Yad Vashem Studies: Volume 53 (1)

Editor: Sharon Kangisser Cohen

NIS 78.00

 

Introduction

 

Yehuda Bauer (1926–2024)—In Memoriam

Yehuda Bauer - A Eulogy to Myself

 

Havi Dreifuss and David Silberklang - Yehuda Bauer: Scholar, Historian, Teacher, Friend, and Mensch

 

Moshe Zimmermann - Clio’s Lament: Yehuda Bauer, the Historian

 

Deborah Lipstadt - Yehuda Bauer Shaped My Career and Changed My Life and the Lives and Careers of So Many Others

 

Richelle Budd Caplan - Yehuda Bauer’s Contribution to the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA)

 

Robert Rozett - Yehuda Bauer: From Conceptual Thinking to Public Engagement

 

Steven T. Katz - Reflections on Yehuda Bauer

 

Christopher RBrowning - Holocaust Perpetrator Studies: An Autobiographical Perspective

 

Jan T. Gross - The Meaning of War: Poland and World War II

 

Renée Poznanski and Moshe Sluhovsky - The French and the Holocaust in France: A Candid Conversation

 

Laura Jockusch - A Postwar Turn? Integrating the “Aftermath” into Holocaust Studies

 

Susan Rubin Suleiman - Personal History: How I Became a Survivor in My Eighties

 

 

Review Articles:

 

Katarzyna Person - Starvation as a Weapon: The Atrocity of Hunger in Three Ghettos in Occupied Poland

Helene J. Sinnreich, The Atrocity of Hunger: Starvation in the Warsaw, Łodź, and Krakow Ghettos during World War II

 

Naomi Menuhin - The Doctors and the Medical System in the Warsaw Ghetto

Maria Ciesielska, The Doctors of the Warsaw Ghetto

 

Jan Láníček - The Holocaust from the Margins: Genocides as Global Events

Paul R. Bartrop, The Holocaust and Australia: Refugees, Rejection, and Memory

 

Anton Weiss-Wendt - Comparative History at Its Best: The Suffering of Jews and Roma at the Hands of the Nazis and Their Parallel Struggle for Justice

Ari Joskowicz, Rain of Ash: Roma, Jews, and the Holocaust

 

Moshe Zimmermann - Memory and Suppression of Memory in the Foreign

Roni Stauber, Diplomatia Be’tzel Hazikaron: Yisrael VeGermania HaMa’aravit, 1953–1965

 

Introduction

 

Yehuda Bauer (1926–2024)—In Memoriam

Yehuda Bauer - A Eulogy to Myself

 

Havi Dreifuss and David Silberklang - Yehuda Bauer: Scholar, Historian, Teacher, Friend, and Mensch

 

Moshe Zimmermann - Clio’s Lament: Yehuda Bauer, the Historian

 

Deborah Lipstadt - Yehuda Bauer Shaped My Career and Changed My Life and the Lives and Careers of So Many Others

 

Richelle Budd Caplan - Yehuda Bauer’s Contribution to the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA)

 

Robert Rozett - Yehuda Bauer: From Conceptual Thinking to Public Engagement

 

Steven T. Katz - Reflections on Yehuda Bauer

 

Christopher RBrowning - Holocaust Perpetrator Studies: An Autobiographical Perspective

 

Jan T. Gross - The Meaning of War: Poland and World War II

 

Renée Poznanski and Moshe Sluhovsky - The French and the Holocaust in France: A Candid Conversation

 

Laura Jockusch - A Postwar Turn? Integrating the “Aftermath” into Holocaust Studies

 

Susan Rubin Suleiman - Personal History: How I Became a Survivor in My Eighties

 

 

Review Articles:

 

Katarzyna Person - Starvation as a Weapon: The Atrocity of Hunger in Three Ghettos in Occupied Poland

Helene J. Sinnreich, The Atrocity of Hunger: Starvation in the Warsaw, Łodź, and Krakow Ghettos during World War II

 

Naomi Menuhin - The Doctors and the Medical System in the Warsaw Ghetto

Maria Ciesielska, The Doctors of the Warsaw Ghetto

 

Jan Láníček - The Holocaust from the Margins: Genocides as Global Events

Paul R. Bartrop, The Holocaust and Australia: Refugees, Rejection, and Memory

 

Anton Weiss-Wendt - Comparative History at Its Best: The Suffering of Jews and Roma at the Hands of the Nazis and Their Parallel Struggle for Justice

Ari Joskowicz, Rain of Ash: Roma, Jews, and the Holocaust

 

Moshe Zimmermann - Memory and Suppression of Memory in the Foreign

Roni Stauber, Diplomatia Be’tzel Hazikaron: Yisrael VeGermania HaMa’aravit, 1953–1965

מפרט המוצר
כריכה רכה
ISBN 978-965-308-715-6
Year 2025
Size 17X24 cm
No. of Pages 242
Publisher Yad Vashem
גולשים שקנו מוצר זה קנו גם

Yad Vashem Calendar 2025-2026

Calendar 2025-2026  A Living Memory

המשפחה בשואה:

סיפורי חפצים מאוסף יד ושם

תחת המשטר הנאצי, בתוך מציאות של רדיפה, של מחסור ושל הפרדה כפויה, התערער המבנה המשפחתי היהודי עמוקות ולעיתים התפרק לחלוטין. קשרים בין הורים לילדיהם, בין אחים ואחיות, בני זוג, סבים וסבות לעיתים נקטעו בבת  tחת או התפוררו בהדרגה, שלב אחר שלב.

גם במצבים הקשים ביותר ניסו יהודים לשמור על תחושת שייכות ואחיזה בחיים דרך קשרי המשפחה, שהיו בשבילם לא רק מקור לנחמה אלא גם יסוד של זהות ושל עצם הקיום. כשנכפו פרדות,  אובדן היה לא רק של האדם הקרוב אלא גם של עוגן פנימי עמוק.

בלוח השנה הזה מוצגים חפצים מאוסף החפצים של יד ושם, שכל אחד מהם נושא סיפור של קשר משפחתי: מתנה או מזכרת מרגע של פרדה או של תשומת לב ואהבה  ניתנה למרות הכל. לעיתים אלו הפריטים האחרונים מן הבית או מאדם אהוב, שנשמרו כל השנים כמזכרת יקרה — עדות למה שעברו בני המשפחה בשואה וזיכרון למי שנרצחו. בסופו של דבר מסרו השורדים ובני משפחותיהם את הפריטים  יד ושם לשם ההנצחה והנחלת הזיכרון לדורות הבאים.

 

THE JEWISH FAMILY DURING THE HOLOCAUST: ARTIFACTS FROM THE YAD VASHEM COLLECTION

In a reality of deprivation, persecution and forced separation, the Jewish family unit was greatly undermined under the Nazi regime, and sometimes disintegrated completely. The ties between grandparents, parents and children, between brothers and sisters, and spouses or partners were often severed abruptly, or otherwise frayed gradually, as the Jews’ lives slowly unraveled.

Even in the most difficult circumstances, Jews attempted to preserve a feeling of belonging and of life affirmation via family connections that were not only a source of comfort, but constituted one of the cornerstones of their identity and existence. The wrench of separation engendered anguished feelings of loss not just for the kinsmen themselves, but also for the profound internal anchor they represented.

This calendar showcases items from the Yad Vashem Artifacts Collection that carry within them stories of family ties: gifts and mementoes symbolic of a parting moment or a loving gesture made despite the hardships. In some cases, these objects were the only items remaining from a home or someone loved. They were safeguarded and cherished through the years as testaments to the tribulations endured by the family during the Shoah and memorials to the murdered. All these artifacts were ultimately donated to Yad Vashem for posterity by survivors and their families.

NIS 49.00

Yad Vashem Studies: Volume 51 [2]

Editor: Dr. Sharon Kangisser Cohen

 

Table of Contents:

Introduction • Susanne Heim and Ulrich Herbert - A Comprehensive Documentation of the Holocaust: The Completion of the VEJ Project • Eliyahu Klein - Between Rescue and Persecution: Defining and Mapping the Range of Behaviors Toward Oppressed Jews During the Holocaust in the Countryside of Occupied Poland • Attila Gidó - Survivors of the Northern Transylvanian Deportations: Liberation, Repatriation, Reckoning • Gali Drucker Bar-Am - “Record and Lament”: Yizkor Books as History and Literature Conflated • Merav Yisrael and Gila Prebor - The Yizkor Book Collection in the Yad Vashem Library in Jerusalem: A Bibliographical Analysis

 

 

NIS 78.00

Yad Vashem Studies: Volume 52 [1]

Editor: Dr. Sharon Kangisser Cohen

 

Table of Contents:

Introduction

Dan Stone - Lawrence L. Langer (1929–2024): In Memoriam

Barbara Engelking - “I Can’t Write”: Requests for Assistance Addressed to the Jewish National Committee in Warsaw, 1943–1944

Fábio Koifman and Rui Afonso - The Legality of the Visas Issued by the Brazilian Consulate in Hamburg, 1938–1939

Kenneth H. Marcus, Marlou Schrover, and Simon Erlanger - Remembering World War II Concentration Camps: Dutch Memorials and Transitional Justice

Efrat Buchris Giuseppe Verdi’s Requiem in Theresienstadt: Music of Succor

NIS 78.00
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