Weesperstraat 107 1018 VN Amsterdam
Testimony, handwritten, 10 pages, circa 1990s, recalling family and childhood in Łódź, study of medicine and training as a doctor, and her work as a physician in the Łódź ghetto, Auschwitz, Guben, and Bergen Belsen.
Testimony, 3 pages, typewritten, by Tamara Freitag, of Bronx, NY, written in 1994. Describes German occupation of her hometown in Poland, her time as forced laborer in Starachowice, then Auschwitz, death march to Ravensbrueck, liberation.
Testimony, 1 page, handwritten, recalling author's experiences as child of British father and German mother in Leipzig, internment in camp on Bodensee for several years, reuniting with father, and family's emigration to England.
Testimony, typescript, two pages. Recounts experiences of Kolander, in his native Poland, life in pre-war period, German occupation, wartime exile in Soviet Union (Ural Mountains), experience as DP at Landshut, immigration to U.S.
Contains a memoir about Julie Lando's childhood experiences in Germany, changes that occurred in her life when the Nazis came to power, and Julie Lando's journey via ship on the M.S.Oakland via the Azores to Columbia, the Panama Canal, Costa Rica, Mexico, San Diego, Los Angeles, and San Francisco.
Contains a memoir which includes a listing of members of the Keizer famiy who perished during the Holocaust, the personal story of Felix Keizer and his family during the German occupation of the Netherlands between 1940 and 1945, and information about the general treatment of Jews during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands.
Consists of a memoir, 131 pages, detailing the Holocaust experiences of Dr. Sándor Vig, originally of Slovakia. Dr. Vig kept a very descriptive daily account of his experiences in a Hungarian forced labor battallion, and wrote this memoir using those notes after the war. The memoir is available in both Hungarian and Hebrew versions.
Testimony, typescript, 3 pages, circa 1990s. Describes childhood in Slovakia, Hungarian occupation of region in 1940, deportation to Auschwitz in 1944, deportation to Kaufering and then march to Allach and liberation. Postwar immigration to Palestine/Israel.
Testimony, photocopy of typescript, 6 pages, describing Oskar Glick, a Jew from Austria who came to Lithuania, where the author (Jerome Gitelson) met him in Vilnius. Notes activities of Glick that helped save numerous Jews.
Materials from the Judaica Memoiren (Jewish Memoirs) Collection, from the Archive of the City of Munich