Yad Vashem Publications

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Yad Vashem Studies: Volume 50 [2]

Edited by Sharon Kangisser Cohen

NIS 78.00 NIS 46.80

Jewish Solidarity: The Ideal and the Reality in the Turmoil of the Shoah

Edited by Dan Michman and Robert Rozett

 

The Holocaust unquestionably shattered most normative frameworks and cast the struggle for survival in its starkest form. Yet despite this, the Holocaust did not necessarily lead Jews to act as lone wolves, caring only about their own survival. This volume demonstrates that Jewish solidarity during the Holocaust is a multifaceted, multilayered issue, replete with complexities and shadings that reflect the diversity of Jewishness and Jewish existence, as well as the unprecedented dire situations that challenged it, and while solidarity was not a given and may not have predominated, it did not cease to exist.

NIS 182.00 NIS 109.20

Night Without End: The Fate of Jews in German-Occupied Poland

Edited by Jan Grabowski and Barbara Engelking

NIS 169.00 NIS 101.40

Yad Vashem Studies: Volume 50 [1]

Edited by Sharon Kangisser Cohen

NIS 78.00 NIS 46.80

The Cold Shower of a New Life: The Postwar Diaries of a Child Survivor, Volume 4 - July 10, 1946–October 21, 1946

Yehuda Bacon, Edited by Sharon Kangisser Cohen and Dorota Julia Nowak

NIS 104.00 NIS 62.40

One Step Ahead: David J. Azrieli (Azrylewicz): Memoirs, 1939–1950

Danna J. Azrieli

 

Upon arriving at the kibbutz, after years of running and living in a constant state of fear and anxiety, I finally felt that I could unburden my heart and mind. I had dreamed of the day I would arrive, alive, in Eretz Israel. The constant stress of the last few years was made easier by my constant desire to achieve that goal. So, when I first arrived in the kibbutz dining hall, it was as if all my dreams had come true.

David J. Azrieli was born in 1922 in Maków Mazowiecki, Poland. Written by his daughter Danna, this gripping account of survival during World War II describes David’s extraordinary travels, always just one step ahead of life-threatening danger, which took him to the Soviet-occupied zones of Poland and later to Ukraine, Tashkent, and Buchara. He subsequently served in the Anders Army, before making his way from Baghdad to the frontiers of British-occupied Palestine.

The memoir chronicles David J. Azrieli’s arrival in Palestine, his studies at the Technion in Haifa, his experiences as a soldier in the War of Independence, and his realization that most of his immediate family had perished in the Holocaust. Azrieli finally settled in Canada in 1954. There he married his wife, Stephanie, and together they raised four children—Rafi, Sharon, Naomi, and Danna. This story of survival is all the more remarkable given Azrieli’s later achievements as a successful real estate developer and philanthropist. One of the economic giants of the Jewish world, his many developments changed the face of Israel and stand as a striking testament to the strength and courage of a boy whom Hitler could not defeat. The highlight of his activities is the establishment of the Canadian and Israeli Azrieli Foundations, which focus on improving the lives of present and future generations through education, research, healthcare, and arts.

NIS 104.00 NIS 62.40

Diary from the Kovno Ghetto: August 1942-January 1943

Ilya Gerber, Edited by Lea Prais

NIS 104.00 NIS 62.40
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