Archival Descriptions

Displaying items 22,201 to 22,220 of 58,923
  1. Jüdische Gemeinden (überwiegend vor 1945)

    Personenbezogene Unterlagen der Jüdischen Gemeinde zu Berlin, darunter: -Austrittskartei der Jüdischen Gemeinde zu Berlin, Ende 19. Jh.−1941 -Registerbände des Jüdischen Krankenhauses, 1888−1978 -Kartei und Akten des jüdischen Friedhofs Berlin-Weißensee, 1880−1990 (Mikrofiches) Jüdische Gemeinde Halle/Saale, 1859−1990 (Benutzung vorbehaltlich der Zustimmung der Jüdischen Gemeinde Halle/Saale)

  2. Jüdische Gemeinden, Organisationen, Einrichtungen nach 1945

    Bestand 5 A 1: Jüdische Gemeinde zu Berlin, 1945−1990 Bestand 5 B 1: Verband der Jüdischen Gemeinden in der DDR, 1945−1990

  3. Judische Kultusgemeinde in Prag Gmina Żydowska w Pradze Jewish Community in Prague Židovská náboženská obec v Praze Żidovska Nabożenska Obec v Pradze (Sygn.102)

    Correspondence from the Foreign Department of the Jewish Community in Prague (Transfer Auslandsabteilung Israelitische Kultusgemeinde in Prag), November 1939 to July 1940. The Jewish Community staff had to send copies of replies to the Head Office of Emigration of Jews (Zentralstelle fuer Auswanderung der Juden). The letters from the Jewish Prague community had to be concise and refer only to emigration matters: including possibilities of departure, the route, information about affidavits, visas and other required documents, fees, transportation costs, lodging, deposits, etc. Included is co...

  4. Jüdische Matriken – Fotoabzüge

    Die jüdischen Matriken decken ab 1914 Tirol und Vorarlberg (bis 1918 auch Meran) ab. Vor 1914 stammen sie von der IKG Hohenems.

  5. Jüdische Soziale Selbsthilfe Jewish Social Mutual Assistance Zespoł Żydowska Samopomoc Społeczna (Sygn. 211)

    Contains correspondence between the head office in Kraków and the local branches in the General Government relating to the organization’s activities and relations with the German and Polish authorities. Records include financial and organizational materials, personal files of the staff, correspondence, post war copies. The index of names and places is included in finding aid.

  6. Jüdische Volkspartei: appeal re leadership

    Appeal to the Jewish community council in Berlin concerning the leadership of the Jüdische Volkspartei.

  7. Jüdischer Kulturbund, Berlin: Legal case papers

    Jüdischer Kulturbund, Berlin: Legal case papers including those pertaining to Herbert Grünbaum, actor; Kurt Rosenbaum; Simon Kaplan; and Harriet Domker

  8. Jüdisches Regionalmuseum Mittelfranken in Fürth collection

    Contains personal papers of the Gräfenberg family, Schäler family, and Lotte Roman (n.d.); correspondence of Lore Sulzbacher with her parents who were deported to Theresienstadt (1938-1944); and documents pertaining to the Spear toy factory (1938-1940).

  9. Jüdisches Standesregister

    Die hier verzeichneten Fotokopien jüdischer Standesregister wurden im Juli 1953 auf Grund einer Weisung des Staatsministeriums der der Finanzen vom Bayerischen Landesentschädigungsamt abgegeben. Aus den Mitteilungen dieses Amtes ergibt sich Folgendes über die Herkunft dieser Fotokopien: Die Standesregister der jüdischen Gemeinden in Deutschland wurden während des Krieges bzw. kurz vorher beschlagnahmt, sie sollen sich bei Kriegsende in Thüringen befunden haben und dort den Russen in die Hände gefallen sein. Im Auftrag einer Dienststelle des Reiches oder der Partei (wie sich bei der Verzeich...

  10. Jüdisches Zentralarchiv des Burgenlandes

    • Burgenland Jewish Central Archives

    Er enthält keine Matriken, sonder Vermögensentzug der Kultusgemeinden.

  11. Jüdisches Zentralarchiv des Burgenlandes (Jewish Central Archive of the Burgenland)

    Records of seven former Jewish communities of the Austrian state of the Burgenland, which were disbanded after the annexation of Austria to Nazi Germany. The material consists of official correspondence, protocols of Jewish community board meetings, marriage, birth and death records, decrees, Jewish community records, school records, tax records, military records, records pertaining to Jewish organizations and officials, and other documentation.

  12. Test

  13. Judit B. Holocaust testimony

    Videotape testimony of Judit B., who was born in Budapest, Hungary in 1933. She recalls her family's assimilated lifestyle; their conversion to Unitarianism; attending a Lutheran school; her father losing his job in 1942 due to antisemitic laws, despite their conversion; German occupation in spring 1944; her father's brief incarceration in a labor camp; expulsion from school in April; moving to a Jewish designated area; her family obtaining Swedish passports in summer 1944; a non-Jewish friend arranging for her to be hidden in the countryside as a non-Jew using false papers; her parents bri...

  14. Judit G. Holocaust testimony

    Videotape testimony of Judit G., who was born in Budapest, Hungary in 1930. She recalls her family's orthodoxy; attending a Jewish school; being sent to the country in 1943 with her younger brother to avoid bombings; their return in January 1944 for their sister's wedding; German invasion; anti-Jewish regulations; forced relocation; her father obtaining places for all of them on the Kasztner train; stopping at Linz; arrival at Bergen-Belsen; separation from the other prisoners; not having to work; apathy due to starvation; praying and fasting on Yom Kippur; transfer after six months to Cele...

  15. Judit Schichtanz collection

    Photo album and documents relating to the Schichtanz family's experiences in Hungary before, during, and after WWII. Included are images of Judit Schichtanz at her First Communion after her mother Ella and she converted to Roman Catholocism in 1941; baptismal certificate for Judit Schichtanz; pre-war photographs of Judit's father Lorand, who was later deported to a Hungarian forced-labor battalion in 1944 is presumed to have perished in Mauthausen.

  16. Judita K. Holocaust testimony

    Videotape testimony of Judita K., who was born in Lušci Palanka, Yugoslavia. She recalls moving to Drvar; celebrating Jewish holidays with relatives in Sanski Most; attending high school in Banja Luka and Podravska Slatina; participating in Hashomer Hatzair; returning to Drvar in 1941; living freely for one year under Italian occupation; encountering Serbians covered in blood after they participated in a mass killing; deportation with her family; a prisoner escaping nightly to smuggle food; Ustaša guards raping female prisoners; train transport to Prijedor; escaping with her family; trave...

  17. Judith B. Holocaust testimony

    Videotape testimony of Judith B., who was born in Matei, Romania in 1927, the youngest of five children. She recounts attending Romanian school; Hungarian occupation; her brother's draft into a Hungarian slave labor battalion; German invasion in 1944; anti-Jewish restrictions; hiding valuables with non-Jewish friends; her brother's return: his deportation to Auschwitz; round-up; transfer with her parents and sisters to the Szamosújvár ghetto, then the Cluj (Kolozsvar) ghetto; deportation to Auschwitz; separation with her sisters and her sister-in-law and her sister from her parents (she n...

  18. Judith B. Holocaust testimony

    Videotape testimony of Judith B., who was born in Berlin, Germany in 1923, the oldest of four children. She recalls her family's orthodoxy; attending a Jewish school; antisemitic harassment and restrictions; apprenticing as a dressmaker; her parents obtaining affidavits from relatives in the United States; her father's three-month incarceration in Sachsenhausen beginning in June 1938; her mother registering the four children for a Kindertransport; assistance from a non-Jewish neighbor immediately after Kristallnacht; she and her siblings traveling to Stockholm on a Kindertransport in 1939; ...

  19. Judith Bar Kochba photograph collection

    The Judith Bar Kochba photograph collection consists of photographs of the Kann family in Dordrecht, Netherlands before and during World War II. Some of the photographs were taken while the Kann children (Elise Kann, Otto Kann, Judith Kann, and Jacob Kann) were in hiding.