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Ancel, Jean, editor. Documents Concerning the Fate of Romanian Jewry during the Holocaust.

New York:
Beate Klarsfeld Foundation, 1986. (DS 135 .R7 D63 1986) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Twelve-volume series that reproduces hundreds of original government documents, newspaper articles, letters,
memoranda, and other sources related to the persecution of Romanian Jews during World War II. [German,
Romanian, and English]

Arad, Yitzhak, Israel Gutman, and Abraham Margaloit, editors. Documents on the Holocaust: Selected
Sources on the Destruction of the Jews of Germany and Austria, Poland, and the Soviet Union. Lincoln:
University of Nebraska Press, 1999. (D 804.19 .D63 1999) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Compiles translations of over 200 sources documenting the destruction of Jewish communities under the Nazis.
Compiles official decrees, speeches, military orders, diary excerpts, and other primary sources. Includes indexes of
names, places, organizations, and individuals. [English]

Arad, Yitzhak, Shmuel Krakowski, and Shmuel Spector, editors. The Einsatzgruppen Reports:
Selections from the Dispatches of the Nazi Death Squads Campaign against the Jews July 1941-January 1943.
New York, NY: Holocaust Library, 1989. (D 757.854 .E567 1989) [Find in a library near you (external
link)]
Provides translations of over 150 situation reports filed by members of the Einsatzgruppen, the units responsible for
the deaths of over one million Jews and other victims. Includes an index. [English]

Berenbaum, Michael, editor. Witness to the Holocaust. New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 1997. (D
804.19 .W58 1997) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Documentary history of the Holocaust. Presents translated excerpts of key documents, speeches, announcements,
letters, and reports, chronologically presented with commentary to provide context for each item. [English]

Braham, Randolph L., editor. The Destruction of Hungarian Jewry: A Documentary Account. New York:
Pro Arte for the World Federation of Hungarian Jews, 1963. (Reference DS 135 .H9 D57 1963) [Find
in a library near you (external link)]
Two-volume collection documenting the destruction of the Hungarian Jewish community in 1944. Volume I covers the
treatment of Hungarian Jews from 1940 until the Nazi occupation and volume II covers the roundups and
deportations of March-April, 1944. Presents reproductions of the original sources. Includes an analytical list of
documents. [German and English]

Crew, David F. Hitler and the Nazis: A History in Documents. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005.
(DD 253 .C67 2005) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Collection of documents in translation and images covering the collapse of the Weimar Republic and Hitlers rise to
power, World War II, and the Holocaust. Includes suggestions for further research and an index.
Friedlander, Henry, and Sybil Milton, editors. Berlin Document Center. New York: Garland, 1992.
(Reference D 810 .J4 A735 1989 v.11) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Representative selection of papers from the Berlin Document Center (BDC), the largest repository of Nazi party
personnel and membership records. Reproduces 486 file cards, questionnaires, letters, handwritten autobiographies,
and other personnel documents from leading Nazi officials. Includes a summary description of the BDC archives, a
glossary of individuals and organizations mentioned in the text, and a summary listing of the documents. Volume 11
of the Archives of the Holocaust series. [German]
Friedlander, Henry, and Sybil Milton, editors. Bundesarchiv of the Federal Republic of Germany, Koblenz
and Freiburg. New York: Garland, 1993. (Reference D 810 .J4 A735 1989 v.20) [Find in a library near
you (external link)]
Presents over 200 letters, memoranda, organization charts, and other Nazi documents related to the persecution of
Jews as well as the creation and administration of the concentration camps. Includes a glossary of individuals and
organizations mentioned in the text along with a summary listing of the documents. Volume 20 of the Archives of the
Holocaust series. [German]
Friedlander, Henry, and Sybil Milton, editors. Zentrale Stelle der Landesjustizverwaltungen,
Ludwigsburg. New York: Garland, 1993. (Reference D 810 .J4 A735 1989 v.22) [Find in a library near
you (external link)]
Reproduces 132 documents drawn from the holdings at the Zentrale Stelle der Landesjustizverwaltungen (Central
Office for the Administration of Justice) in Ludwigsburg, Germany. Presents telegrams, decrees, and letters
pertaining to the treatment of Jews and other prisoners under Nazi control. Also provides transcripts of postwar
interrogations related to the prosecution of war criminals. Includes a glossary of individuals and organizations
mentioned in the text along with a summary listing of the documents. Volume 22 of the Archives of the
Holocaust series. [German]
Hilberg, Raul, editor. Documents of Destruction: Germany and Jewry, 1933-1945. Chicago: Quadrangle
Books, 1971. (D 810 .J4 D572 1971) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Compendium of translated documents outlining the history of the Holocaust, from decrees of the early days of the
Third Reich through documents concerning the postwar fate of perpetrators. [English]

Hill, Jeff. The Holocaust. Detroit, MI: Omnigraphics, 2006. (D 804.19 .H55 2006) [Find in a library near
you (external link)]
Presents translations for over 100 documents, including letters, diary excerpts, Nazi reports, and survivor testimonies,
which trace the history of the Holocaust from the rise of Nazism through the liberation of the camps. Includes a
chronology, glossary, bibliography, and subject index. Part of the Primary Sourcebook series. [English]
Hochstadt, Steve. Sources of the Holocaust. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. (D 804.19 .S68 2004)
[Find in a library near you (external link)]
Collects 84 translations of original documents, including letters, postwar depositions, speeches, diary excerpts, Nazi
reports, and newspaper articles, which outline the history of the Holocaust. Part of the Documents in History series.
[English]
Joods Historisch Museum. Documents of the Persecution of the Dutch Jewry 1940-1945. Amsterdam:
Athenaeum-Polak & Van Gennep, 1979. (DS 135 .N4 J6513 1979) [Find in a library near you (external
link)]
Reproduces dozens of original documents tracing the persecution of the Jews in the Netherlands. Drawn from the
collection of the Jewish Historical Museum in Amsterdam. Includes the original Wannsee Protocol along with
circulars, letters, newspaper accounts, and official Nazi documents. [German and Dutch, with English translations]

Klamper, Elisabeth, editor. Dokumentationsarchiv des sterreichischen Widerstandes, Vienna. New York:
Garland, 1991. (Reference D 810 .J4 A735 1989 v.19) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Collects 221 Holocaust-era documents drawn from the Documentation Center of Austrian Resistance (DW) in
Vienna on topics such as the Anschluss, the operation of Mauthausen concentration camp, euthanasia facilities in
Austria, and the persecution of Jews, Roma, and other groups. Includes a glossary of individuals and organizations
mentioned in the text along with a summary listing of the documents. Volume 19 of the Archives of the
Holocaust series. [German]
Klarsfeld, Serge, editor. Documents Concerning the Destruction of the Jews of Grodno 1941-1944. New
York: Beate Klarsfeld Foundation, 1985. (DS 135 .B382 H76 1985) [Find in a library near you (external
link)]
Six-volume collection of reprinted original documents concerning the destruction of the Jewish community in Grodno,
Poland (now Hrodna, Belarus). Includes deportation lists, Nazi decrees and memoranda, and postwar statements by
survivors. [German, Polish, Lithuanian, Russian, Hebrew, and English]

Mendelsohn, John, editor. The Holocaust: Selected Documents in Eighteen Volumes. New York: Garland,
1982. (Reference D 810 .J4 H645 1982) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Reproduces key original documents tracing the history of the Holocaust from the early 1930s, through the
establishment of the ghettos and camps, to the prosecution of Nazi officials after the war. Presents translations
alongside most of the original documents. [German and English]

Organized in 18 volumes:
o Legalizing the Holocaust: The Early Phase, 1933-1939

o Legalizing the Holocaust: The Later Phase, 1939-1943

o The Crystal Night Pogrom

o Propaganda and Aryanization, 1938-1944

o Jewish Emigration from 1933 to the Evian Conference of 1938

o Jewish Emigration, 1938-1940: Rublee Negotiations and the Intergovernmental Committee

o Jewish Emigration: The S.S. St. Louis Affair and Other Cases

o Deportation of the Jews to the East: Stettin, 1940, to Hungary, 1944

o Medical Experiments on Jewish Inmates of Concentration Camps


o The Einsatzgruppen or Murder Commandos

o The Wannsee Protocol and a 1944 Report on Auschwitz by the Office of Strategic Services

o The Final Solution in the Extermination Camps and the Aftermath

o The Judicial System and the Jews in Nazi Germany

o Relief and Rescue of Jews from Nazi Oppression, 1943-1945

o Relief in Hungary and the Failure of the Joel Brand Mission

o Rescue to Switzerland: The Mussy and Saly Mayer Affairs

o Punishing the Perpetrators of the Holocaust: The Brandt, Pohl, and Ohlendorf cases

o Punishing the Perpetrators of the Holocaust: The Ohlendorf and Von Weizsaecker cases.

Mikoletzky, Lorenz, editor. Allgemeines Verwaltungsarchiv, Archiv der Republik, Vienna. New York:
Garland, 1995. (Reference D 810 .J4 A735 1989 v.21) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Compiles copies of 159 original documents from the Austrian State Archives in Vienna. Primarily consists of letters to
and from Austrian Jews requesting assistance or leniency from Nazi officials. Includes a brief history of the archives,
a glossary of individuals and organizations mentioned in the text, and a summary listing of the documents. Volume 21
of the Archives of the Holocaustseries. [German]
Milton, Sybil, and Roland Klemig, editors. Bildarchiv Preussischer Kulterbesitz, Berlin. New York:
Garland, 1990. (Reference D 810 .J4 A735 1989 v.1) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Reproduces 894 photographs drawn from the holdings of Photo Archive of the Prussian Cultural Trust in Berlin.
Presented in 18 topical chapters, including Nazi propaganda images, photos from the concentration camps, pictures
from countries under German occupation, and postwar trials. Includes a summary listing of the photographs. Volume
1 of the Archives of the Holocaust series.
Nicosia, Francis R., editor. Central Zionist Archives, Jerusalem, 1933-1939. New York: Garland, 1990.
(Reference D 810 .J4 A735 1989 v.3) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Presents facsimiles of 109 documents detailing the activities of the Zionist movement in Europe in response to
increasing persecution of European Jews in the years before World War II. Documents the disintegration of Jewish
life in Nazi Germany and the efforts to escape during the period. Includes a glossary of individuals and organizations
mentioned in the text along with a summary listing of the documents. Volume 3 of the Archives of the
Holocaust series. [German and English]
Nicosia, Francis R., editor. Central Zionist Archives, Jerusalem, 1939-1945. New York: Garland, 1989.
(Reference D 810 .J4 A735 1989 v.4) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Compiles 172 original documents drawn from the holdings of the Central Zionist Archives. Outlines the efforts of the
Zionist movement to raise awareness of the murder of Jews in Nazi-dominated Europe. Organized into six sections to
reflect the primary areas of concern for the Zionist movement during World War II. Includes a glossary of individuals
and organizations mentioned in the text along with a summary listing of the documents. Volume 4 of the Archives of
the Holocaust series. [English, French, and German]
Noakes, Jeremy, and Geoffrey Pridham, editors. Nazism, 1919-1945. Exeter: University of Exeter
Press, 1998-2001. (DD 256.5 .N385 1998) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Four-volume documentary history tracing the rise and fall of Nazism from the movements founding through World
War II. Interweaves translated excerpts from hundreds of primary documents with analytical commentary. Volume 3
includes materials specifically on the Holocaust. [English]

Sax, Benjamin C., and Dieter Kuntz. Inside Hitlers Germany: A Documentary History of Life in the Third
Reich. Lexington, MA: D.C. Heath, 1992. (DD 256.5 .S295 1992) [Find in a library near you (external
link)]
Collection of key primary source documents tracing the political and social history of Nazi Germany, from the origins
of National Socialism in the years after World War I through the establishment of the Third Reich and the Holocaust.
Includes English translations of speeches, letters, newspaper accounts, laws, and other important documents, as well
as a chronology, glossary, maps, and a bibliography for further reading.

Stackelberg, Roderick, and Sally A. Winkle, editors. The Nazi Germany Sourcebook: An Anthology of
Texts. London: Routledge, 2002. (DD 256.5 .N359 2002) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Compiles translations of 148 documents, including some never before published in English, covering the rise of
Nazism through the Holocaust and the following decades. Contains diplomatic records, minutes of meetings, diary
excerpts, speeches, and eyewitness accounts. Includes a listing of all documents found in the text, a chronology of
German history from 1871 to 1990, and an index. [English]

RESCUE EFFORTS top


Baumel, Judith Tydor, editor. Israel State Archives, Jerusalem. New York: Garland, 1991. (Reference D
810 .J4 A735 1989 v.13) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Reproduces 133 original documents drawn from the Israel State Archives in Jerusalem. Presents sources related to
the situation in Palestine during the war, efforts to help refugees fleeing Nazi Europe, assistance to Polish Jews
during World War II, the deportation of the Greek Jewish community, and the postwar rehabilitation of Jewish
displaced persons. Includes a glossary of individuals and organizations mentioned in the text along with a summary
listing of the documents. Volume 13 of the Archives of the Holocaustseries. [English]
Draper, Paula, and Harold M. Troper, editors. National Archives of Canada, Ottawa: Canadian Jewish
Congress Archives, Montreal. New York: Garland, 1991. (Reference D 810 .J4 A735 1989 v.15) [Find in a
library near you (external link)]
Compiles facsimiles of over 200 memoranda, telegraphs, letters, and other papers documenting the efforts of the
organized Jewish community in Canada regarding the persecution of European Jews, along with the Canadian
governments immigration and refugee policies before and during World War II. Includes a glossary of individuals and
organizations mentioned in the text along with a summary listing of the documents. Volume 15 of the Archives of the
Holocaust series. [English]
Greenberg, Karen J., editor. Columbia University Library, New York: the Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League
to Champion Human Rights Papers, the Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League Pamphlet Collection. New York:
Garland, 1990. (Reference D 810 .J4 A735 1989 v.6) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Presents documents of the Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League, founded in 1933, that worked to assist refugees fleeing
Nazi Europe. Contains papers documenting the Leagues various efforts to boycott German-made goods and to keep
the United States from participating in the 1936 Olympics. Includes a glossary of individuals and organizations
mentioned in the text along with a summary listing of the documents. Volume 6 of the Archives of the
Holocaust series. [English]
Greenberg, Karen J., editor. Columbia University Library, New York: The Varian Fry Papers; The Fort
Ontario Emergency Refugee Shelter Papers. New York: Garland, 1990. (Reference D 810 .J4 A735 1989
v.5) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Reproduces holdings from the Columbia University Library related to the work of Varian Fry, an American journalist
who helped anti-Nazi refugees escape from France, along with papers related to the operations of the Fort Ontario
Emergency Refugee Shelter in Oswego, New York. Presents 114 original documents, subdivided into general
categories for easy use. Includes a glossary of individuals and organizations mentioned in the text along with a
summary listing of the documents. Volume 5 of the Archives of the Holocaust series. [English]
Helfand, Jonathan, editor. Yeshiva University, New York. New York: Garland, 1991. (Reference D 810
.J4 A735 1989 v.18) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Reproduces 143 documents concerning the efforts of Vaad Hatzala and of Rescue Children, Inc., two Orthodox
organizations formed to assist Jewish victims of Nazi persecution. Includes a glossary of individuals and
organizations mentioned in the text along with a summary listing of the documents. Volume 18 of the Archives of the
Holocaust series. [English]
Lebowitz, Arieh, and Gail Malmgreen, editors. Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives, New York University:
The Papers of the Jewish Labor Committee. New York: Garland, 1993. (Reference D 810 .J4 A735 1989
v.14) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Reproduces over 300 original documents, including letters, reports, leaflets, and articles from various publications.
Illustrates the inner workings of the Jewish Labor Committee in New York, including its interactions with other labor
organizations and its efforts to preserve East European Jewish culture and history from destruction by the Nazis.
Includes a glossary of individuals and organizations mentioned in the text along with a summary listing of the
documents. Volume 14 of the Archives of the Holocaustseries. [English and Hebrew]
Peck, Abraham J., editor. American Jewish Archives, Cincinnati: The Papers of the World Jewish Congress,
1939-1945. New York: Garland, 1990. (Reference D 810 .J4 A735 1989 v.8) [Find in a library near you
(external link)]
Reproduces 132 original documents related to the work of the World Jewish Congress during World War II, including
rescue and rehabilitation efforts for those attempting to escape Nazi persecution. Presents wartime reports about the
destruction of European Jewish communities. Provides an overview of the archives from which these documents are
taken, a glossary of individuals and organizations mentioned in the text along with a summary listing of the
documents. Volume 8 of the Archives of the Holocaustseries. [English]
Rose, Paul Lawrence, and Herbert Druks, editors. Hecht Archive, University of Haifa. New York:
Garland, 1990. (Reference D 810 .J4 A735 1989 v.12) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Compiles facsimiles of 79 letters, reports, and other papers, in various languages, documenting the efforts of Dr.
Reuben Hecht to raise awareness of the plight of European Jews under the Nazis as well as his work to assist
refugees looking to flee Nazi Europe. Includes a brief summary of Dr. Hechts work, a glossary of individuals and
organizations mentioned in the text, and a summary listing of the documents. Volume 12 of the Archives of the
Holocaust series. [English]
Sutters, Jack. American Friends Service Committee, Philadelphia. New York: Garland, 1989. (Reference D
810 .J4 A735 1989 v.2) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Reproduces over four hundred original documents concerning the efforts of the Society of Friends (Quakers) to assist
refugees fleeing Nazi Europe. Documents are presented chronologically in two volumes, 1932-1939 and 1940-1945.
Includes a glossary of individuals and organizations mentioned in the text along with a summary listing of the
documents. Volume 2 of the Archives of the Holocaust series. [English]
UNITED STATES AND THE HOLOCAUST top
Abzug, Robert H. America Views the Holocaust, 1933-1945: A Brief Documentary History. Boston:
Bedford/St. Martins, 1999. (D 804.19 .A29 1999) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Presents transcriptions of over 60 letters and articles that appeared in newspapers and magazines between 1933
and 1945 in order to document American press coverage of the Nazi persecution of Jews and other victim groups.
Includes a chronology of events, a list of questions for further consideration, a selected bibliography, and an index.
[English]

Bogan, Frederick D., editor. American Jewish Committee, New York. New York: Garland, 1993.
(Reference D 810 .J4 A735 1989 v.17) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Representative sample of the many thousands of Holocaust-era documents from the American Jewish Committees
(AJC) archives housed at the YIVO research facility and the AJC Headquarters in New York. Compiles 188 letters,
reports, memoranda, and other documents describing the AJCs work on behalf of persecuted Jews in Europe before,
during, and after World War II. Includes detailed descriptions of the AJC holdings at both YIVO and the AJC
Headquarters, a glossary of individuals and organizations mentioned in the text, and a summary listing of the
documents. Volume 18 of the Archives of the Holocaust series. [English]
Greenberg, Karen J., editor. Columbia University Library, New York: The James G. McDonald Papers.
New York: Garland, 1990. (Reference D 810 .J4 A735 1989 v.7) [Find in a library near you (external
link)]
Compiles facsimiles of 54 letters, reports, memoranda, and meeting notes regarding the work of James G. McDonald,
the League of Nations High Commissioner for Refugees from 1933 to 1935. Presents McDonalds letter of
resignation over the treatment of European citizens looking to emigrate from Nazi Germany. Includes a glossary of
individuals and organizations mentioned in the text along with a summary listing of the documents. Volume 7 of
the Archives of the Holocaust series. [English]
McJimsey, George, editor. FDRs Protest of the Treatment of Jews in Germany, 1938. Documentary
History of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidency, Volume 12. Bethesda, MD: University Publications of
America, 2001-. (E 806 .D614 2001 v.12) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Collects 176 original documents drawn from the Roosevelt presidential papers, the U.S. Department of State
Archives, and private collections. Traces the actions of the President in response to news of the persecution of
European Jews. Includes a subject index and annotated listing of the documents. [English]
Milton, Sybil, and Frederick D. Bogin, editors. American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, New York.
New York: Garland, 1995. (Reference D 810 .J4 A735 1989 v.10) [Find in a library near you (external
link)]
Presents a representative sampling of the Holocaust-related holdings of the archives of the American Jewish Joint
Distribution Committee. Includes facsimiles of 255 original documents including correspondence with government
agencies, pamphlets, and reports, covering the committees efforts on behalf of Jewish refugees (including the St.
Louis passengers) during World War II and displaced persons after the war. Includes a glossary of individuals and
organizations mentioned in the text along with a summary listing of the documents. Volume 10 of the Archives of the
Holocaust series. [English]
Peck, Abraham J., editor. American Jewish Archives, Cincinnati: The Papers of the World Jewish Congress,
1945-1950: Liberation and the Saving Remnant. New York: Garland, 1990. (Reference D 810 .J4 A735
1989 v.9) [Find in a library near you (external link)]
Compiles 64 original papers and reports drawn from the American Jewish Archives in Cincinnati. Documents the
efforts of the World Jewish Congress in the years after the war to assist displaced persons, punish war criminals, and
capture documentary and eyewitness accounts of Nazi atrocities. Includes an overview of the archives from which
these documents are taken, a glossary of individuals and organizations mentioned in the text along with a summary
listing of the documents. Volume 9 of the Archives of the Holocaust series. [English]
Wyman, David S., editor. America and the Holocaust: A Thirteen-volume Set Documenting the Editors
Book The Abandonment of the Jews. New York: Garland, 1989-1991. (Reference D 810 .J4 W952 1988)
[Find in a library near you (external link)]
Compilation of original documentary materials used by David Wyman in writing his book The Abandonment of the
Jews (New York: The New Press, 1998). Reproduces letters, newspaper articles, government documents, and other
sources. [English]

Organized into thirteen volumes roughly corresponding to the chapters of the book, as follows:
o Confirming the News of Extermination

o The Struggle for Rescue Action

o The Mock Rescue Conference, Bermuda

o Barring the Gates to America

o American Jewish Disunity

o Showdown in Washington: State, Treasury, and Congress

o War Refugee Board: Basic Rescue Operations

o War Refugee Board, Hungary

o War Refugee Board, Special Problems


o Token Shipment (Oswego Camp). War Refugee Board Summary Report

o War Refugee Board Weekly Reports

o Bombing Auschwitz and the Auschwitz Escapees Report

o Responsibility for Americas Failure.

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