Weesperstraat 107 1018 VN Amsterdam
Contains photographs, school records, letters of reference, identification documents, and other material relating to Werner Loval's childhood and education in Bamberg, Germany, and his family's immigration to Ecuador.
The papers consist of a receipt booklet for the number of eggs a farmer gave the German state and a ballot from 1934 requesting the German people to vote if they accepted Hitler's takeover as Reichspraesident after Paul von Hindenburg's death.
The Salomon Pfeffer papers consists of a Military Government Residence Certificate for Salomon Pfeffer, dated August 7, 1945; an image of Salomon Pfeffer taken in fromt of the Landsberg hospital in 1949; and 1 roll of negatives of an unidentified concentration camp taken by Salomon Pfeffer.
The papers consist of a postcard sent by Mendel Lipschitz in Skidel, Poland, to his brother, Charles Lipschitz [donor's father-in-law], in New York, N.Y., and a postcard sent by Mendel Lipschitz in the Soviet Union to Charles Lipschitz in N.Y.
The papers consist of six photographs relating to the experiences of Bianka Karpf and her family in Boryslaw, Poland, (now Boryslav, Ukraine), their attempt to emigrate to Palestine, and their activities with Hashomer Hatzair as well as one "Ausweis für Arbeitsjuden" issued to Bianka Silberman [donor].
Testimony: Typescript, 6 pages, about author's experiences as child in Wittlich, Germany, his family's emigration to Holland, the German occupation, living in hiding there, and capture and deportation of parents to Sobibor.
Consists of personal letters; Swiss protective passes (Schutzpasses); a report to the police about crimes committed by the Arrow Cross in Budapest; and other documents related to the Koch family.
Consists of documents, photographs, passports, correspondence, and other original material pertaining to Gunter H. Blatt and Marie Blatt, formerly of Berlin, Germany, who immigrated to the United States in 1941.
Contains correspondence sent to Estera Binstock Rubenstein (donors' mother) in the United States from her immediate family in Wachok, Poland between 1939 and 1942. Also included are newspapers, in Yiddish, dated 1946 and 1949.
Correspondence, writings, personal documents, printed matter, photographs, and sound recordings, relating to political and cultural conditions in Latvia during the twentieth century, and to the Jewish community in Latvia.