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Guide to the Papers of Philip Friedman (1901-1960) 1914-1993 (bulk 1930-1960) RG 1258

Processed by Shloyme Krystal, 1989-1990, 1998. Additional processing by Rachel S. Harrison as part of the Leon Levy Archival Processing Initiative, made possible by the Leon Levy Foundation.

YIVO Institute for Jewish Research
15 West 16th Street
New York, NY 10011
Email: archives@yivo.cjh.org
URL: http://www.yivo.org

©2012 YIVO Institute for Jewish Research. All rights reserved.

Electronic finding aid was encoded in EAD 2002 by Rachel S. Harrison in June 2012. Description is in English.

Collection Overview

Title: Guide to the Papers of Philip Friedman (1901-1960) 1914-1993 (bulk 1930-1960) RG 1258

Predominant Dates:bulk 1930-1960

ID: RG 1258 FA

Extent: 25.25 Linear Feet

Arrangement:

Philip Friedman arranged his materials either by format, subject, country, or language and then usually alphabetically. This system was maintained as much as was possible. Many of the materials, including the professional correspondence, are arranged alphabetically, while the personal correspondence is arranged chronologically, as are the materials about the memorial gatherings for the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Some of the correspondence is filed under the names of organizations, publications, institutions, and publishers, while other correspondence has been filed by the name of the person who signed the letters. Cross-references have been listed whenever possible. The languages of many of the articles follow the title and author in parentheses. Materials for which no language is given are mainly in English. Articles for which no author is given are often by Friedman.

Shloyme Krystal processed the original materials and created an English finding aid in 1989-1990. He then integrated the new materials and created a new finding aid in December 1998. Additional processing was completed in 2012. The collection is organized in ten series, some of which have been further subdivided into subseries.

Languages: Yiddish, Hebrew, Polish, English, German, French, Russian, Ukrainian, Italian, Dutch;Flemish, Spanish, Czech, Danish, Hungarian, Romanian, Swedish, Croatian

Abstract

This collection contains the personal and professional papers of historian and bibliographer Philip Friedman. These materials include correspondence with individuals and with organizations, newspaper clippings, subject files, manuscripts of works by Friedman and by others, and some of Friedman’s personal documents. These materials relate to Friedman’s work on the histories of various Jewish communities, particularly those in Poland, and his work gathering source documents about the Holocaust.

Scope and Contents of the Materials

The collection relates primarily to Friedman’s post-war research on the history of the Holocaust as well as to his administrative activities in various organizations. The bulk of the collection consists of second-hand sources collected by Friedman, as well as manuscripts by Friedman and others, bibliographical manuals and methodological guides prepared for use in the YIVO-Yad Vashem Joint Documentary Project, and correspondence with organizations and with individuals. Correspondents include Yiddish writers and prominent historians such as H.G. Adler, Ch. Agnoff, Hannah Arendt, E. Auerbach, Rachel Auerbach, Salo Baron, Shlomo Bickel, Ben Zion Dinur, Simon Dubnow, M. Dworzecki, Sz. Datner, Nathan Menachem Gelber, Rudolf Glanz, Jacob Glatstein, E. Glicenstein, Israel Halpern, Arthur Herzberg, Raul Hilberg, A.W. Jasny, Szmerke Kaczerginski, Joseph Kermish, Israel Klausner, M. Kosover, A. M. Klein, Leibush Lehrer, H. Leivick, Raphael Lemkin, Jacob Lestschinsky, Raphael Mahler, J. Mestel, Nahum Baruch Minkoff, L. Namier, Shmuel Niger, Joseph Opatoshu, Koppel Pinson, Leon Poliakov, Sarah Reisen, Gerald Reitlinger, A.A. Roback, L. Rochman, Eleanor Roosevelt, Philip Roth, Isaac Schwarzbart, Hillel Seidman, Genia Silkes, Anna Simaite, E. Sommerstein, Isaac Nachman Steinberg, J. Turkow, M. Turkow, Michael Weichert, and Mark Wischnitzer.

Materials on the Holocaust are primarily arranged geographically by ghetto or concentration camp. Included are over one hundred eyewitness accounts collected from Holocaust survivors by the Central Jewish Historical Commission in Poland, a list of survivors of Majdanek, copies and translations of orders of concentration camps commandants and clippings and pamphlets on Displaced Persons and reparations. There are also depositions relating to the trial of Michael Weichert and a Polish typescript of his book Jewish Self-Help 1939-1945 , materials on Nazi war criminals distributed by the Polish government in September 1954, biographical clippings on Nazi war criminals, copies of proceedings from the Nuremberg Trials, and questionnaires for survivors. Papers relating to Friedman’s organizational activities include clippings, offprints, pamphlets, copies of reports, announcements, short biographies of Jewish historians and Yiddish writers written by Friedman, records of the Historian’s Circle of the YIVO Institute, records of the YIVO-Yad Vashem Joint Documentary Project, and records of the Central Jewish Historical Commission in Poland. In addition, there are some of Friedman’s personal papers, a bibliography of his writings, some correspondence, and diaries and writings of Ada Friedman.

Historical Note

Biographical Note Polish Jewish historian Philip (Jeroham Fishel) Friedman was born in Lwow on April 27, 1901 to Eliezer and Sabina Friedman. He finished his studies at the Lwow gymnasium in 1919 and then studied history at the University of Vienna under the direction of Alfred Pribram, 1920-1925, and at the Jewish Teachers College (Pedagogium) in Vienna under Salo Baron, 1920-1922. He earned his teacher's diploma from the Jewish Teachers College in 1922 and his doctoral degree at the University of Vienna in 1925 with a dissertation entitled Die galizischen Juden im Kampfe um ihre Gleichberechtigung (1848–1868) (The Jews of Galicia in Their Struggle for Legal Equality [1848–1868]), which was published in Frankfurt in 1929. Friedman returned to Poland after receiving his doctorate, where he was briefly the director of the Tarbut school in Volkovysk (currently in Belarus) and taught Hebrew and history at the Jewish gymnasium in Konin, Poland. He also taught at the Jewish gymnasium in Łódź (1925-1939), as well as at the People’s University of that city, was a lecturer for doctoral candidates at YIVO in Vilna (1935-1936), and lectured at the Tahkemoni Rabbinical Seminary of Warsaw (1938–1939), and at the Institute of Judaic Studies, also in Warsaw. He continued his historical research, producing, most notably, his 1935 monograph Dzieje Żydów w Łodzi (The History of the Jews in Łódź), and a number of specialized studies on the Jews of Galicia and Lodz. In addition, he attempted to foster academic cooperation among Jewish historians. He participated in the International Congress of Historians, which was held in Warsaw in 1933, following which he endeavored to create a worldwide association of scholars of Jewish history. When World War II began, he was engaged in writing a comprehensive history of the Jews of Poland from the earliest beginnings through the twentieth century. Friedman survived the Holocaust by hiding in and around Lwow, but he lost his wife and a daughter. After the liberation in 1944, he went to Lublin, where he was appointed the first director of the Central Jewish Historical Commission, which he helped to found with the Central Committee of Jews in Poland, whose mission was to gather data on Nazi war crimes. In this capacity he not only collected testimonies and documentation but also supervised the publication of a number of pioneering studies, including his own on the concentration camp at Auschwitz. This work, To jest Oświęcim , was published in Warsaw in 1945 and appeared in an abridged English version as This Is Oswięcim in 1946. He also published several monographs on various destroyed Jewish communities, including Bialystok and Chelmno, and about Ukrainian-Jewish relations during the Nazi occupation. At the same time, he taught Jewish history at the Łódź University (1945-1946) and was a member of the Polish State Commission to Investigate German War Crimes in Auschwitz and Chelmno. After testifying and acting as a consultant at the Nuremberg International Military Tribunal in 1946, Friedman and his new wife, Dr. Ada Eber-Friedman, decided not to return to Poland. For two years he directed the educational and cultural department of the Joint Distribution Committee in the American Zone in Germany (1946-1948). He also helped the Centre du Documentation Juive Comtemporaire in Paris to set up its documentary collection. Friedman then moved to the United States in October 1948 at the invitation of his former professor Salo Baron, who was now teaching at Columbia University, where Friedman joined him. There he first held the post of research fellow and then, from 1951 until his death in 1960, that of lecturer in the graduate department of history. From 1949-1954, he was the dean of the Jewish Teacher’s Seminary and Folks University. He taught courses at the Herzliya Teachers Seminary in Israel and was a member of the Research Committee of the Board of Director’s of the YIVO Institute starting in 1952. Friedman’s subsequent research focused on the Holocaust. He produced two popular books, the first account of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising titled Martyrs and Fighters: The Epic of the Warsaw Ghetto (1954), the second a volume describing Christian rescuers during the war, Their Brothers’ Keepers (1957). A volume of his essays devoted to Holocaust topics, Pathways to Extinction: Essays on the Holocaust (1980), was edited posthumously by his wife. He was the Research Director of the YIVO-Yad Vashem Joint Documentary Project, a bibliographical series on the Holocaust from 1954-1960. This project consisted of publishing a full bibliography of all published works having a connection to the Holocaust. The first volume, which consisted of Hebrew sources, had been published by the time of Friedman’s death, and the English volume was ready to be printed. He also remained committed to his earlier scholarly interests, and published articles in Yiddish, Polish, Hebrew, French, and English, such as “Polish Jewish Historiography between the Two Wars” and “The First Millennium of Jewish Settlement in the Ukraine and in the Adjacent Areas.” Philip Friedman died in New York on February 7, 1960 after a lengthy illness.   Polish Jewish historian Philip (Jeroham Fishel) Friedman was born in Lwow on April 27, 1901 to Eliezer and Sabina Friedman. He finished his studies at the Lwow gymnasium in 1919 and then studied history at the University of Vienna under the direction of Alfred Pribram, 1920-1925, and at the Jewish Teachers College (Pedagogium) in Vienna under Salo Baron, 1920-1922. He earned his teacher's diploma from the Jewish Teachers College in 1922 and his doctoral degree at the University of Vienna in 1925 with a dissertation entitled Die galizischen Juden im Kampfe um ihre Gleichberechtigung (1848–1868) (The Jews of Galicia in Their Struggle for Legal Equality [1848–1868]), which was published in Frankfurt in 1929.

Friedman returned to Poland after receiving his doctorate, where he was briefly the director of the Tarbut school in Volkovysk (currently in Belarus) and taught Hebrew and history at the Jewish gymnasium in Konin, Poland. He also taught at the Jewish gymnasium in Łódź (1925-1939), as well as at the People’s University of that city, was a lecturer for doctoral candidates at YIVO in Vilna (1935-1936), and lectured at the Tahkemoni Rabbinical Seminary of Warsaw (1938–1939), and at the Institute of Judaic Studies, also in Warsaw. He continued his historical research, producing, most notably, his 1935 monograph Dzieje Żydów w Łodzi (The History of the Jews in Łódź), and a number of specialized studies on the Jews of Galicia and Lodz. In addition, he attempted to foster academic cooperation among Jewish historians. He participated in the International Congress of Historians, which was held in Warsaw in 1933, following which he endeavored to create a worldwide association of scholars of Jewish history. When World War II began, he was engaged in writing a comprehensive history of the Jews of Poland from the earliest beginnings through the twentieth century.

Friedman survived the Holocaust by hiding in and around Lwow, but he lost his wife and a daughter. After the liberation in 1944, he went to Lublin, where he was appointed the first director of the Central Jewish Historical Commission, which he helped to found with the Central Committee of Jews in Poland, whose mission was to gather data on Nazi war crimes. In this capacity he not only collected testimonies and documentation but also supervised the publication of a number of pioneering studies, including his own on the concentration camp at Auschwitz. This work, To jest Oświęcim , was published in Warsaw in 1945 and appeared in an abridged English version as This Is Oswięcim in 1946. He also published several monographs on various destroyed Jewish communities, including Bialystok and Chelmno, and about Ukrainian-Jewish relations during the Nazi occupation. At the same time, he taught Jewish history at the Łódź University (1945-1946) and was a member of the Polish State Commission to Investigate German War Crimes in Auschwitz and Chelmno.

After testifying and acting as a consultant at the Nuremberg International Military Tribunal in 1946, Friedman and his new wife, Dr. Ada Eber-Friedman, decided not to return to Poland. For two years he directed the educational and cultural department of the Joint Distribution Committee in the American Zone in Germany (1946-1948). He also helped the Centre du Documentation Juive Comtemporaire in Paris to set up its documentary collection. Friedman then moved to the United States in October 1948 at the invitation of his former professor Salo Baron, who was now teaching at Columbia University, where Friedman joined him. There he first held the post of research fellow and then, from 1951 until his death in 1960, that of lecturer in the graduate department of history. From 1949-1954, he was the dean of the Jewish Teacher’s Seminary and Folks University. He taught courses at the Herzliya Teachers Seminary in Israel and was a member of the Research Committee of the Board of Director’s of the YIVO Institute starting in 1952.

Friedman’s subsequent research focused on the Holocaust. He produced two popular books, the first account of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising titled Martyrs and Fighters: The Epic of the Warsaw Ghetto (1954), the second a volume describing Christian rescuers during the war, Their Brothers’ Keepers (1957). A volume of his essays devoted to Holocaust topics, Pathways to Extinction: Essays on the Holocaust (1980), was edited posthumously by his wife. He was the Research Director of the YIVO-Yad Vashem Joint Documentary Project, a bibliographical series on the Holocaust from 1954-1960. This project consisted of publishing a full bibliography of all published works having a connection to the Holocaust. The first volume, which consisted of Hebrew sources, had been published by the time of Friedman’s death, and the English volume was ready to be printed. He also remained committed to his earlier scholarly interests, and published articles in Yiddish, Polish, Hebrew, French, and English, such as “Polish Jewish Historiography between the Two Wars” and “The First Millennium of Jewish Settlement in the Ukraine and in the Adjacent Areas.” Philip Friedman died in New York on February 7, 1960 after a lengthy illness.

Subject/Index Terms

Administrative Information

Access Restrictions: Permission to use the collection must be obtained from the YIVO Archivist.

Use Restrictions:

Permission to publish part or parts of the collection must be obtained from the YIVO Archives. For more information, contact:

YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, Center for Jewish History, 15 West 16th Street, New York, NY 10011

email: archives@yivo.cjh.org

Acquisition Method: The materials were donated to the YIVO Archives by Philip Friedman’s widow, Ada Friedman, in June 1987. Additional materials were donated by Friedman’s niece, Sophia Balk, in February 1993.

Separated Materials: Philip Friedman’s library was also donated to YIVO and forms the Philip Friedman Collection at the YIVO Library.

Related Materials: The YIVO Library has many books by and about Friedman and a wealth of materials about the Jews of Poland, World War II, the Holocaust, the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, concentration camps, survivor testimonies, displaced persons, bibliographies of books about the Holocaust, and many other topics found in the Friedman Papers. In addition, many of Friedman’s personal books about Jewish history and Holocaust materials were donated to the YIVO Library.

Preferred Citation: Published citations should take the following form:Identification of item, date (if known); Papers of Philip Friedman; RG 1258; folder number; YIVO Institute for Jewish Research.


Box and Folder Listing


Browse by Series:

Series 1: Series I: Correspondence, 1931, 1944-1982,
Series 2: Series II: Friedman’s Work, 1935-1982,
Series 3: Series III: Research Materials, 1914-1979,
Series 4: Series IV: Ghettos and Concentration Camps, 1939-1968,
Series 5: Series V: Resistance, 1940-1963, 1978-1985,
Series 6: Series VI: The Post-War Era, 1917, 1931-1962,
Series 7: Series VII: Varia (923-937), 1931-1968,
Series 8: Series VIII: Newspaper Clippings, 1942-1993,
Series 9: Series IX: Friedman’s Biographical Materials, 1936-1975, undated,
Series 10: Series X: Ada Friedman’s Writings, 1949-1978, undated,
All

Series VI: The Post-War Era
1917, 1931-1962
This series contains articles, clippings, pamphlets, and correspondence about the post-war Jewish experience, including displaced persons, statelessness, migrations, immigration, the McCarran-Walter Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, reparations, the Jewish Contemporary Documentation Center in Paris, the United Restitution Office, the Netherlands State Institution for War Documentation, the Netherlands Culture Society, the German Red Cross, the Jewish labor movement, and correspondence with various historians and other individuals.
Folders: 50
Subseries 1: General
1917, 1931-1959
This subseries consists of articles, clippings, pamphlets, and correspondence in English, Yiddish, French, German, Polish, and Russian.
Folders: 32
Folder 873: Articles about displaced persons, statelessness and migrations
1942-1955

Convention Relating to the Status of Stateless Persons, by N. Robinson (English, Yiddish), 1954

Uprooted Jews in the Immediate Postwar World, by J. Robinson, 1943

The Legal Status of Stateless Persons, by M. Vishniak, 1945

D Day for DP's, by Isaac Asofsky, 1947

Jews in Migration, 1949

Post-War Migrations - Proposals for an International Agency, by Paul van Zeeland, 1943

Final Report, Invalid Commission, 12/46-7/47

The Jews of Europe, by P.S. Bernstein, 1943

The Postwar Jewish Refugees, by B. Klein, 1955

Jews After the War, by R. Niebuhr, 1942

A Blueprint for the Rehabilitation of European Jewry, 1943

Jewish Post-War Problems - A Study Course, 1943

Folder 874: Articles about displaced persons, statelessness and migrations
1939-1956

Jewish Public Relations and the Displaced Persons Admission Act, by Abraham G. Duker, 1948

Ou en Sont les Refugies, by D. Meyer (French), 1952

L'Ouvre Gravee d'Edy-Legrand, by Gerald Mignot (French), 1950

summary of reports on the position of Jews in Germany, 1945-1946

Ten Years Ago Nazi Camps were Freed, 1955

Jews in Postwar Germany, by N. Peter Levinson, 1954

Postwar Migration Problems, by George L. Warren, 1943

Without a Country, by Joseph P. Chamberlain, 1945

A Century and a Half of Emancipation, by Cecil Roth, 1942

Die Ideologie der Shaerith Ha Plaetah (Displaced Persons), by Samuel Gringauz (German)

Immigration and Citizenship, a Selected Bibliography

Das Los des Gefluechteten, by Arnold Zweig (German)

book reviews (English, French), 1939-1956

Folder 875: Articles about displaced persons, statelessness and migrations
1952-1954
(Yiddish)
Folder 876: Articles about displaced persons, statelessness and migrations
1949
Atlantik Echo, ship's newspaper for the U.S.A.T. General W.G. Haan, 9/18-9/25/49 (German)
Folder 877: Articles about displaced persons, statelessness and migrations
1944-1954
(English)
Folder 878: Articles about immigration
1942-1956

Public Law 414 - 82nd Congress, to revise the laws relating to immigration, naturalization and nationality, 1952

The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 (McCarran-Walter Act), 1952

What You Should Know about the McCarran Immigration Act, 1953

The Stranger at Out Gate - America's Immigration Policy, 1954

Revision of the Alien Law, New York Times, 8/28/53

The McCarran Act, 1953

Injustices of McCarran-Walter Act - Congressional Records, 1955

The McCarran Act, by Lucy P. Gillman

Memorandum on the Lehman Immigration and Naturalization Bill

various articles, 1942-1956

Folder 879: Articles about immigration
1954-1955

A Decade Later 1945-1955, by Jacob Lestschinsky (English), 1955

Noah's Ararat Jewish State in its Historical Setting, by Bernard D. Weinryb (English), reprint from Publication of the American Jewish Historical Society, 3/54

Folder 880: Articles about immigration
1937-1957

East European Immigration to the U.S., by B.D. Weinryb, 1955

The "Bayer" and the "Pollack" in America, by R. Glanz, 1955

Where Can the Refugees Go?, by J.G. McDonald, 1945

Misadventure in History, by C.B. Sherman, 1954

Jewish Immigrants to the U.S., 1881-1900, by E. Tcherikower, 1943

Jewish Immigrants in American Memoirs, by E. Lifschutz

U.S. Immigration Policy, by Rev. R.J. Cushing, 1953

Some Aspects of Polish Jewish Relations in the U.S. after 1865, by A.G. Duker, 1949

German Jews in White Labor Servitude in America, by G. Kisch, 1937

The Immigration of Romanian Jews up to 1914, by J. Kissman

The Immigration of German Jews up to 1880, by R. Glanz

Jewish Immigration from Austria-Hungary 1848-1849, by L. Goldhammer

The Jews in the American Economy, by N. Reich

Occupational Patterns of American Jewry at the Turn of the Century

Source Materials on Jewish Immigration, by R. Glanz

book reviews, 1957

History of Jewish Migration - course lecture outline

The Jewish Emigrant - 1941, by M. Gottschalk

other articles (English, French, German), 1950-1955

Folder 881: Articles about immigration
1941, 1954-1958
(Yiddish)
Folder 882: Immigration statistical data
1938, 1951, undated
(English, German, Yiddish)
Folder 883: Articles about reparations
1952-1955

The German-Israeli Agreement, by Kurt Grossman, 1954

Jewry and Germany - Approach to Reparations, 1952

Information on Restitutions and Related Subjects, 1953

Information Sheets issued by the Institute of Jewish Affairs (English, Yiddish)

Bitzaron Schedule for the Conference on Jewish Material Claims against Germany, 1955

Problems of the State, German Reparations, by Moshe Sharett, 1952

Folder 884: Articles about reparations
1952-1958

news from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims against Germany, 4/17/52; 12/30/52; 3/20/54; 10/10/54

Israel Digest, 4/4/52; 4/9/52; 6/6/52; 9/12/52

Israel Office of Information 4/9/52; 9/12/52

Jewish Agency for Palestinian memos 6/20/56; 7/15/57; 1/30/58; 3/10/58; 4/29/58; 6/3/58; 6/17/58

The Heirless Property Paradox, article by A.S. Hyman, 1953

Folder 885: Articles about reparations
1954-1958

German publications: Allgemeine Wochenzeitung der Juden in Deutschland, 9/3/54; 9/17/54; 1/7/55; 5/27/55; 6/3/55

Die Wiedergutmachung, 5/6/58; 5/30/58; 6/13/58; 6/27/58

Folder 886: Articles about reparations
1947-1958
(German, English, Yiddish, French)
Folder 887: Articles about reparations
1940, 1953-1958

Conference on Jewish Material Claims against Germany, Board of Directors, 1957

applications to Conference on Jewish Material Claims against Germany from: Conference on Jewish Relations; United Galician Jews of America; Club of Polish Jews, Inc.; Anna Pantel (German); Roma Zylberberg (German); Felicja Troszynska (German); Edward Forst (Polish, German); Zygmunt Friedman (German); Sydonia Buch (Polish); Dr. Fohl (German)

Folder 888: The United Restitution Office
1935-1955

United Restitution Office, by Norman Bentwich, 1954

Congressional Record, 1942

Extracts from Hearings before the Committee on Foreign Affairs, House of Representatives 11/26/43

letter of resignation by the High Commissioner for Refugees Coming from Germany, James G. McDonald, 1935

The Last Hundred Thousand, by Earl G. Harrison, 1945

War Losses by Polish Jews, by Dr. Emil Somerstein (Yiddish)

United Service for New Americans, letter 4/18/47, newsletters, 5/6/47, 5/9/47

deposition of P. Mark-Sekler, 1955

Folder 889: Post-War Reconstruction of the Jews in Europe
1944-1955

letter of Dr. Y. Shapiro (Yiddish), 1954

Jews in Liberated Europe - survey of conditions, American Jewish Conference

Situation du Judaisme Europeen dix ans apres la Liberation (French), 1955

memorandum submitted to the United Nations Conference of International Organization at San Francisco, 1945

Planning for the Peace and for Post-War Organization, 1944

Folder 890: Publications of the Netherlands State Institution for War Documentation
1953-1956

list of persons interested in WWII, 10/53

progress report #1, #2, 10/53, 4/55

list of Library Organizations #10, #11, #12, 1954-1956

Folder 891: Archives of the German Red Cross
1952-1955

the archives of the Netherlands Culture Society (Dutch), 1955

Central index list of keywords (Dutch), 1954

status of collections (Dutch), 1952-1954

Folder 892: The Jewish Contemporary Documentation Center in Paris
1946-1953

brochure: Ten Years of Existence, 1953

bulletin, 5/15/46; 6/1/46 (French)

The Jewish Documentation Center in France (Yiddish, English), 1947-1949

A Few Words Regarding the Documentation Center (Yiddish), 1949

agreement between Yad Vashem and the Documentation Center (Yiddish), 1953

plan of a newspaper of comtemporary Jewish history (Yiddish)

memorandum, 1948

Folder 893: The Jewish Contemporary Documentation Center in Paris
1948-1958

World Committee to Erect the Tomb of the Unknown Jewish Martyr, declaration (Yiddish)

The Project on the Road to Realization (French, English, Yiddish)

Joint Gathering for erecting the tomb (Yiddish), 1955

Impressive Gathering for Erecting the Tomb of the Unknown Jewish Martyr (Yiddish)

Release of the Jewish Press about the Documentation Center (Yiddish), 1951

Letter to all Jewish Communities about the Tomb of the Unknown Jewish Martyr (Yiddish)

varia and newspaper articles about the Tomb of the Unknown Jewish Martyr and the Documentation Center (Yiddish, French, English), 1948-1958

Folder 894: Libraries
1945-1957

The Work of the Wiener Library, by Alfred Wiener, 1950

Jewish Central Information Office, the Wiener Library, 1945

The Research Program of Chatcham House, by Arnold J. Toynbee, 1950

The Activities of the Hoover Library, by Fritz T. Epstein, 1950

The Library of Congress, informational bulletin, 1950

Association of Jewish Libraries in Europe (Yiddish), 1957

Columbia University Libraries, 1951

Jewish libraries in Europe affected by Nazi attack

Folder 895: Balaban, Majer
1943-1947
(German, Polish, Yiddish, Russian)
Folder 896: Dubnow, Simon
1931-1932, 1946-1957
(Yiddish, Hebrew, English)
Folder 897: Hersch, Liebman
1955-1956
(Yiddish, French)
Folder 898: Ringelblum, Emanuel
1953-1959
(Yiddish, English, French)
Folder 899: Historians
1952-1958

Bader, Gershom

Baron, Salo (English, Yiddish)

Borwicz, Michel

Dinur, Ben-Zion (English)

Kurski, Franz

Lestschinsky, Jacob (Hebrew)

Mahler, Rafael

Mark, Ber

Philipson, Martin (Hebrew)

Schwartz, Solomon (English)

Shatzky, Jacob (English, Yiddish)

Tcherikower, Eliahu

Folder 900: Personalities
1938-1958

Carmel, Herman

Finkelstein, Leo

Frank, Herman

Freud, Sigmund (English)

Greenbaum, Icchok (Yiddish, Hebrew)

Hayot, H.P.

Huberband, Szymon

Klausner, Joseph (English)

Lehrer, Leibush

Mark, Yudel

Mendelson, Shloime

Opatoshu, Joseph (English)

Shor, Mosche

Sommerstein, Emil (Yiddish, English)

Spitzer, Salomon (Polish)

Steinberg, I.N.

Zak, Abraham

Zhitlowsky, Chaim

Folder 901: Simaite, Anna
1953-1958
(Yiddish, English)
Folder 902: Skobtzov, Mother Maria
1955-1956
(Russian, English, Yiddish)
Folder 903: Jewish labor movement
1917, 1946-1954

Religious and Secular Trends in Jewish Socialism, by A. Menes, 1952

Jewish Socialist Parties Without Jewish Workers, by J. Lestschinsky (Yiddish), 1952

The Beginnings of the Jewish Labor Movement, by I. Halpern (Hebrew), 1954

Modern Capitalism and Jewish Fate, syllabus

Rise of the Bund and its Development Until about 1904

The Jewish Problem and the International, by H. Cohn (German), 1917

Jews in the American Labor Movement, by J.B.S. Hardman

Jews in the Clothing Industry, by J. Greenfeld

Needle, Thread and Thimble (The Story of Jewish Labor in the United States), by B. Seligman, 1953

The Adaptation of Jewish Labor Groups to American Life, by B.D. Weinryb, 1946

Folder 904: Jewish labor movement
1943-1959

Bund and Bundism bibliography (Yiddish), 1956-1957

Romanovka, by A. Rosenthal (Yiddish)

The First Step of Jewish Socialism in Our Places, by L. Kisman (Yiddish), 1957

The Russian Menshevist Movement and its Justification (Yiddish), 1953

The Place of Israel in the Life of the Jews (Yiddish), 1953

About the Organizing of the Bund in Galicia (Yiddish), 1955

Fifty Years Since the Beginning of the Bund in Galicia (Yiddish), 1955

The Jewish Labor Movement in Galicia (galleys)

Personalities in the Labor Movement: Friedrich Adler, 1954

Ber Borochov, 1952

Hersh Lekert, and his death (Yiddish), 1952

Beinish Michalevich, 1952

Rudolf Rocker (Yiddish, English), 1943, 1953

Anna Rosenthal, 1952

I. Zerubavel, 1953

memoirs of G. Aronson (Yiddish), 1953

The Beginnings of the Socialist Labor Movement in Bialystok (Yiddish), 1953

Socialist Propagandists among Jews in Bialystok (Yiddish), 1951

The First Demonstration in Horodenko (Yiddish), 1954

Listing of Holocaust Material in the Bund Archives (Yiddish), 1959

clippings (English), 1953-1956

Subseries 2: Landsmanshaftn
1942-1962
These landsmanshaftn are in the United States and Israel and materials are in Polish, English and Yiddish.
Folders: 4
Folder 905: Club of Polish Jews
1942-1962
(Polish, English, Yiddish)
Folder 906: Bialystok
1949-1958
(Yiddish, English)
Folder 907: Chelm, Czestochowa, Lodz
1950-1955
(Yiddish, English)
Folder 908: Israel, varia
1957, undated
(Yiddish, English)
Subseries 3: Warsaw Ghetto Uprising Memorial Gatherings
1943-1958
This subseries contains materials about memorial gatherings for the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising arranged chronologically. Materials are in Hebrew, Yiddish, Polish, English, German, transliterated Yiddish, French, and Spanish.
Folders: 14
Folder 909: Memorial Gatherings - Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
1943-1946
(Hebrew, Yiddish, Polish)
Folder 910: Memorial Gatherings - Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
1947
(Yiddish, English)
Folder 911: Memorial Gatherings - Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
1948
(Polish)
Folder 912: Memorial Gatherings - Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
1948
(Polish, Yiddish, German, transliterated Yiddish)
Folder 913: Memorial Gatherings - Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
1949
(Polish, Yiddish)
Folder 914: Memorial Gatherings - Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
1950
(English, French, Yiddish)
Folder 915: Memorial Gatherings - Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
1951
(Yiddish, English)
Folder 916: Memorial Gatherings - Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
1952
(Yiddish, English)
Folder 917: Memorial Gatherings - Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
1953
(Hebrew, Yiddish, English, French)
Folder 918: Memorial Gatherings - Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
1954
(Yiddish, English, French)
Folder 919: Memorial Gatherings - Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
1955
(Yiddish, English)
Folder 920: Memorial Gatherings - Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
1956
(Yiddish, English)
Folder 921: Memorial Gatherings - Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
1957
(English, Spanish, Yiddish)
Folder 922: Memorial Gatherings - Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
1958
(Polish, Yiddish, German, English)

Browse by Series:

Series 1: Series I: Correspondence, 1931, 1944-1982,
Series 2: Series II: Friedman’s Work, 1935-1982,
Series 3: Series III: Research Materials, 1914-1979,
Series 4: Series IV: Ghettos and Concentration Camps, 1939-1968,
Series 5: Series V: Resistance, 1940-1963, 1978-1985,
Series 6: Series VI: The Post-War Era, 1917, 1931-1962,
Series 7: Series VII: Varia (923-937), 1931-1968,
Series 8: Series VIII: Newspaper Clippings, 1942-1993,
Series 9: Series IX: Friedman’s Biographical Materials, 1936-1975, undated,
Series 10: Series X: Ada Friedman’s Writings, 1949-1978, undated,
All
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