111 Dessins de Boris Taslitzky faits à Buchenwald 1944-1945

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn47573
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, graphic arts : beige, black, blue ; Ht: 25,1 cm x W: 21,7 cm
Date
1944-1945
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, graphic arts : beige, black, blue ; Ht: 25,1 cm x W: 21,7 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
1944-1945
Creator
0
Physical Condition
Good
Language
English
French
Notes
500+ pages (exact page number is unknown). Cardboard cover, not bound. Cover is beige with black and blue text; a b&w drawing of a person lying down, with their hands covering their face. Interior pages are beige, the first 12 consist only of text. The remaining pages have b&w drawings of different camp scenes, with captions under each. The last 5 drawings are in colour. The book ends with a table of contents of all the included drawings.
Accession No.
2011X.110.01
Name Access
Dionne, Danielle
Places
Paris, France, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
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Le Péril Juif: Le Règne d'Israel chez les Anglo-Saxons

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn47609
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound : beige, black, mustard ; Ht: 18,6 cm x W: 12 cm
Date
1921
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound : beige, black, mustard ; Ht: 18,6 cm x W: 12 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
1921
Creator
-
Physical Condition
Good
Language
English
French
Notes
271 pages, soft cover, paper and string bound, mustard-coloured cover. Spine has book information printed on it in 5 sections - author, title, price and editor information, back cover has a list of other publictions by the editor. Interior pages are beige and contain text.
Accession No.
2011X.58.25
Name Access
MHMC
Places
Paris, France, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Le Peril Judeo-Maconnique: Les "Protocols" de 1901

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn47611
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound : beige, black ; Ht: 25,5 cm x W: 6,5 cm
Date
1922
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound : beige, black ; Ht: 25,5 cm x W: 6,5 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
1922
Creator
-
Physical Condition
Good
Language
French
Notes
335 pages, paper bound book; beige cover and interior. Interior pages consist of text. Narrative: Revue internationale des sociétés secrètes (International Journal of Secret Societies [RISS]) was a French journal founded and directed by Mgr. Jouin in 1912. The magazine was Catholic tradionalist published by the Free-Catholic League. It was anti-Masonic and anti-Jewish, and was devoted to denouncing plots developed by secret societies, so-called Judeo-occultists. Publication of the magazine stopped in 1939.
Accession No.
2011X.58.32
Name Access
MHMC
Places
Paris, France, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

L'Étoile Jaune

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn47806
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound, photography : green, red-brown, black, beige ; Ht: 25,7 cm x W: 16,5 cm
Date
1949
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound, photography : green, red-brown, black, beige ; Ht: 25,7 cm x W: 16,5 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
1949
Creator
-
Physical Condition
Good
Language
French
Notes
93 pages. Softcover, paper bound. Cover is faded green with red-brown and black text; a series of thin red-brown lines are running horizontally along the bottom of the cover. The title is printed on the spine. Interior pages are beige, consisting of text, tables and b&w photocopies of documents. Narrative: Review of all French anti-Jewish laws and decrees.
Accession No.
2011X.178.01
Name Access
Kanterovich, Marie
Places
Paris, France, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
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In Memory of the Martyrs and Fighters of the Warsaw Ghetto [Translation]

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn47880
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound, graphic arts : beige, red, black, gold ; Ht: 27,4 cm x W: 21,8 cm
Date
1950
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound, graphic arts : beige, red, black, gold ; Ht: 27,4 cm x W: 21,8 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
1950
Creator
-
Physical Condition
Poor
Language
Hebrew
French
Notes
Approximately 78 pages. Softcover, paper bound. Cover is textured beige with red and black text; the text at the bottom centre is in the shape of a circle; the back cover is plain beige. Approximately the first 10 pages have text only; the remaining pages each have a b&w illustrations of people. The book is housed in a cardboard book box, which has 2 flaps put together to form a box. The box is textured beige and red-brown. The title is gilded along the spine.
Accession No.
2005.21.02
Places
Paris, France (Europe)
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
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Geven a Shtot in Lutsk ?

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn47895
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Booklet : printed, bound : white, black ; Ht: 21,2 cm x W: 13,6 cm
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Booklet : printed, bound : white, black ; Ht: 21,2 cm x W: 13,6 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Physical Condition
Good
Language
Yiddish
Notes
15 pages. Softcover, cardstock bound with staples. Cover is white with black text, surrounded by a thin rectangular border. Interior pages are white with text. Narrative: The pamphlet is about the Jews in Lutsk. Belonged to Mordecai Szteinfeld.
Accession No.
2001.61.07
Name Access
Meltzer, Riva
Places
Paris, France, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
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Le Renouveau

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn47917
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Booklet : printed, bound, photographed : black, white, beige ; Ht: 21,5 cm x W: 14 cm
Date
1946-1947
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Booklet : printed, bound, photographed : black, white, beige ; Ht: 21,5 cm x W: 14 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
1946-1947
Physical Condition
Good
Language
French
Notes
64 pages. Softcover, bound with string (see condition). Pages are both matt and glossy. Contains photographs, testimonies and analysis of the children’s home in Montmorency, France. Narrative: Suzanne Modlin (donor) was in the Montmorency children's home between 1945-1948. Contains a testimony from her on page 35 - 36.
Accession No.
2011X.237.02
Name Access
Modlin, Suzanne
Places
Montmorency, France, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
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Autograph Book

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn47991
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Autograph Book : leather work, handwritten, photography, graphic arts : brown, beige, multi-coloured ; Ht: 20,2 cm x W: 17,4 cm
Date
1938-July 9, 1943
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Autograph Book : leather work, handwritten, photography, graphic arts : brown, beige, multi-coloured ; Ht: 20,2 cm x W: 17,4 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
1938-July 9, 1943
Physical Condition
Good
Language
French
Yiddish
German
Italian
Spanish
Notes
110 pages. Hardcover, cardboard bound with glue and fabric. Cover is brown leather with a crocodile-skin pattern and a silver key-clasp; the edges and corners are rounded and the page edges are gilded; the binding fabric is red. Inside covers have a printed abstract pattern with multi-coloured smears of paint along the verticle axis. Interior pages are beige; primarily used as an autograph book. Autographs are found throughout in blue, black, green and purple inks, or in pencil. Drawings have been done in ink or pencil. One b&w photograph is attached to its own page: shows a woman in a dress, crouching outside on the ground, on a matt, with one arm extended as if to crawl, there is surrounding greenery with a mountain in the background. 2 pages of pressed flowers are found in the book: the first has only a 4-leaf clover; the second is filled with wildflowers, with stalks of wheat in the center. Many pages of the book are still blank. Book belonged to German Jewish woman named Hanna Landé. Narrative: Autographs, well-wishes and drawings to Hanna Landé. Written before and during her internment in Gurs internment camp. Earliest autograph dates from 1938. Hanna was in Paris in 1939, and in Villerbon in Dec. 1939. From July 1940 to June 1943, she was interned at Gurs. Gurs was an internment camp in south-western France along the Spanish border; it was originally used by the French to intern prisoners from the Spanish Civil War. On May 21, 1940, the Vichy government incarcerated German and other Axis citizens, as well as sympathizers at the camp, adding them to the existing Spanish population. When the armistice was signed with Germany, the Vichy government liberated the prisoners and burned the records (August to October 1940). The Nazis took over the camp in October 1940, filling it with Jews from other camps, Spaniards, and other "undesirables". There were numerous escapes from the camp (755 recorded) and it was only moderately secure, without the gun towers and a barbed wire fence only a few feet high. As of August 6, 1942, the camp's Jews were deported, usually to Drancy and from there on to Auschwitz.
Accession No.
2008.01.01
Name Access
Wendt, Wulfram
Places
France, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Letter

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn48211
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Letter : paper : beige, black ; Ht: 18 cm x W: 27,5 cm
Date
December 17, 1946
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Letter : paper : beige, black ; Ht: 18 cm x W: 27,5 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
December 17, 1946
Physical Condition
Good
Language
French
Notes
Two pages of lined paper. Double-sided and folded. Double-sided. . Personal letter from Elzbieta (Elizabeth) to mother Chana (Anna) Zilberbogen (born Wartens). Handwritten in black ink, Elzbieta tells her mother about the activities she does at Le Rainey and says that she did not have new of Celinka (Cécile) since a long time. Narrative: The Zilberbogen were a Jewish family originally from Warsaw (Poland). Mother Chana and daughters Elzbieta (born 1933) and Celinka (born 1937) moved to Belgium in 1939. The father, Szygmundt, an engineer, stayed in Poland. During the Second World War, the mother and daughters were first sent to Brens camp and then to Rivesaltes camp in the South of France before being released. Chana was then hospitalized and spent the war hidden in a Sanatorium in Mazamet from 1940 to 1947. Elzbieta and Celinka were hidden in various locations in the South of France, including a farm and different children's homes run by OSE including Andrésy. Szygmundt was killed in Poland. Chana and her daughters went back to live in Belgium after Liberation until immigrating to Canada in 1951.
Accession No.
2012.15.140
Name Access
Peltier, Cécile
Places
Raincy, France, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Letter

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn48221
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Letter : paper : beige, blue ; Ht: 20,9 cm x W: 13 cm
Date
May 04, 1947
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Letter : paper : beige, blue ; Ht: 20,9 cm x W: 13 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
May 04, 1947
Physical Condition
Excellent
Language
French
English
Notes
One page of lined paper. Double-sided. Personal letter from Elzbieta (Elizabeth) to mother Chana (Anna) Zilberbogen (born Wartens). Handwritten in blue ink. Thanks mother for the package she sent her. Tells mother that she will organize her stay in Paris. Says that she is going to see her sister Celinka (Cécile). Small part of letter is written in English. At that time, Elzbieta and sister Celinka where separated. Celinka stayed at Andrésy while Elzbieta went at Raincy. Narrative: The Zilberbogen were a Jewish family originally from Warsaw (Poland). Mother Chana and daughters Elzbieta (born 1933) and Celinka (born 1937) moved to Belgium in 1939. The father, Szygmundt, an engineer, stayed in Poland. During the Second World War, the mother and daughters were first sent to Brens camp and then to Rivesaltes camp in the South of France before being released. Chana was then hospitalized and spent the war hidden in a Sanatorium in Mazamet from 1940 to 1947. Elzbieta and Celinka were hidden in various locations in the South of France, including a farm and different children's homes run by OSE including one in Andrésy and at Raincy. Szygmundt was killed in Poland. Chana and her daughters went back to live in Belgium after Liberation until immigrating to Canada in 1951.
Accession No.
2012.15.151
Name Access
Peltier, Cécile
Places
Raincy, France, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

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