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Ladataan... The Archive Thief: The Man Who Salvaged French Jewish history in the Wake of the Holocaust (2015)Tekijä: Lisa Moses Leff
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Kirjaudu LibraryThingiin nähdäksesi, pidätkö tästä kirjasta vai et. Ei tämänhetkisiä Keskustelu-viestiketjuja tästä kirjasta. Leff’s focus is on an historian who wrote under the name Zosa Szajkowski, who at the same time he was authoring a prodigious number of articles and books on the history of French Jewry, was also systematically pillaging the very archives where he did his research. He was transformed over his lifetime from a leading scholar of French Jewish history who heroically rescues documents, to a thief of manuscripts, selling books and pages he had stolen to academic libraries. Szajkowski was born in 1911 to a poor family in a small town in Poland, moved to Paris when he was 16, and eventually escaped Hitler’s Europe in 1941 by fleeing to the United States. He was a book loving young boy and despite his lack of a formal advanced education, he wrote several groundbreaking studies of Jews in France in the pre and post war era. After his escape to the U.S., Szajkowski returned to Europe as a G.I. In the post-war period, while serving with the occupying forces in Germany, he began a systematic pillaging of documents and materials from Nazi archives and shipping them to YIVO in New York. Suspicions grew about his pilfering and selling documents to major collections in the U.S. and Israel. It was not until 1961 that he was caught red-handed by librarians in France, however, another decade passed before he was finally arrested in New York. In an article written in Jewish Week it was said that “not many books by historians seem like the stuff of feature films’ but Leff’s Archive Thief “seems like a cinematic natural.” ei arvosteluja | lisää arvostelu
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In the aftermath of the Holocaust, Jewish historian Zosa Szajkowski gathered up tens of thousands of documents from Nazi buildings in Berlin, and later, public archives and private synagogues in France, and moved them all, illicitly, to New York. In The Archive Thief, Lisa Moses Leff reconstructs Szajkowski's story in all its ambiguity. Born into poverty in Russian Poland, Szajkowski first made his name in Paris as a communist journalist. In the late 1930s, as he saw the threats to Jewish safety rising in Europe, he broke with the party and committed himself to defending his people in a new wa Kirjastojen kuvailuja ei löytynyt. |
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Google Books — Ladataan... LajityypitMelvil Decimal System (DDC)940.53History and Geography Europe Europe 1918- World War IIKongressin kirjaston luokitusArvio (tähdet)Keskiarvo:
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