Booklet
Extent and Medium
a: Height: 8.750 inches (22.225 cm) | Width: 5.500 inches (13.97 cm)
b: Height: 3.250 inches (8.255 cm) | Width: 4.380 inches (11.125 cm)
c: Height: 3.250 inches (8.255 cm) | Width: 4.380 inches (11.125 cm)
d: Height: 4.380 inches (11.125 cm) | Width: 2.870 inches (7.29 cm)
e: Height: 2.870 inches (7.29 cm) | Width: 4.500 inches (11.43 cm)
f: Height: 2.870 inches (7.29 cm) | Width: 4.500 inches (11.43 cm)
Creator(s)
- Sol Oster (Subject)
- Isaac Ossowski (Subject)
Biographical History
Isaac Ossowski was born in 1877 in Lubraniez, near Warsaw, Poland, to an extremely devout family and Hasidim, with a long tradition of religious study and service, as hazan [cantors], shochet [ritual slaughterer], mohels [perform ritual circumcision], and sofers [scribes.] His father, Menahem, was a shochet and Isaac attended Yeshiva in Russia. He resettled in Germany, first in Frankfurt am Main, then in Berlin. He married Frieda Schwartzbardt, born in 1888. They had three sons, Joseph, (1915-2011), Leo (b. 4/1/1913), and Sol (1919-2011), and one daughter, Nettie. Rabbi Ossowski became head shochet, overseeing the ritual slaughter of animals in Berlin. He also served as hazan, mohel, and sofer for the Alte Shule [Old Synagogue]. After Hitler was appointed Chancellor in 1933, the persecution of Jews became official government policy. Rabbi Ossowski and members of his family were interrogated several times by the SS (Schutzstaffel; Protection Squadrons) who gathered intelligence on opponents of the Nazi state and policed racial purity. In 1934, due to the threatening anti-Semitic climate of the Nazi state, he sent his young son, Sol, to Lithuania to study at a yeshiva. In 1938, Rabbi Ossowski, with his wife and daughter, escaped Nazi Germany for the United States. They joined their sons, Joseph and Leo, who had settled in the United States in 1936. Their son, Sol, joined them in the United States in 1939 after completing his rabbinical studies in England. Rabbi Ossowski, 66, died in Ohio in 1943.
Sally (Sol) Ossowski was born on January 1, 1919, in Berlin, Germany, to Frieda Schwartzbardt, born in 1888, and Rabbi Issac Ossowski, born in 1877 in Lubraniez, Poland. Sol had two brothers, Leo, born on April 1, 1913, and Joseph, born in 1914, in Pfungstadt, and a sister, Nettie. His father was a prominent and active member of the Jewish community, serving as a shochet [ritual slaughterer], mohel [practioner of ritual circumcision], sofer [scribe], and cantor. The family attended the Alte Schul synagogue where Sol sang in the choir. He attended the Jewish Community School for Boys until he was 14 years old and was active in sports, plays, and clubs. By the early 1930s, and especially after Hitler's appointment as Chancellor in 1933, Sol noticed a change within society as people’s attitudes towards Jews began to change in response to the anti-Semitic policies of the Nazi government. The Ossowski family was the target of anti-Semitic behaviours and attacks, much of this due to his father's prominent position within the Jewish community. Some of Sol's friends stopped playing with him and neighbors no longer said hello. Members of the Hitler Youth attacked Sol on the subway, yelling “Jew, get out”, and attempted to open the doors of the moving train; Sol escaped, but not one person helped him. One day as they were on their way to temple, two SS (Schutzstaffel; Protection Squadrons) guards took Sol, his brothers, and father into the basement of a bar. Sol managed to escape, but was captured and returned; a neighbour talked the SS into letting them go. Another time, the SS forced their way into their home looking for contraband. As a result of this incident, Sol decided he wanted to leave Germany. Isaac supported this decision and made arrangements for him to attend seminary outside of Germany. Sol left in 1934 for a yeshiva in Ponevezh (Panevezys), Lithuania. He wanted to emigrate to Palestine and help establish a Jewish state. His brother, Joseph, got a visa for the United States with the help of a cousin, and emigrated in 1936. He sent Sol money for his living expenses. In December 1936, Sol received a letter from the German government requiring German citizens to register with the embassy in Kaunas and to hand in their passports. He was terrified that if he complied he would be stateless and unable to leave Lithuania. Sol believed emigration to Palestine was no longer an option. An Arab revolt in 1936 resulted in the British severely limiting immigration. He discussed his plight with Rabbi Kahaneman, the head of the Yeshiva. They decided that Sol should apply to the Tree of Life seminary in London. Sol no longer felt safe in Lithuania. Pro-Nazi groups were active in the country and anti-Semitism was growing stronger throughout the country. He decided to go into hiding in the Jasnegurke forest in January 1937. A farmer allowed him to live in his barn. Food was brought to him by the Green family whom he had lived with while in school. The mother, a cook at the Yeshiva, made food for Sol which her daughter brought to him. Once he received his acceptance letter from the seminary in June 1937, Sol came out of hiding and left for London via Denmark. He stayed for one week in Copenhagen with a local Rabbi before securing a ticket to London from the Joint Distribution Committee, a Jewish humanitarian assistance organization that aided German Jews in their flight from Nazi Europe. He entered England on a student visa in June 1937. Sol’s parents and sister left Germany for the United States via Belgium in 1938, having changed their name from Ossowski to Oster. Sol completed university and emigrated to the U.S. in 1939. He married Frieda Perl on December 20, 1947, and they had a son. He was the longest tenured rabbi at Temple Beth Israel-Shaare Zedek in Lima, Ohio, serving for more than 40 years. He retired in 1992, and was bestowed the honor of rabbi emeritus by his congregation. Leo died in 2008, Joseph in 2009, and his wife, Frieda, in 2011. Sol died on August 25, 2011, in Hilliard, Ohio at age 92.
Acquisition
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Sol Oster
Scope and Content
Book and other items found inside the book from the library of Isaac Ossowski that were also used by his son, Sol Oster: a book, Universal-Agende für jüdische Kultursbeamte : Handbuch für den Gebrauch in Synagoge, Schule und Haus [Universal liturgy for Jewish cultural officials: Handbook for use in the Synagogue, School, and House]; a pamphlet with 2 articles on Jewish ceremonial law and custom from the series: Writings of the Association for the Preservation of traditional Judaism, and 4 US Army Signal Corps photographs of concentration camp victims. Rabbi Ossowski was a prominent member of the Jewish community in Berlin, Germany, who emigrated in 1938 to avoid the increasing persecution of Jews by the government of Nazi Germany. He was head shochet [ritual slaughterer], mohel [practitioner of ritual circumcision], sofer [scribe], and hazan [cantor, musical prayer leader] at the Alte Shul [Old Synagogue]. After Hitler was appointed Chancellor in 1933, increasingly severe sanctions were enacted against Jews. Isaac was repeatedly questioned by the SS (Schutzstaffel; Protection Squadrons) who gathered intelligence on opponents of the Nazi state and policed racial purity. In 1934, he sent his youngest son, 14 year old Sally (Sol), to Lithuania to study at a yeshiva. In 1936, his sons, Joseph and Leo, left for the United States. In 1938, Isaac and his wife, Frida, and their daughter, Nettie, escaped Nazi Germany and joined Joseph in the US. Sol joined them there in 1939.
Conditions Governing Access
No restrictions on access
Conditions Governing Reproduction
No restrictions on use
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
a. Rebound black leather cloth book with purple, amorphous shapes decorating the text block. Two names are inscribed on the bottom of the title page. Title: Universal=Ugende für jüdische Kultusbeamte : Handbuch für den Gebrauch in Synagoge, Schule und Haus / Lion Wolff. Publication: Berlin : C. Boas Nachf., 1891. / Edition 2 Aufl. / Description: xiii, 674 p. ; 23 cm. b. Paper pamphlet with 2 articles: 1st article reprinted from "Jeschurun" :, 1857: 2nd is a reprint of a pamphlet issued in 1981 Title: Verein Zur Erhaltung des Ueberlieferten Judentums / Samson Raphael Hirsh Title: Jerusalem, die Opfer und die Orgel / Moritz Guedemann Publication: Halberstadt : Meyer ; 1925 / Description: 27 p. : 21 cm. Series Title: Schriften des Vereins zur Erhaltung des Ueberlieferten Judentums, Heft 1-2. c. Black and white photograph with an image of a pile of naked, skeletal corpses; the exposed bodies lie on top of a tarp that covers the large pile of bodies on the bottom, n an area with plank walls and a dirt floor. d. Black and white photograph with an image of 2 gloved men holding a naked, emaciated corpse. The man on the right is wearing a prison uniform; the man on the left is shirtless. is is a from a series of photographs taken by the US Army Signal Corps following the liberation of Dachau concentration camp. See Photo Archives 1058845. e. Black and white photograph with an image of a corpse lying on the ground with an arm raised so that the hand covers the face; in the background are several clothed, male corpses. This is a from a series of photographs taken by the US Army Signal Corps following the liberation of Dachau concentration camp. See Photo Archives 1059178. f. Black and white photograph with an image of mostly naked, skeletal corpses lying in a large pile on the ground with 2 skulls in the foreground. This is a from a series of photographs taken by the US Army Signal Corps following the liberation of Dachau concentration camp. See Photo Archives record 14000..
a. title page, front bottom, title page, ink, handwritten: Isaak Ossowski. Berlin b. title page, front bottom, title page, ink, stamped : RABBI SOL OSTER receipt: front, ink, handwritten : Lakewood and Glenwood /Lima / 223-9616/NIGOR WWII 1945 receipt: back, ink, handwritten : MR. WILLIAM HUTCHINSON/NEW HAMPSHIRE, OHIO, / WWII VETERAN /FRIEND OF NIGOR 1945
Subjects
- Rabbis--United States--Biography.
- Jews--Persecutions--Germany.
- Rabbis--Germany--Biography.
- Jewish refugees--United States.
- Jews--Germany--History--20th century.
- World War, 1939-1945--Refugees--United States.
Genre
- Object
- Books and Published Materials