57 records – page 1 of 3.

The Birth of Hitler (Translation)

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn47681
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound : green, pink, white, beige, black ; Ht: 18,8 cm x W: 12,7 cm
Date
November 1945
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound : green, pink, white, beige, black ; Ht: 18,8 cm x W: 12,7 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
November 1945
Creator
-
Physical Condition
Good
Language
English
Yiddish
Notes
64 pages. Softcover, paper bound. Front cover is divided into 3 parts, the top and bottom parts are green, and the middle part is pink. The title and author information is printed in white lettering on the top and bottom parts. In the middle is a sketch of a white frog, wearing a necklace with a swastika pendant, and swastikas drawn in its eyes. On either side is a small sketch of a planet, and a happy face. The back cover is white. Interior pages are beige, consisting of text.
Accession No.
2011X.275.01
Name Access
Rothman, Larry
Places
New York, United States of America, North America
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Booklet

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn48194
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Booklet : printed, bound, photographed : beige, red, black, white ; Ht: 28,1 cm x W: 21,6 cm
Date
1958
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Booklet : printed, bound, photographed : beige, red, black, white ; Ht: 28,1 cm x W: 21,6 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
1958
Physical Condition
Good
Notes
32 pages. Softcover, bound with staples. Cover is beige, with red text (needs translation), an illustration of a book done in red, with the number 50 in the centre. Pages are glossy with text broken down into articles. Several b&w photos are found throughout the text.
Accession No.
2012X.75.01
Name Access
MHMC
Places
New York, United States of America , North America
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

The Capture and Trial of Adolf Eichmann

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn47751
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound, photography, gilded : black, white, beige, blue ; Ht: 21,8 cm x W: 15 cm
Date
1963
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound, photography, gilded : black, white, beige, blue ; Ht: 21,8 cm x W: 15 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
1963
Creator
0
Physical Condition
Good
Language
English
Notes
666 pages. Hardcover, cardboard bound with string. Book has a dustjacket that is glossy black with the title and author printed in white; 2 b&w drawings appear under the title. The left drawing is a white outline of Eichmann's head, wearing a hat, with a black background surrounded by a thin white border; the right drawing is a white box with Eichmann's head drawn in black, wearing glasses, drawn behind several thin vertical lines. The spine of the dustjacket is black with white text and the back is white with black text. The book's cover is all black with the title gilded onto the spine. Interior pages are beige with text. Page 10 has a image of a photocopied document.
Accession No.
2002.26.02
Name Access
Campbell, Robert
Places
New York, United States of America, North America
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Card

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn59399
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Card : Cardstock : Printed : Printed : Black, beige. ; Ht: 6 cm x W: 9 cm
Date
December 12, 1943
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Card : Cardstock : Printed : Printed : Black, beige. ; Ht: 6 cm x W: 9 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
December 12, 1943
Physical Condition
Good
Language
English
Notes
Card with embossed border and calligraphic message. Response card for a marriage. Dated December 12, 1943. Narrative: Isaac Herbert Isselbacher was born 1919-11-20 in Isselbach, Germany. His brother was Helmut Isselbacher, born 1921-12-20. Their father was Jacob Isselbacher, born 1883-08-05. They had an uncle and aunt, David and Betty Loewenstein, who lived in New York City with their two children. Isaac left Germany on 1939-07-29, hoping to join his relatives in NYC. He only had the time to get to London, England before the war broke out and started working in a factory. He was arrested at his workplace as an ‘enemy alien’ and sent to Canada for internment in 1940. Isaac was interned in Camp N in Sherbrooke, Quebec. He was drafted into the Works Program Division for woodworking and net-making. In 1940, he received a last letter from his parents which suggested their imminent deportation. After his release, circa November 1942, Isaac worked as a locksmith. He married Fanny Azeff on 1943-12-26 at the Bnai Jacob synagogue in Montreal. Fanny was born on 1921-12-23 in Canada, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Azeff. Isaac was naturalized as a Canadian citizen on 1946-06-08. Fanny was naturalized on 1946-08-30 (she had lost her citizenship by marrying Isaac). Isaac’s brother, Helmut Isselbacher, was deported with Transport XXII A from Dossin casern in Mechelen (Malines), Belgium to Auschwitz Birkenau, Poland on 1943-09-20. Of the 2,450 people on the transport, 100 men were selected to work –including Helmut- and the remainder prisoners were gassed. Helmut was made to work as a welder, and was soon fitting new pipes for the gas chamber. He suffered a nervous breakdown as a result. As he was a valued welder, he was transferred to a labour camp in Upper Silesia (Poland) where he remained for two years. As the Russian army advanced, the 6,000 prisoners of this camp were evacuated by train. Helmut remembered being forced to march as the other prisoners died from exhaustion. When liberation was announced, the survivors travelled by ship from Luebeck, Germany, to Sweden with the aid of the Red Cross. After recovery, Helmut decided to remain in Sweden as a welder. Upon learning of his brother’s survival, Helmut travelled to New York in April 1946 to meet with him and their Loewenstein relatives. Afterwards, Helmut travelled to Canada bringing with him a washing machine and bras as late wedding presents for his brother and Fanny. By 1946-08-12, their parents were presumed dead and the two sons inquired into their estate. They received a deed for the land and travelled to the estate to discover that the current owner of their house was their old maid and her son had become the town mayor. Various disputes arose with the current ‘owners’ who believed the Isselbacher family dead. Isaac wished to discuss a settlement, but the mayor’s mother –not realizing Fanny understood German- called the neighbours at work to warn them not to come home as the Isselbacher sons had resurfaced. Payment for the land had reportedly been sent to Israel, though no documentation could be provided.
Accession No.
1999.1.62
Name Access
Issley, Jason
Places
New York, United States of America, North America
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Certificate

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn59445
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Certificate : Paper : Copy : Ink : Beige, black ; Ht: 29 cm x W: 18 cm
Date
December 13, 1938
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Certificate : Paper : Copy : Ink : Beige, black ; Ht: 29 cm x W: 18 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
December 13, 1938
Physical Condition
Good
Language
English
Notes
Copy of original document, entitled Hamburg-American Line --- North German Lloyd, black line border around edge, copy becoming darker at both ends. Affidavit in Support of the Application for Immigration Visa made by Isaac Herbert Isselbaecher, supported by his uncle David Lowenstein in New York. Narrative: Isaac Herbert Isselbacher was born 1919-11-20 in Isselbach, Germany. His brother was Helmut Isselbacher, born 1921-12-20. Their father was Jacob Isselbacher, born 1883-08-05. They had an uncle and aunt, David and Betty Loewenstein, who lived in New York City with their two children. Isaac left Germany on 1939-07-29, hoping to join his relatives in NYC. He only had the time to get to London, England before the war broke out and started working in a factory. He was arrested at his workplace as an ‘enemy alien’ and sent to Canada for internment in 1940. Isaac was interned in Camp N in Sherbrooke, Quebec. He was drafted into the Works Program Division for woodworking and net-making. In 1940, he received a last letter from his parents which suggested their imminent deportation. After his release, circa November 1942, Isaac worked as a locksmith. He married Fanny Azeff on 1943-12-26 at the Bnai Jacob synagogue in Montreal. Fanny was born on 1921-12-23 in Canada, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Azeff. Isaac was naturalized as a Canadian citizen on 1946-06-08. Fanny was naturalized on 1946-08-30 (she had lost her citizenship by marrying Isaac). Isaac’s brother, Helmut Isselbacher, was deported with Transport XXII A from Dossin casern in Mechelen (Malines), Belgium to Auschwitz Birkenau, Poland on 1943-09-20. Of the 2,450 people on the transport, 100 men were selected to work –including Helmut- and the remainder prisoners were gassed. Helmut was made to work as a welder, and was soon fitting new pipes for the gas chamber. He suffered a nervous breakdown as a result. As he was a valued welder, he was transferred to a labour camp in Upper Silesia (Poland) where he remained for two years. As the Russian army advanced, the 6,000 prisoners of this camp were evacuated by train. Helmut remembered being forced to march as the other prisoners died from exhaustion. When liberation was announced, the survivors travelled by ship from Luebeck, Germany, to Sweden with the aid of the Red Cross. After recovery, Helmut decided to remain in Sweden as a welder. Upon learning of his brother’s survival, Helmut travelled to New York in April 1946 to meet with him and their Loewenstein relatives. Afterwards, Helmut travelled to Canada bringing with him a washing machine and bras as late wedding presents for his brother and Fanny. By 1946-08-12, their parents were presumed dead and the two sons inquired into their estate. They received a deed for the land and travelled to the estate to discover that the current owner of their house was their old maid and her son had become the town mayor. Various disputes arose with the current ‘owners’ who believed the Isselbacher family dead. Isaac wished to discuss a settlement, but the mayor’s mother –not realizing Fanny understood German- called the neighbours at work to warn them not to come home as the Isselbacher sons had resurfaced. Payment for the land had reportedly been sent to Israel, though no documentation could be provided.
Accession No.
1999.1.631
Name Access
Issley, Jason
Places
New York, United States of America, North America
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

A chronicle of the destruction of the sacred Jewish communities of Lithuania 1941-1945

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn51230
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : Bound : Ink : Grey, Green, Black, Orange ; Ht: 9,5 in. x W: 6,5 in.
Date
1951
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : Bound : Ink : Grey, Green, Black, Orange ; Ht: 9,5 in. x W: 6,5 in.
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
1951
Creator
-
Physical Condition
Good
Language
English
Yiddish
Notes
Hard cover, 468 pages. On the inside there is an illustration of a tree falling to the left, with its roots out of the ground.
Accession No.
2011X.58.153
Name Access
MHMC
Places
New York, United States of America, North America
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Citizenship Certificate

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn59815
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Citizenship Certificate : paper : Printed ; Ht: 20 cm x W: 25 cm
Date
March 18, 1955
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Citizenship Certificate : paper : Printed ; Ht: 20 cm x W: 25 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
March 18, 1955
Physical Condition
Good
Language
English
Notes
Form with details typed-in, b&w photo attached, embossed stamp from the United States District Court of the District of New York, U.S. Certificate of Naturalization for Rosa Zabejinski, born May 24, 1885 in Russia. Narrative: Gregory Hirsch Braude (donor’s father) was born in Smorgon, near Riga, Latvia, on May 23, 1900. Between that time and 1920, his family had moved to Berlin, Germany. Vera Braude, née Zabejinski, was born in Moscow, Russia, in 1908. In 1920, Vera’s family moved to Berlin, Germany. Gregory met Vera Zabejinski (born on June 23, 1908, in Moscow) at a masked ball in 1929 and then got married. They remained in Berlin until the spring of 1938 and moved to Paris, France. Their daughter, Marina was born there on January 17, 1940. Around 1941, Gregory, Vera, their daughter Marina, and Johanan (one of Gregory’s elder brothers) escaped Paris towards Marseilles. Then they were smuggled out to Lisbon, Portugal. While in Lisbon, the family got visas for Cuba and left for Havana aboard the Serpa Pinto. They remained there for approximately six months. The family later moved to New York City after Gregory got a visa for the United States. He and Vera had a son, Alexander, in New York in 1946. In New York, Gregory and Johanan established a business, Braude Brothers Leather Tanning Corporation, while Vera was an artist and a homemaker. Vera’s parents, Rosa Zabejinski (née Belkin, on May 24, 1885) and Gregory Zabejinski (born on March 23, 1879), had joined them in Paris, while her sister, Rufina ("Ina"), hid in a fishing village in France. Rufina had married Marc Beaucourt, a non-Jewish Frenchman. Rufina’s in-laws, the Beaucourt, had arranged to build a hidden room behind their daughter Lydie’s room for Rosa and Gregory to hide into.
Accession No.
2006.24.131
Name Access
Etingin, Marina
Places
New York, United States of America, North America
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Commandant of Auschwitz: The Autobiography of Rudolf Hoess

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn47750
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound, photography : red, yellow, black, white, beige ; Ht: 21,7 cm x W: 15 cm
Date
1959
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound, photography : red, yellow, black, white, beige ; Ht: 21,7 cm x W: 15 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
1959
Creator
0
Physical Condition
Good
Language
English
Notes
285 pages. Hardcover, cardboard bound with string. Book has a dustjacket that is glossy and divided horizontally into 3 parts: the top is red with white text, the middle has a b&w photo of the Auschwitz barracks, the bottom is yellow with b&w text. The colour blocking and picture continues along the spine and onto the back. The book's cover is red with 3 lines of illustrated barbed wire running horizontally across the front, spine and back; the title is gilded on the spine. The flyleaf has a red and black rectangular piece of cardboard taped to the page with writing on and underneath it (see inscriptions). Interior pages are beige with text divided into chapters. There are 4 pages in the middle of the book that are glossy and contain b&w photos and captions.
Accession No.
2002.26.01
Name Access
Campbell, Robert
Places
Cleveland; New York, United States of America, North America
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Der Forward

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn51347
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Newspaper clipping : Ht: 17 in. x W: 13 in.
Date
December 18, 1945
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Newspaper clipping : Ht: 17 in. x W: 13 in.
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
December 18, 1945
Physical Condition
Poor
Language
Yiddish
Notes
This is newspaper article from the newspaper “Der Forward”.
Accession No.
2001.17.01
Name Access
Kroo, Emil
Places
New York, United States of America, North America
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Less detail

Di Geheime Drukerei Fun Yidishn Untehgrund

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn47576
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound, photography : beige, black ; Ht: 23 cm x W: 14,9 cm
Date
1953
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound, photography : beige, black ; Ht: 23 cm x W: 14,9 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
1953
Creator
-
Physical Condition
Good
Language
Yiddish
Notes
71 pages. softcover, paper bound. Beige cover with black lettering. Interior pages are beige with black text and some b&w photographs.
Accession No.
2011X.331.01
Name Access
Tenenbaum, Marcel
Places
New York, United States of America, North America
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Employment certificate

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn59946
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Employment certificate : Paper : Typewritten : Ink : b&w ; Ht: 27,5 cm x W: 21 cm
Date
December 28, 1945
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Employment certificate : Paper : Typewritten : Ink : b&w ; Ht: 27,5 cm x W: 21 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
December 28, 1945
Physical Condition
Good
Language
English
Notes
Photocopy of an official credential issued to Sylvia Markowitz, print line on right side. TL portrait of letter holder. 'The American Jewish Distribution Committee. Inc' across top. Three signatures: Sylvia Markowitz, Louis Sobel (Ass. Secretary), and Edward Warburg (Chairman). Illegible stamp BR. Issued on the 28 December 1945. This letter grants Sylvia the full power to request assistance and resources from any American institution under the US government. Narrative: Sylvia Benjamin (then Markowitz) started working as overseas staff for the American Joint Distribution Committee in Dec 1945. Her first assignment was at the Bergen-Belsen Displaced Persons camp near Hamburg. She was charged with interviewing for and distributing visas to Sweden, helping Jews locate surviving family, and for arranging medical care. After 6 months she was transferred to Hamburg where she helped re-establish a Jewish community. Her focus was on rebuilding a sense of community and spirit above mere survival requirements.
Accession No.
2011X.75.11
Name Access
Benjamin, Sylvia
Places
New York, United States of America, North America
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Envelope

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn59383
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Envelope : Paper : Handwritten : Ink : Blue, Red ; Ht: 9 cm x W: 16 cm
Date
February 06, 1946
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Envelope : Paper : Handwritten : Ink : Blue, Red ; Ht: 9 cm x W: 16 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
February 06, 1946
Physical Condition
Poor
Language
English
French
Spanish
Notes
Air mail envelope with two air mail stamps -one of which has been partly removed. Red and blue border follows bottom and right edges. Two United States Air Mail stamps to the value of 6 cents each. Air mail decal decorates the TL corner with the inscription 'Via Air Mail - Par Avion - Correo Aereo.' There is a yellow liquid stain on TL corner. Envelope is opened, interior decorated with blue crosshatches. Reverse reads 'After Five Days Return To:' Ink addresses are illegible. May be addressed to Lavy Becker in Montreal, Quebec. Return post to N.Y. Narrative: Born in 1905, Becker was a rabbi and a businessman. He was a National Vice-President of Canadian Jewish Congress, an executive chairman of Federation of Jewish Community Services. He was on the Board of Governors Canadian Welfare Council, Board of Directors America-Israel Cultural Foundation, and Board of Governors of the Combined Jewish Appeal. He was a National Vice-President Zionist Organization of Canada; Director of the Joint Distribution Committee in U.S.A. Zone, Germany. He is a former Executive Director Young Men's Hebrew Association. He was a representative of the Jewish Welfare Board in Caribbean countries, a founder of the Beth-El Congregation in the Town of Mount Royal, and he was the founder and first rabbi of Reconstructionist Synagogue, Hampstead. He died in Montreal in 2001.
Accession No.
2011X.72.28
Name Access
Becker, Hillel
Places
New York, United States of America, North America
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Envelope

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn59816
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Envelope : paper : Printed, stamped : ink : Black, beige, purple ; Ht: 10 cm x W: 24 cm
Date
April 01, 1955
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Envelope : paper : Printed, stamped : ink : Black, beige, purple ; Ht: 10 cm x W: 24 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
April 01, 1955
Physical Condition
Good
Language
English
Notes
Printed, pre-paid envelope from the United States District Court, addressed to Rosa Zabejinski. Included her certificate of naturalization. Narrative: Gregory Hirsch Braude (donor’s father) was born in Smorgon, near Riga, Latvia, on May 23, 1900. Between that time and 1920, his family had moved to Berlin, Germany. Vera Braude, née Zabejinski, was born in Moscow, Russia, in 1908. In 1920, Vera’s family moved to Berlin, Germany. Gregory met Vera Zabejinski (born on June 23, 1908, in Moscow) at a masked ball in 1929 and then got married. They remained in Berlin until the spring of 1938 and moved to Paris, France. Their daughter, Marina was born there on January 17, 1940. Around 1941, Gregory, Vera, their daughter Marina, and Johanan (one of Gregory’s elder brothers) escaped Paris towards Marseilles. Then they were smuggled out to Lisbon, Portugal. While in Lisbon, the family got visas for Cuba and left for Havana aboard the Serpa Pinto. They remained there for approximately six months. The family later moved to New York City after Gregory got a visa for the United States. He and Vera had a son, Alexander, in New York in 1946. In New York, Gregory and Johanan established a business, Braude Brothers Leather Tanning Corporation, while Vera was an artist and a homemaker. Vera’s parents, Rosa Zabejinski (née Belkin, on May 24, 1885) and Gregory Zabejinski (born on March 23, 1879), had joined them in Paris, while her sister, Rufina ("Ina"), hid in a fishing village in France. Rufina had married Marc Beaucourt, a non-Jewish Frenchman. Rufina’s in-laws, the Beaucourt, had arranged to build a hidden room behind their daughter Lydie’s room for Rosa and Gregory to hide into.
Accession No.
2006.24.132
Name Access
Etingin, Marina
Places
New York, United States of America, North America
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Forward

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn51346
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Newspaper : Paper ; Ht: 17 1/2 in. x W: 12 1/4 in.
Date
December 18, 1945
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Newspaper : Paper ; Ht: 17 1/2 in. x W: 12 1/4 in.
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
December 18, 1945
Physical Condition
Good
Language
Yiddish
Notes
Photocopy of a newspaper article from Forward newspaper about Displaced Persons camp entitled "A Visit to a Jewish Camp near Nuremberg".
Accession No.
2011X.198.04
Name Access
Kroo, Emil
Places
New York, United States of America, North America
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Less detail

Jewish Affairs

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn51209
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Magazine : Bound : Ink : Blue, Black, White ; Ht: 7,5 in. x W: 5,5 in.
Date
May 1, 1946
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Magazine : Bound : Ink : Blue, Black, White ; Ht: 7,5 in. x W: 5,5 in.
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
May 1, 1946
Creator
0
Physical Condition
Good
Language
English
Notes
19 pages. Cover has 3 shadows of people walking from the bottom left corner towards the upper right. The title of the issue "Where Shall they Go?" runs vertically along the left edge.
Accession No.
2000.7.4
Name Access
Gertel, Brenda
Places
New York, United States of America, North America
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

The Jewish Badge and the Yellow Star in the Nazi Era

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn48193
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Booklet : printed, bound : beige, black ; Ht: 25,1 cm x W: 17 cm
Date
April 1955
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Booklet : printed, bound : beige, black ; Ht: 25,1 cm x W: 17 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
April 1955
Creator
-
Physical Condition
Good
Language
English
Notes
29 pages. Softcover, bound with staples. Cover is beige, with black text, surrounded by a black border. Pages are beige, with text: pages start at number 41 and end at number 70.
Accession No.
2012X.74.01
Places
New York, United States of America (North America)
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

The Jewish Catastrophe (Translation)

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn47677
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound : grey, black, beige ; Ht: 22,4 cm x W: 15,2 cm
Date
1944
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound : grey, black, beige ; Ht: 22,4 cm x W: 15,2 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
1944
Creator
-
Physical Condition
Good
Language
English
Yiddish
Notes
239 pages. Softcover, paper bound. Cover is textured grey with black lettering; no text found on the spine or back cover. Interior pages are beige, with black text. The last cover, on the inside, has English text.
Accession No.
2011X.58.141
Name Access
MHMC
Places
New York, United States of America, North America
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

The Jewish Ghettos of the Nazi Era

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn48192
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Booklet : printed, bound : beige, black ; Ht: 24,5 cm x W: 17,4 cm
Date
1954
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Booklet : printed, bound : beige, black ; Ht: 24,5 cm x W: 17,4 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
1954
Creator
-
Physical Condition
Good
Notes
27 pages. Softcover, bound with staples. Cover is beige, with visible fibres woven into the paper; black text. Pages are beige, with text: pages start at number 61 and end at number 88.
Accession No.
2012X.73.01
Places
New York, United States of America (North America)
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Jews Must Live: An Account of the Persecution of the World by Israel on all the Frontiers of Civilization

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn47426
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound, graphic arts : black, gold, beige, white ; Ht: 23,8 cm x W: 15,7 cm
Date
1934
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Book : printed, bound, graphic arts : black, gold, beige, white ; Ht: 23,8 cm x W: 15,7 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
1934
Creator
-
Physical Condition
Good conservation
Language
English
Notes
319 pages. Hardcover, cardboard bound with string. Cover is textured black fabric with no text; title is printed in gold along the spine, surrounded by a rectangular boarder; the back cover is blank. Interior pages are beige with text and b&w illustrations. The page before the title page is glossy white, with an illustration of a man in front of a black background. The book's title is printed along the bottom.
Accession No.
2011X.41.10
Name Access
Orenstein, Benjamin
Places
New York, United States of America, North America
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

The Last Stand: Jewish Resistance in Nazi Europe and the role of the Labor Zionist Movement

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn47541
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Booklet : printed, bound : grey-blue, brown, black, beige ; Ht: 21,1 cm x W: 13,8 cm
Date
April 1944
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
textual record
Physical Description
Booklet : printed, bound : grey-blue, brown, black, beige ; Ht: 21,1 cm x W: 13,8 cm
Other Title Information
Documentary Artifact
Date
April 1944
Physical Condition
Good
Language
English
Notes
43 pages. Softcover, paper bound with staples. Cover's edges are brown, and the centre is grey-blue (the brown is a result of discolouration, see condition); the title is printed in black. The back cover is the same colour as the front, with 1 line of text printed in the bottom centre. Interior pages are beige, consisting of text.
Accession No.
1997.39.15
Name Access
Flanders (Rome), Tibey
Places
New York, United States of America, North America
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

57 records – page 1 of 3.