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Yis raʾel Gut man

    20 maggio 1923 – 1 ottobre 2013
    ʿImanuʾel Ringelblum
    The Jews of Poland Between Two World Wars
    Resistance
    The Auschwitz album
    Anatomy of the Auschwitz death camp
    Storia del Ghetto di Varsavia
    • Il 19 aprile 1943, migliaia di soldati nazisti ricevettero l'ordine di deportare gli ebrei del ghetto di Varsavia nei campi di sterminio. In un ghetto ormai ridotto a pochi blocchi, i restanti ebrei, per lo più adolescenti armati di pistole e bombe molotov, decisero di difendersi. Questo libro racconta in dettaglio la rivolta e gli eventi che la precedettero. Negli anni '20 e '30, Varsavia ospitava una vivace comunità ebraica, composta da persone di ogni estrazione sociale e orientamento politico. Con l'invasione tedesca, gli ebrei furono soggetti a violenze inaudite, isolamento, fame e deportazioni. Un muro circondò il ghetto, e centinaia di migliaia furono deportati a Treblinka. Tuttavia, la resistenza cominciò a organizzarsi e, quando arrivò l'ordine dell'attacco finale, i combattenti erano pronti. Attraverso estratti toccanti da diari, lettere e documenti dell'epoca, il libro offre una lucida ricostruzione di un periodo cruciale della storia ebraica e mondiale.

      Storia del Ghetto di Varsavia
    • Leading scholars from the united States, Israel, Poland, and other European countries provide a comprehensive account of what took place at the Auschwitz death camp. The book addresses the history of the camp, the technology and dimensions of the genocide carried out there, profiles of the perpetrators and the lives of inmates, underground resistance and escapes, and what the outside world knew about Auschwitz and when. 25 photos.

      Anatomy of the Auschwitz death camp
    • The Auschwitz album

      • 304pagine
      • 11 ore di lettura

      This album, an extraordinary find, was originally discovered during the tumult of the first days after the liberation. It reveals how two SS photographers documented the arrival of shipments of Jews to the platform in the Birkenau concentration camp, the selection process, and their path to the gas chambers and the crematoria. The photographs also memorialize the piles of possessions left by the Jews which were sorted in the 'Canada' Barracks. They are accompanied by three articles that describe the development of the camp, the Holocaust of Hungarian Jewry, and the story of how the album was found; a fourth focuses on the camera as a historical tool. The 189 pictures, arranged in chronological order and reproduced in this album for the first time, are unusually powerful, not least because 70% of the people shown have been identified.

      The Auschwitz album
    • On April 19, 1943, thousands of Nazi troops were given the order to remove all Jews in the Warsaw ghetto, a few square blocks sheltering the remnants of the half million or more Jewish citizens of Poland's capital, to the death camps of Treblinka and Auschwitz. They were to kill those who resisted. A few hundred of the trapped Jews, mostly teenagers, armed only with pistols, Molotov cocktails, and a few light machine guns, vowed to fight back. Resistance is the full story of the uprising and the events leading to it, told by a survivor of the battle who is now a world-renowned Israeli scholar of the Holocaust. Warsaw in the 1920s and 1930s was the home of Europe's largest and most vibrant Jewish community. It included the rich, the poor, and the middle class; casual assimilationists and ardent Zionists; representatives of the full spectrum of political and religious factions. Then came the German onslaught of ruthless violence against the Jews--isolation and starvation amid desperation and disease--then deportations. As the ghetto walls rose, hundreds of thousands were rounded up and sent to Treblinka. But resistance began to take shape, and when the final attack order came, the ghetto fighters stood ready. Includes excerpts from diaries, letters, and other documents of the period

      Resistance
    • A series of essays, by noted scholars from America, Europe, and Israel, describing Jewish life in Poland between 1918 and 1939. the study illustrates the communities' efforts to maintain the strong cultural heritage amidst anti-Semitism.

      The Jews of Poland Between Two World Wars