+ Photos Only + Advanced Search
Printer-friendly Printer-friendly


Guide to the Papers of Julian (Yehiel) Hirszhaut (1908-1983) 1921-1988, 2001-2004 (bulk 1939-1945) RG 720

Processed by Felicia Figa, Leah Oler and Markus Nowogrodzki. Additional processing by Rachel S. Harrison in 2013. Described and encoded as part of the CJH Holocaust Resource Initiative, made possible by the Conference on Jewish Material Claims against Germany.

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

©2013 YIVO Institute for Jewish Research. All rights reserved.

Electronic finding aid was encoded in EAD 2002 by Rachel S. Harrison in July 2013. Description is in English.

Collection Overview

Title: Guide to the Papers of Julian (Yehiel) Hirszhaut (1908-1983) 1921-1988, 2001-2004 (bulk 1939-1945) RG 720

Predominant Dates:(bulk 1939-1945)

ID: RG 720 FA

Extent: 5.0 Linear Feet. More info below.

Arrangement:

A Yiddish card catalog for the testimonies was created by Felicia Figa. The correspondence listing was compiled by Leah Oler. The addendum was processed by Markus Nowogrodzki. The complete Yiddish card catalog was translated and additional processing was completed in 2013. Described and encoded as part of the CJH Holocaust Resource Initiative, made possible by the Conference on Jewish Material Claims against Germany.

This collection is arranged by topic and document format. The Testimonies and Correspondence series are arranged alphabetically according to the Hebrew alphabet, even when the materials are in a language that uses the Latin alphabet. The Writings and Printed Materials series is arranged alphabetically according to the Latin alphabet even when the materials are in Yiddish. The addendum is arranged by document type. The addendum correspondence and newspaper clippings are arranged chronologically and the Di Zukunft submissions are arranged alphabetically according to the Latin alphabet.

Yiddish writings have been transliterated and translated and Polish and German writings and publications have been translated. Yiddish personal names have been transliterated according to YIVO standards except when the individual is known in English by another spelling. Additionally, if the name appeared in Latin letters anywhere within the folder, that spelling was used rather than a standard transliteration.

The names of geographical locations indicating places of birth and ghettos listed within the testimonies have been spelled according to what that location was called in its respective country in 1939, without diacriticals. Russian place names have been transliterated. For concentration camp names, the German wartime spelling has been used. Thus a person may have been born in Oswiecim but interned in the Auschwitz camp. Within German-occupied Poland, the Generalgouvernement, the Germans mainly used the Polish spellings without the diacriticals. This system has been followed for forced labor camps for Jews and prisoner of war camps, although the testimony descriptions do not differentiate between the types of camps. In the German-occupied Soviet Union and some of the more eastern parts of Poland, as well as for some of the states allied with Nazi Germany, including Italy, Romania, Slovakia, Hungary, and others, the Germans often developed their own more Germanized spellings of town names although they were not always consistent in this. These names, when clear from the testimonies, have been used although, when the Germanized name is not clear, the 1939 name has been used.

The collection is organized into three series and an addendum, some of which have been further divided into subseries.

Languages: Polish, Yiddish, German, English, French, Hebrew, Russian, Ukrainian

Abstract

This collection contains the papers of Julian Hirszhaut, a Yiddish journalist and author of several works about the Holocaust in Poland. He collected a great number of historical documents on this topic, including hundreds of eyewitness accounts, which make up an important part of this collection. The materials in this collection relate to Hirszhaut’s important work gathering documents and testimonies of the Holocaust, as well as to his other professional activities as a journalist.

Scope and Contents of the Materials

This collection relates mainly to Hirszhaut’s collecting of Holocaust materials, which he began soon after the war. There are also materials relating to his involvement with publishing and writing articles for various Yiddish and Polish newspapers. A major part of this collection consists of hundreds of eyewitness Holocaust testimonies, as well as newspaper clippings, correspondence, printed material, and photographs relating to Jews in Poland under Nazi occupation. The eyewitness testimonies were collected ca. 1945 by local Jewish historical commissions in Bialystok, Katowice, Krakow, Lublin, Lodz, and Warsaw. The testimonies are in Polish, Yiddish and German.

Materials relating to the Lodz ghetto include photographs, ghetto money, printed announcements by Chaim Mordechai Rumkowski, and a handwritten Zionist newspaper from the ghetto edited by Dawid Joskowicz. There are also newspapers from the Polish underground and from other ghettos, and miscellaneous materials from Jewish organizations in post-war Poland, such as Ichud and the Central Jewish Historical Commission.

The collection also contains manuscripts and typescripts of articles by Hirszhaut and other writers, many of which are unattributed, and a great deal of correspondence. Correspondents include Abraham Golomb, Chaim Grade, Freed Weininger, Herschel Weinrauch (Grigory Vinokur), Hinde Zaretski, Israel Silberberg-Cholewa, Jacob Zipper, Shea Tenenbaum, Saul Maltz, Jacob Maitlis, Avram Sutzkever, Moishe Ettinger, Arnold Posy, Menke Katz, Rokhl Korn, Joseph Kermish, Isaac Rontch, William Shore, and Mordkhe Schaechter, among others.

Additionally, there is an addendum containing supplementary materials, mostly from the 1970s and 1980s, including submissions to Di Zukunft , of which Hirszhaut was the editor, correspondence, papers of Hanka Hirszhaut, newspaper clippings, and miscellaneous writings.

Historical Note

Biographical Note Julian (Yehiel) Hirszhaut was born on September 2, 1908 in Drohobycz, Poland, near Lwow. He graduated from LwowUniversity with a Master’s degree in jurisprudence and political economics and simultaneously graduated from the Hebrew Pedagogical Institute, also in Lwow, in 1933. Following his graduation, Hirszhaut worked as the legal advisor to a large bank, first at the Lwowbranch and later at the main office in Warsaw. He was also involved in Zionist activities in Western Galicia, and wrote about Zionist problems in both Polish and Yiddish periodicals. He first published his work in the Polish monthly Narod (Nation, Warsaw) in 1929 and continued to publish in Polish and Yiddish until the beginning of World War II. Among the publications he wrote for were Der emes (The Truth, Warsaw), Der nayer veg (The New Way, Paris, later London), Haynt (Today, Warsaw), Der kampf (The Struggle, Lwow), and Di naye velt (The New World, German, Vienna). He also contributed to the Polish daily Chwilie (Moment, Lwow).

From 1939-1942 Hirszhaut was in hiding in Warsaw before he went to live with his brother and sister-in-law who were living with Aryan identity papers. Hirszhaut obtained false identity papers and even got a job working for a local hardware wholesaler for several months. He was arrested and sent to Pawiak Prison in Warsaw on July 8, 1943 where he stayed for a year before escaping on May 30, 1944. Hirszhaut’s brother was also sent to Pawiak Prison, where he died in November 1943. After escaping, Hirszhaut went into hiding, where he was able to survive until the end of the war. His wife, daughter and entire family perished in the Holocaust.

Hirszhaut helped to build the postwar Yiddish press in Poland, founding and editing the periodicals Ichud (Union, Lodz, 1945, Polish and Yiddish), Opinia (Opinion, Lodz, 1945) and Życie Warszawy (Life of Warsaw, 1945), for which he used the name Michal Dobiecki. He was also the honorary President of the Jewish Committee in Warsaw after the war and, as part of this office, he was instrumental in organizing local Jewish historical committees in Bialystok, Katowice, Krakow, Lublin, Lodz, and Warsaw to collect eyewitness Holocaust testimonies. Hirszhaut also wrote extensively on the Holocaust period in Poland and bought and collected historical documents and photographs on this topic, many of which he later sent to Yad Vashem. Hirszhaut married Hanka Hirszhaut, another survivor, in Lodz in July 1945.

The Hirszhauts moved to France in June 1946 on the invitation of the French Zionist Organization. There they helped ensure that illegally arriving Jews got temporary visas to stay in France and provided help and clothing. As an emissary of the French government, Julian Hirszhaut went to Poland to distribute 500 visas for Jewish survivors. He also continued to be involved in publishing while in France. He was the editor of Di tsionistishe shtime (The Zionist Voice, 1946), Videroyfboy (Reconstruction, 1946-1947), which was published through the Union of Polish Jews in France, Undzer veg (Our Way, 1946-1951), and Undzer vort (Our Word, 1946). He also wrote a series of essays for Kiyum (Existence) in Paris: on the history of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising (1948-1949), about Holocaust literature among the Germans (April 1950), and about politics and Jews (1950-1951).

In February 1951 the Hirszhauts settled in New York, where once again Julian Hirszhaut involved himself in publishing and writing about the Holocaust. He edited Amerikaner (The American, 1951-1952), YIVO bleter (YIVO Pages, 1954) and Di Zukunft (Future, 1976-1983). He also served as the President of the Yiddish PEN Club and the executive director of the Congress for Jewish Culture in New York.

Among his books and writings are Finstere nekht in Pawiak (Dark Nights in Pawiak), published by the Central Union of Polish Jews in Argentina in 1948, later published as Jewish Martyrs of Pawiak in 1982; Yidishe Naft Magnatn (Jewish Oil Magnates, 1954); “Dr. Ignacy Schipper – His Life and Works” in Fun noentn ever (From the Recent Past), published by the World Jewish Culture Congress in 1955; and “Meir Balaban” in Dortn (There, 1959), among others.

Julian Hirszhaut died in New York on March 20, 1983. He was survived by his wife, Hanka, and two daughters, Betty Lee Hirszhaut and Dr. Vivian Hirszhaut Swartz.

Subject/Index Terms

Administrative Information

Alternate Extent Statement: 12 5" boxes

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 YIVO by Julian Hirszhaut in several accessions between 1975-1978. Additional materials were donated by Julian Hirszhaut’s widow, Hanka Hirszhaut in 1983, 2001 and 2004.

Separated Materials: There is no information about materials that are associated by provenance to the described materials that have been physically separated or removed.

Original/Copies Note: There is a card catalog for Series I: Eyewitness Testimonies, a handwritten Yiddish list of correspondents and a guide to the addendum.

Related Materials: The YIVO, AJHS and LBI Library and Archives have a wealth of materials about World War II, the Holocaust, concentration camps, survivor testimonies, the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, the Lodz ghetto, and many other topics found in the Hirszhaut Papers. There are also many collections in the YIVO Archives relating to Yiddish newspapers and journals and Yiddish newspaper publishing. The YIVO Library has several of Hirszhaut’s books, including Jewish Martyrs of Pawiak , Finstere nekht in Pawiak , Der nign fun nekhtn , In gang fun der geshikhte: monografyes un eseyen , and Yidishe naft-magnatn .

Preferred Citation: Published citations should take the following form:Identification of item, date (if known); Papers of Julian (Yehiel) Hirszhaut; RG 720; box number; folder number; YIVO Institute for Jewish Research.


Box and Folder Listing


Browse by Series:

Series 1: Series I: Eyewitness Testimonies, 1940-1946,
Series 2: Series II: Writings and Printed Materials, 1930-1978, undated,
Series 3: Series III: Correspondence, 1970-1982,
Series 4: Series IV: Addendum, 1921, 1944-1948, 1963, 1974-1988, 2001-2004, undated,
All

Series III: Correspondence
1970-1982
This series contains Hirszhaut’s correspondence with various Yiddish literary personalities and scholars, as well as with a few organizations and publications, mostly from when Hirszhaut was the editor of Di Zukunft. This correspondence is almost entirely in Yiddish and thus is arranged alphabetically by individual or organization according to the Hebrew alphabet even when the correspondence is in English or Russian. There is also correspondence from Julian Hirszhaut.
Folders: 155
Folder 370: Abish, S.
1982
Folder 371: Okrutny, Yosef
1981
Folder 372: Agranovitsh, B.
1972
Folder 373: Izban, Shmuel
1972-1982
Folder 374: Ayzenberg, Yitzhak
1978
Folder 375: Indelman, Elkhanon
1978-1981
Folder 376: Altusky, Hirsh
1982
Folder 377: Elkhanon, Hirsh
1979
Folder 378: Olitzky, M.
1981
Folder 379: Amerikaner Farband fun Yidish Profesorn (American Association of Professors of Yiddish)
1978
English
Folder 380: Opalek, Zvi
undated
Folder 381: Apter, Shimshon
1979
Folder 382: Akselrod, Pearl
1978
Folder 383: Okrutny, Yosef
1978-1979
Folder 384: Aratz, Meir
1979-1981
Folder 385: Baumwol, Rokhl
1978-1982
Yiddish, Russian
Folder 386: Birnboym, Y.
1981-1982
Folder 387: Beller, Jacob
1982
Folder 388: Berger, A.
1977-1978
Folder 389: Berger, Borukh
1970
Folder 390: Berger, L.L.
1978-1982
Folder 391: Berkman, Yonah
undated
Folder 392: Bractwo Polskie z Warszawy (Polish Brotherhood of Warsaw)
1981
Anti-semitic pamphlet
Folder 393: Golomb, Abraham
undated
Folder 394: Goldberg, Yitzhak
1979
Folder 395: Goldene Keyt (Golden Chain)
1978
Folder 396: Goldkorn, Isaac
1981-1982
Folder 397: Garrin, Stephen H.
1979
English
Folder 398: Gurkin, Israel
1981-1982
Folder 399: Goodman, Leib
1982
Folder 400: Goodman, S.L.
1979
Folder 401: Gutman, Meir Ber
1981
Folder 402: Gutkovitch, Y.
1981
Folder 403: Goldberg, Reuven
1972
Folder 404: Glicksman, Wolf
1977-1982
Folder 405: Gelehrter, Menachem
1981-1982
Folder 406: Gershonovitsh, M.
1977
Folder 407: Grade, Chaim
1977
Folder 408: Grossman, J.
1978-1981
Folder 409: Gross, Noah
1977-1982
Folder 410: Dorftink
1977
Folder 411: Hage, Borukh
1978-1979
Folder 412: Hofer, Hana
1978
Folder 413: Hacken, Vera
1981
Folder 414: Horn, Yosef (Jose)
1981
Folder 415: Heller, Binem
1977-1980
Folder 416: Wolpe, D.
1979
Folder 417: Wasser, H.
1977-1978
Folder 418: Weininger, Freed
1979-1982
Folder 419: Weinrauch, Herschel (Vinokur, Grigory)
1978, 1981
Also photocopies of earlier materials from 1950-1963
Folder 420: Vainsenker, I.
1976
Folder 421: Zak, Avram
1978
Folder 422: Zaretski, Hinde
1977-1982, undated
Folder 423: Silberberg-Cholewa, Israel
1979-1981
Folder 424: Zipper, Jacob
1979
Folder 425: Zeltzer, Chaim
1979
Folder 426: Hasid, M.
1978-1981
Folder 427: Halmish, Mordechai
1979
Folder 428: Top, S.
1981
Folder 429: Telesin, Ziame
1978-1982
Folder 430: Tenenbaum, Shea
1978-1982
Folder 431: Trunk, Zvi
1982
Folder 432: Tchechanovsky, I.
undated
Folder 433: Janasowicz, Isaac
1978-1982
Folder 434: Jacobson, Sol
1979
Folder 435: Yakir, Manya
1978-1982
Folder 436: Yungman, Moshe
1981
Folder 437: Cohen, Berl
1981
Folder 438: Lowin, Jacob
1981
Folder 439: Londinsky, Helen
1977-1982
Folder 440: Lokiec, Moshe
1982
Folder 441: Lusk, Irene
undated
Folder 442: Lusky, Shimon
1982
Folder 443: Layserovich, Avigdor (Victor)
1980
Folder 444: Lipshitz, I.
1978
Folder 445: Lewin, Samuel
undated
Copy of 1959 obituary and list of published works
Folder 446: Levenberg, S.
1979-1982
Folder 447: Lempel, Blime
1978
Folder 448: Leftwich, Joseph
1978-1981
Folder 449: Lermer, Arthur
1980-1982, undated
Folder 450: Matis, David
1981-1982
Folder 451: Maltinsky, Chaim
1979-1982
Also Hebrew newspaper clipping
Folder 452: Maltz, Saul
1978-1982
Folder 453: Mann, Harry
undated
Folder 454: Maitlis, Jacob
1977-1982
Folder 455: Milkovsky, Yitzhak
1979
Folder 456: Mlotek, Yosl
1977
Folder 457: Medek, Ivan
1982
English
Folder 458: Nadich, Judah
1982
English
Folder 459: Sapoznikow, Gershon (Gregorio)
1972
Folder 460: Sarna, M.
1978-1982
Yiddish, English
Folder 461: Sudit, Shalom
1978-1979
Folder 462: Sutzkever, Abraham
1979
Folder 463: Simchovitch, S.
1975
Folder 464: Serebrenick, Shlomo (Salamao)
1979
Folder 465: Ettinger, Moishe
1978-1981
Folder 466: Emiot, Israel
1976, undated
Folder 467: Eck, N.
1982
Folder 468: Fogel-Mamlak, Gershon
1978
Folder 469: Povzea, Mordecai (Murray)
1981
Folder 470: Posy, Aryeh (Arnold)
1977-1978
Folder 471: Fuks, Chaim Leib
1978-1981
Folder 472: Fuhrman, Herbert
undated
Folder 473: Fain, Yonia
1980
Folder 474: Fayn, Yitzhak
1982
Folder 475: Plotkin, Chaim
1978-1982
Folder 476: Friedlaender, Joseph
1981-1982
Folder 477: Fregers, D.
1979
Folder 478: Tsanin, M.
1982
Folder 479: Tzitrin, Nesiah
1977-1978
Folder 480: Tzenatum ??
1979
Folder 481: Kahn, Isaac
1978-1982
Folder 482: Kazdan, H.S.
1978-1979
Folder 483: Kaplan, Ozer
1982
Folder 484: Katz, Menke
1978-1982
Folder 485: Karmiol, W.
1978-1979
Folder 486: Korn, Rokhl
1981
Folder 487: Korenchandler, Yekhezkel
1978-1979
Folder 488: Koifman, Mordecai (Marcos)
1978-1979
Also an article on the first anniversary of Isaac Lipsky's death, 1982
Folder 489: Kiel, Chonon
1979
Folder 490: Klinger, Sholem
1971, 1979
Folder 491: Klepfisz, Heszel
1978-1982
Folder 492: Kesler, S.
1981
Folder 493: Kermish, Joseph
1982
Folder 494: Keshev, S.
1977-1979
Folder 495: Kresel, G.
1979
Folder 496: Rogel, Joseph
1979-1981
Folder 497: Rosenthal-Schneiderman, Esther
1975-1981
Folder 498: Rothenberg, Joshua
1979-1982
Also photocopy of Biuletyn Zydowskiego Instytutu Historycznego w Polsce, 1974
Folder 499: Rontch, I.E.
1978
Folder 500: Rak, Meir
1979
Folder 501: Rackovsky, Isaiah
1979
Folder 502: Rubinstein, E.
1977-1981
Folder 503: Rudman, B.
1975
Folder 504: Roytman, Shlomo
1978
Folder 505: Riz, Yaakov
1978-1979
Folder 506: Shabbetai, R.
undated
Folder 507: Shalit, Louis
1979-1980
Folder 508: Shafir, M.M.
undated
Folder 509: Shore, Wolf (William)
1979
Folder 510: Schwarts, Herschel
1980
Folder 511: Shvartz, Shlomo
1978-1982
Folder 512: Shulvass, Moses A.
1979
Folder 513: Shulman, Avram
1978
Folder 514: Shtern, Israel
1981
Folder 515: Sternfeld, Harry
1979
Folder 516: Shukhman, V.
1982
Folder 517: Snyder, Wolf
1979
Folder 518: Shedletzky, E.
1982
Folder 519: Schaechter, Mordkhe
1981-1982
Folder 520: Schaechter-Gottesman, Bella
1981-1982
Folder 521: Shklifer, Moshe
undated
Folder 522: Toren, Haim
1975
Folder 523: Unidentified correspondents
1978
Folder 524: Correspondence from J. Hirszhaut
1970-1981
Yiddish, English, Hebrew, French, German

Browse by Series:

Series 1: Series I: Eyewitness Testimonies, 1940-1946,
Series 2: Series II: Writings and Printed Materials, 1930-1978, undated,
Series 3: Series III: Correspondence, 1970-1982,
Series 4: Series IV: Addendum, 1921, 1944-1948, 1963, 1974-1988, 2001-2004, undated,
All
© 2013 YIVO Institute for Jewish Research Terms of Use Privacy Policy

Archive powered by Archon Version 3.14
Copyright © 2011 The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign