Weesperstraat 107 1018 VN Amsterdam
Contins a false identification card issued for "Sonja Seegers" and used by Betty Beek (donor's couson) who died in Bergen-Belsen of typhus on March 15, 1945; issued in Haarlem, The Netherlands; dated September 15, 1941.
Photocopied correspondence and news clipping, appears to be from police file, documenting allegations against Jewish attorney Justin Held in Nuremberg, who was accused of fraud, and who fled to Paris, and then Palestine. Dated 1933-1935.
Contains documents, correspondence, and photographs illustrating the experiences of Joseph Rosenfeld of Vienna, who was able to flee to the United States with the assistance of an American sponsor named Harry Rosenfeld.
The papers consist of photographs of and identification papers for the Josef Diamant Burzminski [donor] and members of the Diamant family before and during the Holocaust. The papers also include a page of 6 portraits that the donor sketched of the people with whom he was hiding.
Verschijnt onregelmatig v. ; xx cm.
Correspondence and newspaper issues, relating to the German occupation of Poland and to German concentration camps. This collection contains 2 letters and one postcard sent by Julius Zon to his family in l942 and l943. Useful for the actual physical appearance of the camp issued postcard and letter paper.
The papers consist of a note written by Masha Musel to her brother, Moshe, on the day that he left the ghetto and a photograph showing a group of women working in a workshop (Ida Karnovsky [donor's sister] is pictured in the first row on the right).
The Fred Feld papers consists of a passport ("Reisepass") stamped with a " J" issued to Mathias Scheer [Fred Feld's uncle] in Austria on December 1, 1938, and two postcards written by Baruch Wiener in Tarnów, Poland, to his brother-in-law, Mathias Scheer in Brooklyn , N.Y. in September 1941.
The papers consist of captioned United States Army Signal Corps photographic prints of concentration camps taken immediately following liberation as well as a card with a photograph of Charles T. Blythe and the caption: "Born: May 13, 1924 / Last Wishes: July 11, 2001"; "Look out for one another."
The papers consist of three photographs of a meeting of Jewish men in Poland, including Chaim Bornstein and his father Moshe Wolf and the Chief Hassidic Rabbi of Będzin. Also included are three letters written by Sifra Forster in Sosnowiec, Poland, to her brother, Bernard Forster, in Great Britain.