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The novella was composed in Terezín as a surprise birthday present for his wife, Irena, and was produced with the conspiratorial artistic assistance of his young daughter Helga. Before his deportation to Auschwitz in October 1944, Otto Weiss gave the novella to a relative remaining in the ghetto, who hid it in the Magdeburg barracks.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eAnd God Saw That It Was Bad relates the experiences of God, who comes down to Terezín incognito, in human form, as Aaaron Gottesmann, in order to examine the situation personally. God finds his encounter with the reality of this ghetto most disturbing, and through him the author exposes the truth of life in Terezín. The result is a rare, unique literary document from the Holocaust. Weiss was murdered in Auschwitz-Birkenau in October 1944. 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These letters were sent from the ghettos, hidden in cattle cars and train stations, and smuggled out of the concentration camps. They reveal the raw emotions of mothers, fathers, sisters, and brothers, trying desperately to tell their story before it is too late. 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The children were accompanied on their journey by caregivers, social workers, and educators, and placed with families or in other settings in the United Kingdom. Henry Foner, who had lost his mother at a young age, was one of approximately 10,000 children who left Europe between December 1938 and September 1939 thanks to this program. Henry was sent from Berlin to Wales and lived there with Morris and Winifred Foner, a Jewish couple, who provided him with a warm, loving home. From the moment they parted, Max Lichtwitz, Henry’s father, regularly sent him colorful illustrated postcards written in German. On Henry’s seventh birthday, Max telephoned him from Berlin, but Henry had already forgotten all his German, and from that time on all postcards were written in English. Henry’s foster mother, Aunty Winnie, arranged in an album the postcards and letters that Henry received from his father and other relatives and friends. Max Lichtwitz, who had the courage and foresight to part from his only child and thereby save his life, was deported to Auschwitz on December 9, 1942 and was murdered a week later. Henry and his family moved to Israel in 1968 and made their home in Jerusalem. 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The group of 19 letters left behind by journalist Herman Samter, head of the classified section of Jüdisches Nachrichtenblatt, the last Jewish newspaper to remain active after Krystallnacht, is a rare historical document of Jewish Berliners in the shadow of deportation and death.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Editor: Daniel Fraenkel","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":50363588673814,"sku":"17-807","price":50.0,"currency_code":"ILS","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0919\/0876\/8022\/files\/0000513_to-be-a-jew-in-berlin-the-letters-of-hermann-samter-1939-1943.jpg?v=1748498007"},{"product_id":"to-pour-out-my-bitter-soul-14","title":"To Pour out my Bitter Soul: Letters of Jews from the USSR 1941-1945","description":"\u003cp\u003eThe 100 letters presented in the book provide a unique insight into the multi-faceted Jewish life on the soil of the Soviet Union during the years of the Second World War. These letters open a window into the world of Soviet Jewish thoughts and feelings. For some of these writers, this collection brings to light the last thoughts they were able to share with their loved ones before they had to face death.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Editor: Arkadi Zeltser","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":50363588804886,"sku":"17-924","price":156.0,"currency_code":"ILS","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0919\/0876\/8022\/files\/0000828_to-pour-out-my-bitter-soul-letters-of-jews-from-the-ussr-1941-1945.jpg?v=1748498136"},{"product_id":"while-theres-life-7","title":"While There's Life…: Poems from the Mittelsteine Labor Camp 1944-1945","description":"\u003cp\u003eSurviving one more day in the camps was spiritual resistance. The poems in this collection were written by Riva Minska (Ruth Minsky Sender) during her incarceration as prisoner #55082 in the Nazi slave labor camp in Mittelsteine, Germany. She wrote them in little notebooks while hiding in her bunk. Every Sunday, she would read these moving verses aloud to the 50 other women in the room. They were her critical and faithful audience. She endeavored to depict scenes from their lives-their anguish, their pain and their longings-to give everyone a little courage and the will to continue. 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Let us create an atmosphere of brotherhood, integrity, and justice—a warm, friendly environment… This we know: Man can only obtain these things in a regime that is just—this is the only regime that can restore humanity to the human race\". [Iton Hatenua, December 1940-January 1941] \u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThe Jewish underground press in Warsaw under the Nazi occupation was a tangible expression of the momentum of the political-underground enterprise. Almost all of the dozens of newspapers and pamphlets written in Yiddish, Polish, and Hebrew that were circulated in secret among the Jews in the Warsaw ghetto were produced by a wide range of political organizations and youth movements—communist, socialist, and Zionist, such as the Bund, Hashomer Hatzair, Dror-Hechalutz, and Betar. The different underground newspapers dealt with major issues of communal and ideological significance. They presented descriptions of life in the ghetto; attitudes towards the Judenrat and its institutions; analyses of the nature of the war; and the Land of Israel and the future of the Jewish nation. They also addressed practical concerns of ghetto life such as welfare and mutual assistance, and publicized news of the fate of the Jews as it trickled in through the ghetto walls.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThe differences in outlooks and ideological positions reflected in these papers were essentially the continuation of the prewar political platforms of each group, adapted to echo the new circumstances. The translation of The Jewish Underground Press in Warsaw, first published in Hebrew by Yad Vashem in six volumes between the years 1979-1997, and now introduced to the English reader, reveals an astonishing breadth of historical knowledge. This first volume deals with the period from May 1940-January 1941. In the midst of all the distress, famine and death, the editors of the youth movements found a place to write essays on Ber Borochov; to mark memorial days in honor of Bialik and Mendele; to present a historical survey of the history of the ghetto over the centuries; and to plan for the future of the Jews after the war. The writings presented here encompass topics that go way beyond their time frame and remain fresh and relevant today.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003e \u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Editors: Joseph Kermish, Tikva Fatal-Knaani","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":50363588870422,"sku":"17-976","price":101.0,"currency_code":"ILS","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0919\/0876\/8022\/files\/0001093_the-jewish-underground-press-in-warsaw-volume-one-may-1940january-1941.jpg?v=1748498297"},{"product_id":"tommy-56","title":"Tommy: To Tommy, for his Third Birthday in Theresienstadt, 22 January 1944","description":"\u003cp\u003eThe album was drawn by Czech artist Bedrich Fritta as a present for his son Thomas, on his third birthday. Illustrations for the toddler show a child sucking his thumb, using the potty, at the table, playing games and other activities, until we remember that this was not reality, but rather a gift of optimism. Fritta was head of the Theresienstadt ghetto's technical department, where Jewish artists imprisoned in the ghetto were forced to work for the Germans, drawing plans and preparing propaganda illustrations by day. However, they clandestinely documented the grim ghetto life whenever possible and concealed the drawings. Of his family, only Tommy survived the war, and was adopted by Leo Haas and his wife Erna, who also recovered the manuscript from its hiding place. 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As early as December 1945, Yisrael Kaplan (1902–2003) – an established historian and literary essayist, and editor of Fun Letstn Khurbn, the Yiddish journal published by the Central Historical Commission in the immediate aftermath of the war – circulated among survivors a questionnaire on ethnographic-linguistic topics. This was one aspect of the Commission’s endeavor to provide historians with insight into the inner lives of the Jews in Nazi-controlled Europe. Kaplan’s main goal was to document for posterity the vast popular cultural activity that flourished in Nazi Europe, despite the increasing persecution and annihilation of the Jews.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThis volume is a unique collection of poems, jokes, popular expressions, proverbs, slogans, common curses, secret codes, and more that were devised by Jews in the camps and ghettos as a way of coping with the harsh reality. The terms and sayings reflect the Jews’ attitudes toward the Nazi oppressors and their collaborators and demonstrate the resilience of the Jewish spirit against all odds.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Yisrael Kaplan | Editor: Zeev W. 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May it be our condolence and yours\". (Dror Wolność, May 1941)\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThe Jewish underground press in Warsaw under the Nazi occupation was a tangible expression of the momentum of the political-underground enterprise. Almost all of the dozens of newspapers and pamphlets written in Yiddish, Polish and Hebrew that were circulated in secret amongst the Jews in the Warsaw ghetto were produced by a wide range of political organizations and youth movements – communist, socialist, and Zionist – such as the Bund, Hashomer Hatzair, Dror-Hechalutz and Betar. The different underground newspapers dealt with the major issues of communal and ideological significance. They presented descriptions of life in the ghetto; attitudes towards the Judenrat and its institutions; analyses of the nature of the war; and the Land of Israel and the future of the Jewish nation. 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The writings presented here encompass topics that go way beyond their time frame and remain fresh and relevant today.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Editor: Tikva Fatal-Knaani","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":50363588968726,"sku":"17-977","price":101.0,"currency_code":"ILS","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0919\/0876\/8022\/files\/0002045_the-jewish-underground-press-in-warsaw-volume-two-februaryjune-1941.jpg?v=1748498505"},{"product_id":"so-that-you-know-a-diary-from-lw-w-september-1943february-1944","title":"So that You Know: A Diary from Lwow September 1943–February 1944","description":"\u003cp\u003eSilent Voices: Short Documents from the Holocaust is a series of texts that were written during the Holocaust, some of which had been stowed on the archive shelves, known only to scholars. 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(Lipman Kunstadt, August 26, 1942)\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eDiary from Hell in Transnistria is a painfully vivid and intricate account of life in the Dzhurin ghetto in Transnistria, written by Lipman Kunstadt, who was deported there from Radauţi, Romania, with his wife, his children, his mother, and his sister on October 14, 1941. Kunstadt, who was well-educated and a journalist, was appointed secretary of the Jewish council in the Dzhurin ghetto, where he had access to a great deal of information about its inner workings. He began writing his diary in Yiddish on April 11, 1942, at great risk, sparing no criticism against the ghetto leadership. \u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eHis journalistic instincts led him to discover and disclose the social scourges in the ghetto: the denunciations, the division into classes of the rich and the wretched poor, and the acrimonious relations between the deportees and the local Jews. 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I try to escape from these thoughts, of the next day, but they keep haunting me like nagging flies. If only I could say, it’s over, you only die once… But I can’t, because despite all these atrocities I want to live, and wait for the following day. That means waiting for Auschwitz or labor camp. I must not think about this so now I’ll start writing about private matters.” (February 20, 1943)\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eAnd so, descriptions of alarming moments are intertwined with private and banal thoughts in the notebook of 14-year-old Rutka Laskier from Bedzin, which documented her life during a few months in 1943. The outside world slowly closed down on her, but these few sheets of paper – some 60 handwritten pages in a notebook – reflect the entire universe of an adolescent Jewish girl in the shadow of death. Initial buds of womanhood, first loves, deceptions, friendships, jealousy and disputes are recorded in detail in the midst of deportations, fear, horror and death. 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Filderman supervised the process of obtaining equal rights for Jews following World War I. The first part covers 1900-1940, and deals with the fate of the last eastern European Jewish community to be emancipated (1923), and its struggle for civil rights amid antisemitism; Jewish integration within the weak democracy of “Greater Romania” between the two world wars; the emergence and expansion of A. C. Cuza’s antisemitic movement and C. Codreanu’s fascist Iron Guard; the antisemitic policies of pro-Western governments (1919-1940); the Romanian establishment’s betrayal of the Jews and willingness to pay with Jewish money for rapprochement with Nazi Germany; Jewish life: organizations, assimilation and Zionism, education, community and religious affairs, and finally the first pogroms in June 1940. The second volume will cover the Holocaust period, 1940-1944.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003e“Wilhelm Filderman was one of the outstanding leaders of Romanian Jewry during the stormy years of its statehood and rise of antisemitism which ended in violence against the Jews and the Holocaust… The book is a collection of diaries and writings which allow us to learn about Romanian Jewry, its struggles for equal rights, Jewish life during the interwar period and the relations of the Jews with their non-Jewish neighbors as antisemitism was on the rise.” [Zion, 5765]\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003e \u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Editor: Jean Ancel","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":50369260683542,"sku":"17-421","price":70.0,"currency_code":"ILS","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0919\/0876\/8022\/files\/0000079_wilhelm-filderman-memoirs-and-diaries-volume-1-1900-1940.jpg?v=1748497897"},{"product_id":"wilhelm-filderman-31","title":"Wilhelm Filderman: Memoirs and Diaries, volume 2 – 1940-1952","description":"\u003cp\u003eThis volume covers 1940-1952, and deals with life under General Antonescu’s Legionnaire regime and the Iron Guard; Filderman’s ongoing correspondence and meetings with leading members of the government; articles in the Romanian press about Filderman; the evacuation of Bessarabia and Bukovina; assistance to Jewish authors and artists; Filderman’s deportation to Transnistria and his own internment in the Moghilev camp; his efforts to help Jews emigrate from Romania; and his endeavors to track down his two sons.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003e \u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Editor: Jean Ancel | Revised and annotated by Leon Volovici and Miriam Caloianu","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":50369260814614,"sku":"17-916","price":70.0,"currency_code":"ILS","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0919\/0876\/8022\/files\/0000221_wilhelm-filderman-memoirs-and-diaries-volume-2-1940-1952.jpg?v=1748497955"},{"product_id":"the-cold-shower-of-a-new-life-the-postwar-diaries-of-a-child-survivor-volume-2-february-20-1946april-23-1946","title":"The Cold Shower of a New Life: The Postwar Diaries of a Child Survivor, Volume 2 – February 20, 1946–April 23, 1946","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cem\u003eFather wanted to have a bit of land and to live contentedly in Eretz [Israel]. I’m on my way there. Will that country become dear to my heart? Will I one day call it my country? My homeland? Notebook 4\u003c\/em\u003e, April 12, 1946\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThe world-renowned Israeli artist and Holocaust survivor Yehuda Bacon began to keep a diary in July 1945, while in a youth home in stirin, Czechoslovakia, shortly after his liberation. During the past six decades, Bacon has written over 240 notebooks. His diary is a mosaic of words and drawings through which he remembers his past, contemplates his present, and imagines his future.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eBacon was born in Moravska Ostrava, Czechoslovakia. In 1941, at the age of thirteen, he was deported with his family to Theresienstadt. Two years later he was sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau. Bacon survived death marches to Mauthausen and Gunskirchen before he was finally liberated, only to discover that his entire nuclear family had been murdered, aside from one sister. In 1946, Bacon immigrated to \u003cem\u003eEretz Israel\u003c\/em\u003e and studied at the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design, where he later became a professor of graphics and drawing.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThese diary notebooks tell the story of a young survivor exploring his emotional and physical challenges after intense suffering, discovering his strengths and abilities as he builds a life after the Shoah. The writings echo the author’s inner dialogue regarding the meaning of his existence, and his conversations, real and imagined, with his lost loved ones, contemporaries, and former fellow camp inmates.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThe first volume in the series, covering the first two notebooks, was published in 2019. This second volume brings to the reader the third and fourth notebooks, wherein Bacon records his journey to \u003cem\u003eEretz Yisrael \u003c\/em\u003eand his contemplations as he takes leave of the country of his birth, but also the landscape of his persecution, embarking on a bold voyage to an unknown country in which he hopes to regain some of what was lost. Bacon's words, accompanied by his early sketches, offer a profound documentation of the destruction, his personal world, and his tremendous efforts to create a life of value and meaning.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003e \u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Yehuda Bacon, Editors: Sharon Kangisser Cohen and Dorota Julia Nowak","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":50369260847382,"sku":"17-1319","price":50.0,"currency_code":"ILS","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0919\/0876\/8022\/files\/0002056_the-cold-shower-of-a-new-life-the-postwar-diaries-of-a-child-survivor-volume-2-february-20-1946april.jpg?v=1748498505"},{"product_id":"the-cold-shower-of-a-new-life-the-postwar-diaries-of-a-child-survivor-volume-3-april-23-1946july-10-1946","title":"The Cold Shower of a New Life: The Postwar Diaries of a Child Survivor, Volume 3 - April 23, 1946?July 10, 1946","description":"\u003cp\u003e\"I’ve been four years without a home. But I still have hope in this black world that I will one day be able to do what I really want\" [Notebook 6, May 29, 1946],\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThe world-renowned Israeli artist and Holocaust survivor Yehuda Bacon began to keep a diary in July 1945, while living in a youth home in stirin, Czechoslovakia, shortly after his liberation. During the past six decades, Bacon has filled over 240 notebooks. His diary is a mosaic of words and drawings through which he remembers his past, contemplates his present, and imagines his future.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eBacon was born in Moravska Ostrava, Czechoslovakia. In 1941, at the age of thirteen, he was deported with his family to Theresienstadt. Two years later he was sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau. Bacon survived death marches to Mauthausen and Gunskirchen before he was finally liberated, only to discover that his entire nuclear family had been murdered, aside from one sister.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eIn 1946, Bacon immigrated to Eretz Israel and studied at the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design, where he later became a professor of graphics and drawing. These diary notebooks tell the story of a young survivor exploring his emotional and physical challenges after intense suffering, discovering his strengths and abilities as he builds a life after the Shoah. The writings echo the author’s inner dialogue regarding the meaning of his existence, and his conversations, real and imagined, with his lost loved ones, contemporaries, and former fellow camp inmates.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThe first two volumes in the series, covering the first four notebooks, were published in 2019 and 2020. This third volume brings to the reader the fifth and sixth notebooks, wherein Bacon records his first months living in Eretz Israel, his reunion with his sister, Rella, and his life and studies at the agricultural school Mikveh Yisrael. These notebooks articulate his efforts to develop his talents and training as an artist. Bacon’s words, accompanied by his sketches, offer a profound documentation of the destruction, his personal world, and his tremendous efforts to create a life of value and meaning.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Yehuda Bacon, Editors: Sharon Kangisser Cohen and Dorota Julia Nowak","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":50369260880150,"sku":"17-1363","price":50.0,"currency_code":"ILS","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0919\/0876\/8022\/files\/0002165_the-cold-shower-of-a-new-life-the-postwar-diaries-of-a-child-survivor-volume-3-april-23-1946july-10.jpg?v=1748498570"},{"product_id":"diary-from-the-kovno-ghetto-august-1942-january-1943","title":"Diary from the Kovno Ghetto: August 1942-January 1943","description":"\u003cp\u003e”People lived, they had dreams, they wanted to live and to let others live, until… until suddenly they were exterminated before their time, because they wanted to eat, because they wanted to live, because they wanted to survive...;\"\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eIlya Gerber was born in Kovno to an enlightened, Zionist family, and was seventeen years old when the Kovno Ghetto was sealed off in 1941. Gerber had kept a diary from mid-1941 to early 1943, but sadly, only part of it has been found.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003ePublished here for the first time, his diary reveals an intelligent and sensitive young man with a love of music, books, art, poetry—and a passion for writing. His story is of someone deeply immersed in ghetto life and aware of the consuming murderous reality, while still fiercely clinging to life. Gerber’s description of daily ghetto life illuminates previously unknown facets of Jewish society and how it contended with a reality of oppression and persecution. He also depicts the lives and personal relationships of his family and friends, and various responses toward the challenging circumstances. Gerber accompanies his writing with many artistic illustrations. Ilya Gerber was tragically killed on April 28, 1945, during a march from the Dachau concentration camp to Wolfsratshausen in Germany. In his deeply sensitive, artistic, and sometimes humorous manner, Gerber’s diary movingly portrays the broader story of Lithuanian Jewry during the Holocaust, particularly of the Jews of Kovno. \u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003e\u003cem\u003eDiary from the Kovno Ghetto: August 1942–January 1943\u003c\/em\u003e is an authentic and multifaceted historical document that gives voice to the thousands of young people interned in ghettos throughout Eastern Europe, and to the many victims of the Holocaust who did not record their own chronicles, or whose own accounts have been lost forever.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Ilya Gerber, Editor: Lea Prais","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":50369260912918,"sku":"17-1357","price":50.0,"currency_code":"ILS","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0919\/0876\/8022\/files\/0002198_diary-from-the-kovno-ghetto-august-1942-january-1943.jpg?v=1748498572"},{"product_id":"these-thoughts-of-mine-diaries-of-an-italian-jewish-partisan-january-1940february-1944","title":"These Thoughts of Mine: Diaries of an Italian Jewish Partisan, January 1940–February 1944","description":"\u003cp\u003e\"We are what we are: an array of individuals, in part altruistic and in good faith, in part political opportunists, in part soldiers who’ve deserted and fear being deported to Germany, in part driven by the thirst for adventure, in part by a thirst for theft. Men are men...\" (Emanuele Artom,\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003ePartisan Diary, first half of November 1943); Emanuele Artom (Aosta, 1915–Turin, 1944), an Italian Jewish intellectual and a revered figure among Italian Jews, experienced racial persecutions and in 1943 joined the resistance. His diaries, now published for the first time in English, are a precious source for the study of Italian Jewry, of Fascist antisemitism, and of the anti-Fascist resistance. Artom’s first diary, concerning the period from January 1940 to September 1943, is a rich source of information about cultural life in Turin, the development and effects of the racial persecution, the material and psychological consequences of the Allied bombings, and the period between the fall of Mussolini and the beginning of the German occupation (July 25–September 8, 1943).\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThe second diary, from November 1943 to February 23, 1944, concerns his partisan experience. It offers an unmediated and anti-rhetorical representation of the hardships of partisan life, the divisions within the anti-Fascist front, social conflicts, and gender dynamics within the bands, as well as the tensions between local populations and fighters. Furthermore, Artom intensely reflects on the ethics of the resistance and on the value and meaning of violence. As a political commissar and an educator, Artom attributed the utmost importance to nurturing renewed social bonds and a new morality. Thus, he endeavored to teach the unlettered fieldhands that made up the bulk of the partisan bands the basic tenets of liberal democracy. Moreover, his testimony allows us to gauge how the resistance represented a first and fundamental step for the social and political reintegration of persecuted Jews, who—after years of marginalization—were able to play an active role in a collective struggle aimed at the regeneration of the body politic. Emanuele Artom died after enduring atrocious torture at the hands of Fascist and Nazi tormentors. His memory endures among Jewish and non-Jewish Italians, especially—but not solely—in Turin, the city in  which he grew up and spent most of his life.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Emanuele Artom, Editor:Guri Schwarz","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":50369260945686,"sku":"17-1389","price":70.0,"currency_code":"ILS","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0919\/0876\/8022\/files\/0002214_these-thoughts-of-mine-diaries-of-an-italian-jewish-partisan-january-1940february-1944.jpg?v=1748498574"},{"product_id":"the-cold-shower-of-a-new-life-the-postwar-diaries-of-a-child-survivor-volume-4-july-10-1946october-21-1946","title":"The Cold Shower of a New Life: The Postwar Diaries of a Child Survivor, Volume 4 - July 10, 1946–October 21, 1946","description":"\u003cp\u003e\"What a life it will be, Jerusalem! I know very well what the wordmeans. Like every association, it spans my entire life\". Notebook 8, August 12, 1946;\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eWorld-renowned Israeli artist and Holocaust survivor Yehuda Bacon began to keep a diary in July 1945, while living in a youth home in stirin, Czechoslovakia, shortly after his liberation. During the past seven decades, Bacon has filled over 240 notebooks. His diary is a mosaic of words and drawings through which he attempts to express his past, contemplate his present, and imagine his future.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eBacon was born in Moravska Ostrava, Czechoslovakia, and in 1941, at the age of thirteen, he was deported with his family to Theresienstadt. Two years later, he was sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where he was placed in the family camp, and, a few months later, he was among a group of teens selected to work as forced laborers. Bacon survived death marches to Mauthausen and Gunskirchen before he was finally liberated, only to discover that aside from one sister, his entire nuclear family had been murdered. Upon his return to Czechoslovakia, Bacon lived in a provisionary youth asylum close to Prague, run by the humanist Premysl Pitter.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eIn 1946, Bacon immigrated to Eretz Israel and studied at the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design, later becoming a professor of graphics and drawing at Bezalel and achieving fame as an artist. These notebooks tell the story of a young survivor exploring his emotional and physical challenges after intense suffering and losses, while discovering his strengths and building a life after the Shoah. The writings reflect the author’s inner dialogue regarding the meaning of his existence, expressing his intimate thoughts as well as his imagined conversations with lost loved ones, contemporaries, and the fellow camp inmates with whom he shared his darkest hours. In this fourth volume, Bacon leaves the agricultural village of Mikveh Yisrael and moves to Jerusalem, embarking on studies at Bezalel. These notebooks trace his efforts to find and make a new home while managing his financial insecurity, vulnerability, and the memories of his traumatic past. He writes these notebooks against the backdrop of the increasingly violent and tense political reality of Jerusalem in 1946. His words, accompanied by sketches, offer documentary evidence of the destruction, his personal world, and his tremendous efforts to create a life of value and meaning.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Yehuda Bacon, Editors: Sharon Kangisser Cohen and Dorota Julia Nowak","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":50369261142294,"sku":"17-1375","price":50.0,"currency_code":"ILS","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0919\/0876\/8022\/files\/0002215_the-cold-shower-of-a-new-life-the-postwar-diaries-of-a-child-survivor-volume-4-july-10-1946october-2.jpg?v=1748498572"},{"product_id":"the-cold-shower-of-a-new-life-the-postwar-diaries-of-a-child-survivor-volume-5-october-13-1946march-2-1947","title":"The Cold Shower of a New Life: The Postwar Diaries of a Child Survivor, Volume 5 - October 13, 1946–March 2, 1947","description":"\u003cp\u003e\"What a life it will be, Jerusalem! I know very well what the wordmeans. Like every association, it spans my entire life\". Notebook 8, August 12, 1946;\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eWorld-renowned Israeli artist and Holocaust survivor Yehuda Bacon began to keep a diary in July 1945, while living in a youth home in stirin, Czechoslovakia, shortly after his liberation. During the past seven decades, Bacon has filled over 240 notebooks. His diary is a mosaic of words and drawings through which he attempts to express his past, contemplate his present, and imagine his future.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eBacon was born in Moravska Ostrava, Czechoslovakia, and in 1941, at the age of thirteen, he was deported with his family to Theresienstadt. Two years later, he was sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where he was placed in the family camp, and, a few months later, he was among a group of teens selected to work as forced laborers. Bacon survived death marches to Mauthausen and Gunskirchen before he was finally liberated, only to discover that aside from one sister, his entire nuclear family had been murdered. Upon his return to Czechoslovakia, Bacon lived in a provisionary youth asylum close to Prague, run by the humanist Premysl Pitter.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eIn 1946, Bacon immigrated to Eretz Israel and studied at the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design, later becoming a professor of graphics and drawing at Bezalel and achieving fame as an artist. These notebooks tell the story of a young survivor exploring his emotional and physical challenges after intense suffering and losses, while discovering his strengths and building a life after the Shoah. The writings reflect the author’s inner dialogue regarding the meaning of his existence, expressing his intimate thoughts as well as his imagined conversations with lost loved ones, contemporaries, and the fellow camp inmates with whom he shared his darkest hours. In this fourth volume, Bacon leaves the agricultural village of Mikveh Yisrael and moves to Jerusalem, embarking on studies at Bezalel. These notebooks trace his efforts to find and make a new home while managing his financial insecurity, vulnerability, and the memories of his traumatic past. He writes these notebooks against the backdrop of the increasingly violent and tense political reality of Jerusalem in 1946. His words, accompanied by sketches, offer documentary evidence of the destruction, his personal world, and his tremendous efforts to create a life of value and meaning.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Yehuda Bacon, Editors: Sharon Kangisser Cohen and Dorota Julia Nowak","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":50369261175062,"sku":"17-1413","price":70.0,"currency_code":"ILS","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0919\/0876\/8022\/files\/0002478_the-cold-shower-of-a-new-life-the-postwar-diaries-of-a-child-survivor-volume-5-october-13-1946march.jpg?v=1748498630"},{"product_id":"condemned-to-life-the-diaries-and-life-of-chajka-klinger","title":"Condemned to Life - The Diaries and Life of Chajka Klinger","description":"\u003cp\u003eIn 1943, Chajka Klinger, a key female activist in the Jewish Fighting Organization\u0026amp;nbsp;in Będzin, Poland, was “condemned to life,” chosen by her friends to survive the\u0026amp;nbsp;battle for their existence in order to document their stories. Her diary reveals\u0026amp;nbsp;her anguish as she describes the deportations, the death of loved ones, and the\u0026amp;nbsp;torture she underwent. After her escape from Nazi-occupied Europe, she tried\u0026amp;nbsp;to build a new life for herself in Israel with her husband and three children, but\u0026amp;nbsp;in April 1958, on the eve of the anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, she\u0026amp;nbsp;took her own life.\u003cbr\u003eWritten by her son, Professor Avihu Ronen, Condemned to Life moves seamlessly\u0026amp;nbsp;between Chajka’s narrative, the historical context, and the author’s personal\u0026amp;nbsp;journey to remember his mother whom he lost at a young age, intimately\u0026amp;nbsp;documenting her life, struggles, and death through stories from those who\u0026amp;nbsp;knew her. The book also confronts contentious historiographical issues,\u0026amp;nbsp;including the mythologizing of the ghetto uprisings, the role of the Judenrat,\u0026amp;nbsp;and the conflict between personal and collective memory.\u003cbr\u003eCondemned to Life is an extraordinary portrait of Chajka Klinger, her comrades, and the role of the underground in Nazi-occupied Europe. Dedicated to telling the story of these young fighters and preserving their memory, Ronen’s masterful blend of biography and meticulous historical research will move, inspire, and enlighten readers for generations.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Avihu Ronen","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":50371221717270,"sku":"17-1426","price":109.0,"currency_code":"ILS","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0919\/0876\/8022\/files\/0002518_condemned-to-life-the-diaries-and-life-of-chajka-klinger.png?v=1748498630"},{"product_id":"it-happened-on-our-planet","title":"It Happened On Our Planet","description":"\u003cp\u003e\nIt Happened on Our Planet offers a brutally honest insight into the horrifying decisions that the Jews had to make and the unbearable situations in which the Jews found themselves during this time. The publication of this important work presents generations to come with a better understanding of the complex reality of the Holocaust.\nAs a former partisan, Holocaust survivor, brigadier general in the Israel Defense Forces, historian, and chairman of Yad Vashem, Yitzhak (Tolka) Arad contributed much important historical research and insight about the Holocaust during his long life. In this thought-provoking final work, Arad presents the impossible moral dilemmas experienced by the Jews in the reality of the Holocaust.\n\nThrough excerpts from diaries, memoirs, archival material, and research works, Arad addresses some of the most difficult moral questions among Jews from this time. How did the different Judenr?te respond when they were ordered to carry out the horrific orders of the Nazis? Is it justified to risk the lives of others in order to save oneself in the cruelty of the concentration camps? To whom should one give medicine in the case of insufficient medical supplies? Should the underground organizations risk the lives of the masses to fight the enemy? Arad examines these moral issues and others from an unquestionably unique perspective as an eyewitness to the Holocaust, and he includes his own moral dilemmas both in the ghetto and during his time as a partisan.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Yitzhak Arad","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":50522402095382,"sku":"17-1408","price":109.0,"currency_code":"ILS","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0919\/0876\/8022\/files\/0002405_it-happened-on-our-planet.png?v=1748498571"},{"product_id":"confession","title":"Confession - The Story of a Jewish Family During the Nazi Occupation of Poland","description":"\u003cp\u003e\"Once again, I take hold of my pen, once again I sit down at the table to write....The process of our family’s collapse with its inexorable consequences is reaching its end; all that remains for me is the sad task of the chronicler and final victim.\"\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eWhen Germany invaded Poland in September 1939, agronomist Calek Perechodnik lived with his wife, Anka, in the small resort town of Otwock near Warsaw. The situation for local Jews deteriorated quickly, and soon, the Perechodniks with their infant daughter, Athalie, were forced to relocate to the newly established Otwock ghetto, where many Otwock Jews were stripped of their livelihoods. To keep his family alive, Calek joined the Jewish Ghetto Police.\u003cbr\u003eIn August 1942, as the ghetto was liquidated, Perechodnik believed assurances that his position would protect his family, and so he brought Anka and Athalie to the assembly point, only to realize too late that he had been deceived. His wife and daughter were deported to Treblinka and murdered.\u003cbr\u003eLeft behind with the other Jewish policemen, Perechodnik blamed himself for his family’s death. After escaping into hiding, he wrote his unflinching account of wartime events, addressing them directly to his wife and daughter whom he could not save. Calek Perechodnik perished during the Warsaw Uprising, leaving only his manuscript and the hope that his testimony would one day be published. His brother, who survived the war, later entrusted the manuscript to the Yad Vashem Archives.\u003cbr\u003eThis new English publication of Confession fulfills Calek Perechodnik’s hope. Edited with the utmost precision by Professor David Engel, this faithful translation from the original manuscript presents Perechodnik’s stark and haunting testimony in full, exactly as he left it—raw, unaltered, and impossible to forget.\u003cbr\u003e\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Calek Perechodnik","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":50953931489558,"sku":"17-1444","price":83.0,"currency_code":"ILS","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0919\/0876\/8022\/files\/confession.jpg?v=1768839378"}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0919\/0876\/8022\/collections\/diaries.jpg?v=1762692679","url":"https:\/\/store.yadvashem.org\/en-us\/collections\/personal-diaries.oembed?page=3","provider":"Yad Vashem Online Store","version":"1.0","type":"link"}