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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 I: Correspondence
1931, 1944-1982
This series contains Friedman’s correspondence with Yiddish writers and prominent historians, universities, libraries, other academic institutions, with periodicals and publishers, with government organizations and offices, and with landsmanshaftn. This correspondence is arranged alphabetically by individual or organization according to the Latin alphabet even when the correspondence is in Yiddish, Hebrew or Russian and thus does not use Latin characters. There is also personal correspondence from Philip and Ada Friedman, which is arranged chronologically.
Folders: 480
Subseries 1: Individuals
1931, 1946-1981
This subseries consists of correspondence with Yiddish writers, scholars and prominent historians, including Rachel Auerbach, Salo Baron, Szymon Datner, A.G. Duker, N.M. Gelber, Joseph Kermish, Berl Mark, Jonas Turkow, Mark Wischnitzer, and many others.
Folders: 285
Folder 1: Adelson, Daniel
1953-1957
Folder 2: Adler, H.G.
1954-1959
Folder 2A: Adler-Rudl, S.
1958
Folder 3: Amster, Tobias
1954-1958

Folder 4: Angoff, Charles

Antonovsky, A.

1954-1956

Folder 5: Arendt, Hannah

Arditti, A.

1951-1955
Folder 6: Arnst, I.
1959

Folder 7: Artur, Boris

Artman-Sasse

1950-1960
Folder 8: Asen, Abraham
1955

Folder 9: Ash, Saul

Atlas, H.

1951-1959
Folder 10: Auerbach, Efraim
undated
Folder 11: Auerbach, Philipp
1950
Folder 12: Auerbach, Rachel
1951-1969

Folder 13: Bakalczuk, M.

Badi, J.

1954-1959

Folder 14: Balberyszski, Mendel

Bandman, Edith

1948-1958
Folder 15: Barlas, Chaim
1955-1966

Folder 16: Baron, Salo

Bass, David

1946-1965

Folder 17: Bein, William

Bein, A.

1955-1958
Folder 18: Bel Geddes, Joan
1958

Folder 19: Ben-Ezra, A.

Ben-Horin, M.

1951-1958
Folder 20: Ben-Zvi, I.
1951
see also folder 314
Folder 21: Berezer, David
1951
Folder 22: Bergner, Herc
1950-1955

Folder 23: Berlinski, Szloime

Bernholtz, S.

1946-1949
Folder 24: Bernstein, Mordecai (Matiwoj)
1955-1958
Folder 25: Berlstein, Alfred
1959-1960

New York Public Library

see also folder 330

Folder 26: Bickel, Shlomo
1954
Folder 27: Biderman, Itche
1950

Folder 28: Billig, Joseph

Blatt, Mrs. Josef

1949-1959

Folder 29: Blau, Bruno

Bloch, Pierre

1951-1958
Folder 30: Blumenthal Weiss, Ilse
1957
Folder 31: Borzykowski, Tuvia
1953
Folder 32: Brandstaetter, Roman
1946

Folder 33: Brilling, Bernhardt

Braun, Sam

1950-1953

Folder 34: Bryks, Rachmil

Brzezinski, A.

1951-1952
Folder 35: Bjoza, M.
1950-1954
Folder 36: Caiserman, Hananiah M.
1949-1950
Folder 37: Canaan, Haviv
1952

Folder 38: Charney, Daniel

Chononowitz, Ch.

I. Milstein

1931, 1951-1952
Folder 39: Checinski, Slawomir
1958-1961
Folder 40: Chojnacki, Wladyslaw
1958-1959
Folder 41: Chubinsky, Boruch
1949-1956

Folder 42: Ciemny, Melech

Clergy

1952-1958

Folder 43: Cohen, Elie A.

Cohen, M.J.

1952

Folder 44: Cohen, Oscar

Cohn, Gabriel H.

Czapska, Maria

1958-1960
Folder 45: Datner, Szymon
1958-1959
see also folder 298
Folder 46: De Nur, Yehiel (Katzelnick) and Nina
1953-1960
Folder 47: De Jong, Louis
1958-1961
see also folder 328
Folder 48: Diamant, Z.
1953
Folder 49: Dienstag, Jacob
1959
Folder 50: Dinur, B.
1954-1959

Folder 51: Domaradzki, T.F.

Dobroczynski, Wiktor

1955-1956
Folder 52: Dombrowsky, Alexander
1959
Folder 53: Doring, Hans
1959
Folder 54: Druckmann, Zwi-Hersch
1948
Folder 55: Duker, A.G.
1949-1956
see also folder 301
Folder 56: Dunetz, Max
1952-1956
Folder 57: Dworzecki, Mark
1952-1960

Folder 58: Eck, Nusin

Eckstein, F.

1951-1959
Eck - see also folder 341

Folder 59: Efroikin, Z.

Efros, I.

Epstein, G. and L.

1949-1953

Folder 60: Eisenbach, Artur

Elis, B.

Eisenstein, Miss

1950-1960

Folder 61: Eran, A.

Eris, A.

Ettinger, I.

1954-1959

Folder 62: Federman, R.

Faulkner, S.O.

1956-1957

Folder 63: Feigenbaum, M.

Feldman, E.

1950-1951

Folder 64: Fink, J.

Feldschuh, B.

1948-1954
Folder 65: Fink, Reuben
1957

Folder 66: Finkelstein, Arie

Fishman, M.

1951-1959

Folder 67: Flagg, W.T.

Fledel, Joseph

1949-1957

Folder 68: Fogelman, L.

Forman, Evelyn and Charles

1949-1950

Folder 69: Friedman, Tuvye

Friedman, Theodore

Frankenhuis, Maurice

1950-1958

Folder 70: Foxman, Joseph

Friede, Maximilian

1951-1956
Folder 71: Gar, Joseph
1948-1954
Folder 72: Gartner, Lloyd
1952-1957
Folder 73: Gelbart, Israel
1947-1948
Folder 74: Gelber, N.M.
1947-1959
Folder 75: Gelehrter, Menachem
1952

Folder 76: Gildin, H.

Gilman, Lucy

1953-1955

Folder 77: Gladstone, Jacob

Glatstein, M.

1955

Folder 78: Glanz, Rudolf

Glantz, Jacob

1953-1955
Folder 79: Glicenstein, Emanuel (E. Romano)
1952
Folder 80: Gliksman, William M.
1949-1959

Folder 81: Goldkorn, I.

Gombinski, Stanislas

1955-1958
Folder 82: Gollancz, Victor
1956
Folder 83: Gottfarstein, J.
1946-1958
Folder 84: Gotlib, Szulim
1953-1959
Folder 85: Gropper, William
1956
Folder 86: Grossmann, Kurt
1951-1965
Folder 87: Grossman, Mojsze
1954
Folder 88: Gruss, Noe
1950-1951
Folder 89: Gumkowski, Janusz
1958-1959
Folder 90: George, Manfred
1960
Folder 91: Geva, T.
1959
Folder 92: Glikson, Joseph
1959
Folder 93: Goodman, Philip
1953-1960
Folder 94: Gringauz, S.
1950-1954

Folder 94A: Gelbard, W.

Gildesgame, L.L.

Gelman

Glazer, Nathan

Glube, S.

Goelman, Elazer

Goheen, H.

Goldstein, L.

Gorin, G.

Greenberg, M.

Grundlinger, S.

1949-1956

Folder 95: Hamovich, A.

Halamski, Jerzy

Halicki, M.

1949-1960

Folder 96: Halevy, M.A.

Hamburger, A.

1948-1951

Folder 97: Halkin, A.

Haas, H.

1956
Halkin - see also folder 284

Folder 98: Halpern, Israel

Halpern, H.

Haski, Michal

1946-1958

Folder 99: Hertz, Alexander

Harris, M.

1952-1956
Folder 100: Hertzberg, Arthur
1955
Folder 101: Herzog, Fred
1958
Folder 102: Hibel, B.
1948
Folder 103: Hilberg, R.
1955-1959
Folder 104: Hirschberg, H.Z.
1960
Folder 105: Hoch, A.
1959

Folder 106: Horkheimer, M.

Horowitz, Z.

1956-1959
Folder 107: Humen, A.
1959

Folder 108: Jacobson, W.

Itan, Rhoda

Jacobs, R.K.

1952-1957
Folder 109: Jasny, A.W.
1951-1952
Folder 110: Javits, Jacob K.
1949

Folder 111: Kaganovich, M.

Kader, B.

1949-1958

Folder 112: Kahan, Berl

Kahan, Solomon

Kalk, I.

1949-1957
Folder 113: Karmiol, Wolf
1951-1952
Folder 114: Kazdan, Ch.S.
1951-1959
Folder 115: Keitelman, I. (Chaskel)
1952-1954

Folder 116: Kermish, Joseph

Kessler, J.A.

1948-1959
Kermish - see also folder 341

Folder 117: Klausner, I.

Klausner, Abraham

1949-1960

Folder 118: Klein, A.M.

Klein, Jacob

1951-1960
Folder 119: Kaczerginski, Szmerke
1947-1949
Folder 120: Kohansky, Ruth and Mendel
undated

Folder 121: Koniuchowski, L.

Kopaczewska, Helene

1954-1958
Folder 122: Kosover, Mordecai
1950
Folder 123: Kadari (Dr. Ball-Kadari)
1959
Folder 124: Kaplan, D.
1961
Folder 125: Karski, Jan
1952
Folder 126: Katzman, Jacob
1981
Folder 127: Klementinowski, David
1956

Folder 128: Kober, Adolf

Knapp, Mrs. Jarvis

1955-1958

Folder 129: Koszyk, Kurt

Kowalski, S.

Kornfeld, I.

1953-1959

Folder 130: Kovner, Aba

Kohansky, M.

1954-1958
Folder 131: Kremer, Hanno
1956-1957

Folder 132: Krausnick, Helmut

Krasne, Byron

Kos, Edward

1949-1959

Folder 133: Kubowy, Arje

Kuzon, Jozef

1958-1959
Folder 134: Lamm, Hans
1956-1959
see also folder 288

Folder 135: Landowska, Wanda

LaPorte, Joseph A.

1948-1949
Folder 136: Laczynska, Wladyslawa
1958

Folder 137: Leder, Herman

Lador, J.J. (Lederer)

1953-1956

Folder 138: Leftwich, Joseph

Lederhendler, B.

1947-1956
Folder 139: Lehrer, Leibush
1949-1959
Folder 140: Leivick, H.
1954-1958
Folder 141: Lemkin, Raphael
1947-1952
Folder 142: Lestschinsky, Jacob
1951-1957

Folder 143: Lewin, Isaac

Levin, N.

1951-1959
Folder 144: Levinsohn, Josef
1959-1960
Folder 145: Likowski, G.
1959

Folder 146: Lipetz, D.

Liwer, A.

1952-1958
Folder 147: Loewenthal, Rudolf
1951-1958
Folder 148: Lowdurmilk, Walter
1950
Folder 149: MacKay, Donald
1959
Folder 150: Mahler, Rafael
1947-1954

Folder 151: Mandel, Jehoshua

Malycky, Alex

1958-1959
Folder 152: Manteuffel, Tadeusz
1959

Folder 153: Mann, Mendl

Manfred, Ernest Fred

Mann, Eric

1947-1954

Folder 154: Margoshes, Dr.

Maritz, D.

1947-1951

Folder 155: Mark, Berl

Markson, Julius

1954-1959
Mark - see also folder 298

Folder 156: Mark, Nehemiah

Mauthner, Rose-Marie

Mayer, A.

1949-1958

Folder 157: Meincke, Henning

Major, Robert

1956-1959

Folder 158: Menachovsky, Moishe

Matenko, P.

1954-1959
Folder 159: Mestel, Jacob
1946-1951
Folder 160: Minkoff, Nachum B.
1950-1957
Folder 161: Minkoff, Isaiah
1960
Folder 162: Melkman, Joseph
1957-1960
see also folder 341

Folder 163: Mukdoni, A.

Miszel, Leon

Mishkin, L.

Morgenstern, B.

1951-1958

Folder 164: Namier, L.B.

Nadel, Emanuel

1954

Folder 165: Niger, Shmuel (Charney)

Neiman, David

1949-1956
Folder 166: Novitch, Miriam
1946
Folder 167: Opatoshu, Joseph
1950-1954
Folder 168: Ophir, Boruch
1955-1956
Folder 169: Ophir, Boruch
1957
Folder 170: Ophir, Boruch
1958
Folder 171: Ophir, Boruch
1959-1960
Folder 172: Orenstein, Benjamin
1948-1965

Folder 173: Ormian, Chaim

Ormont, James

1949-1952
Folder 174: Oved, Moishe
1952

Folder 175: Palmon, A.

Pasicznyk, M.

Palmer, Paul R.

1951-1957
Folder 176: Pehr, Otton
1958
Folder 177: Perlow, David
1957
Folder 178: Perlow, Isaac
1955-1959
Folder 179: Persky, Daniel
1951
Folder 180: Peeters, F.P.J.
1960
Folder 181: Pinkerfeld, A.
1955

Folder 182: Pinson, Koppel

Pliskin, B.

1946-1960
Folder 183: Poliakow, Leon
1954-1959
Folder 184: Pomerantz, Chaim
1949

Folder 185: Prager, M.

Pracownik, L.

Pregel, B.

1949-1952

Folder 186: Puttemans, Andre

Preiss, Michael

1951-1959

Folder 187: Rafaeli, Eliezer

Raczynski, Edward

1958-1960

Folder 188: Rajski, Edward

Radoszydie, I.H.

1951-1959

Folder 189: Raskin, Saul

Ravitz, M.

Ranz, J.

1953-1958
Folder 190: Reitlinger, Gerald
1954-1956
Folder 191: Reizin, Sarah
1952-1953

Folder 192: Ribalow, M.

Rifkind, I.

1950-1956
Folder 193: Riz, Jacob
1957
Folder 194: Roback, A.A.
1959
Folder 195: Robinson, Jacob
1947-1973
Folder 196: Rodd, Elsie
1964
Folder 197: Rochman, Leib
1948

Folder 198: Rogel, Joseph

Rokach, L.

Rosen, H.I.

1949-1956

Folder 199: Rokitstein, M.

Rona, B.

1947-1959
Folder 200: Roosevelt, Mrs. Franklin D. (Eleanor)
1952-1957
Folder 201: Roosevelt, Franklin D., Jr.
1952
Folder 202: Rosenbach, Chava
1958
Folder 203: Rosenstein, David
1947-1952
Folder 204: Rosenthal, Jehuda
1957
Folder 205: Rosenwein, Zvi
1954-1958
Folder 206: Roth, Philip
1959
Folder 207: Rothholtz, Walter
1959-1960
Folder 208: Rubinstein, Reuven
1957

Folder 209: Ryterband, Roman

Rygiel, Jan

1958-1959

Folder 210: Samuel, Maurice

Sainer, Herman

1951-1956
Folder 211: Sandel, Jozef
1958-1964

Folder 212: Sanders, Ronald

Saviv, A.

1949-1956

Folder 213: Scharfstein, Z.

Schindler, Alexander

1950-1954

Folder 214: Schneer, Zvi

Schochet, S.

1951-1959
Schneer - see also folder 306
Folder 215: Scholl (Aicher), Inge
1959-1960
see also folder 312
Folder 215A: Schulsohn, Samuel
1949-1958
Folder 216: Schultz, H.E.
1957
Folder 217: Schwartz, Leo
1947-1959
Folder 218: Schwartz, Pinches
1954-1960
Folder 219: Schwarzbart, I.
1949-1957

Folder 220: Schweig, Joseph

Seckar, A.

1946-1948

Folder 221: Segal, A.

Segal, P.

1951-1959
Folder 222: Seidenman, Ludwik
1953-1954

Folder 223: Shalit, L.

Shaffir, M.M.

1950-1954

Folder 224: Shapiro, Leon

Sher, A.

1951-1959
Folder 225: Shatkai, Joseph
1947-1963

Folder 226: Shemen, N.

Sheinbaum, M.

1950-1954
Folder 227: Shishler, H.
1950-1953
Folder 228: Shmueli, Efraim
1954-1958
Folder 229: Shmulevitch, I.
1962
Folder 230: Shub, Rafael
1956
Folder 231: Shulvass, M.A.
1951-1957
see also folder 289

Folder 232: Shuster, Z.

Shonmi, Sz.

1955
Folder 233: Silberman, Lena
1952

Folder 234: Silkes, Genia

Silberschein, A.

1946-1959
Folder 235: Simaite, Anna
1956-1963
Folder 236: Sinani, Elie
1952

Folder 237: Singer, Elias

Singer, Joel

1950-1958

Folder 238: Skobcov, A.

Sloan, Jacob

1955

Folder 239: Sommerstein, Emil

Sohn, D.

1954-1957

Folder 240: Spitzer, T.H.

Spizman, L.

Szper, S.

Spies, G.

1949-1958
Folder 241: Stearns, Mrs. Eugene (Annan)
1958-1965
Folder 242: Steckel, Charles W.
1958

Folder 243: Steinberg, I.N.

Steiner, F.

1950
Folder 244: Stockfisz, D.
1956-1960
Folder 245: Stone, Isaac
1949-1958
Folder 246: Sudarski, Mendel and Alte
1949-1960
Folder 247: Swidler, Leo
1955

Folder 248: Sworakowski, W.S.

Sudol, Stanislaw

Suhl, A.

1958-1959

Folder 249: Steinberger, I.

Sternfeld, M.L.

Szczekacz, Leon

Szuldberg, Bronislawa

1950-1956
Folder 250: Tartakower, Arieh
1954-1958
see also folder 309
Folder 251: Tenenbaum, J.
1948-1956
Folder 252: Tenenbaum, Sz.
1951
Folder 253: Trunk, Isaiah
1960
Folder 254: Turkow, Jonas
1946-1965

Folder 255: Turkow, Mark

Tzadkoni, A.

1950-1956

Folder 256: Unger, Menashe

Urbach, Izydor

1954-1958

Folder 257: Uris, Leon

Urbasik, H.J.

1958-1959
Folder 258: Uveeler, Mark
1954-1960
Folder 259: Wajsblum, Marek
1959-1960

Folder 260: Warenstam, Eric

Wdowinski, D.

1953-1956
Folder 261: Weichert, Michal
1947-1955
Folder 262: Weinrauch, Herschel
1949-1950
Folder 263: Weinryb, B.
1951-1953
Folder 264: Weiss, Lea
1956-1966
Folder 265: Weissbluth, Gertrude and Eugene
1950-1959
Folder 266: Wells, Leon
1961

Folder 267: Weliczker, L.

Wiederman, P.

1949-1952
Folder 268: Wiesenthal, Simon
1956-1959

Folder 269: Winchell, Constance

Wininger, S.

1952-1960
Folder 270: Wischnitzer, Mark
1954

Folder 271: Witty, Irwin E.

Wittlin, Jozef

1953-1958

Folder 272: Wulf, Joseph

Wolfe, Leon

Wohl, Samuel

Wurmbrand, F.

Wolff, Ilse R.

1950-1963

Folder 273: Xanthos, Virginia

Yales, D.E.

1951-1960
Folder 274: Zajaczkowski, S.
1949

Folder 275: Zak, Abraham

Zaltzman, M.

1948-1950

Folder 276: Zakalik (Kupferberg), D.

Zamlynska, Halina

1946-1958
Folder 277: Zelby, Leon
1956
Folder 278: Zineman, Jakub
1948-1958
Folder 279: Zipper, Jacob
1952-1953
Folder 280: Zonabend, N.
1948-1951
Folder 281: Zonschein, Mordcke
undated
Folder 282: Zylberberg, Leon W.
1952-1953
Subseries 2: Universities, Libraries, Academic Institutions
1946-1969
Many of the institutions in this subseries are those with which Friedman was closely involved, such as Centre de Documentation Juive Contemporaire, Central Jewish Historical Institute, Columbia University, Jewish Teachers Seminary, the Wiener Library in London, and Yad Vashem.
Folders: 64
Folder 283: Academy for Higher Jewish Learning
1956-1958
Folder 284: American Academy for Jewish Research
1948-1958
see also folder 97
Folder 285: American Association for Jewish Education
1952-1956
Folder 286: American Committee for the Study of War Documents
1956
Folder 287: American Council of Learned Societies
undated
Folder 288: American Jewish Historical Society
1952-1959
see also folder 134
Folder 289: Baltimore Hebrew College and Teachers Training School
1949-1952
see also folder 231
Folder 290: Basel University
1954-1959
Switzerland
Folder 291: Bibliotheque de L'Alliance Israel Universelle
1948
Folder 292: Brandeis University
1952-1956
Folder 293: Brooklyn College
1949-1950
Folder 294: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences - American Bulgarian League
1958-1959
Folder 295: Central Bureau of Statistics
1950
Jerusalem
Folder 296: Centre de Documentation Juive Contemporaire
1946-1959
Paris
Folder 297: Centre d'Etude des Problems Actuels
1957-1958
Paris
Folder 298: Zydowski Institut Historyczny (Central Jewish Historical Institute)
1946-1965

Warsaw

see also folders 45, 155

Folder 299: University of Chicago
1955
Folder 300: City College
1950-1952
Folder 301: College of Jewish Studies
1952-1958
see also folder 55
Folder 302: Columbia University
1949-1960
Folder 303: Commission Historique Juive
1946-1947
Switzerland, Paris, London
Folder 304: Deutsches Institut fur Geschichte der Nationalsozialistischen Zeit
1951
Munich
Folder 305: Dropsie College
1951-1952
Folder 305A: First International Conference on the History of European Resistance
1959
Brussels
Folder 306: Ghetto Fighters House - Kibbutz Lohamai Haghetoff
1950-1959
see also folder 214
Folder 307: Hamburg University
1952
Folder 308: Harvard University Library
1951-1957
Folder 309: Hebrew University
1949-1959
see also folder 250

Folder 310: Hebrew Teachers College

Hebrew Union College

1948-1955
Folder 311: Theodor Herzl Institute
1959
Folder 312: Hochschule for Gestaltung
1956-1958

Ulm, Germany

see also folder 215

Folder 313: Hoover Institute and Library
1956
Folder 314: Institute for the Research of Jewish Middle East Communities
1952-1956
see also folder 20
Folder 315: Institute for Zeitgeschichte
1952-1959
Germany
Folder 316: Instytut Historii Najnowszej
1950
Folder 317: Jewish Congress for Yiddish
1957-1958
Argentina
Folder 318: Jewish Historical Documentation
1948
Linz, Austria
Folder 319: Jewish Historical Society of Israel
1951-1958
Folder 320: Jewish Library
1949-1962
Montreal
Folder 321: Jewish Museum
1956
Folder 322: Jewish Teachers Seminary
1949-1958
Folder 323: Jewish Theological Seminary in America
1950-1962
Folder 324: Jewish Institute of Religion
1954-1961
Folder 325: Library of Congress
1949-1961
Folder 326: Manitoba University
1955-1957
Folder 326A: Marquette University
1959
Folder 327: Montreal University
1956

Folder 328: National Jewish Youth Conference

Netherlands State Institute for War Documentation

1949-1959
Netherlands - see also folder 47
Folder 329: New School for Social Research
1959
Folder 330: New York Public Library
1949-1959
see also folder 25
Folder 331: New York University
1954-1957
Folder 332: Palestine Historical Ethnographical Society
1946-1958
Jerusalem
Folder 333: University of Pennsylvania
1949
Folder 334: Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences in America
1958-1963
Folder 335: Research Institute for Post-War Problems of Religious Jewry
1953-1957
Folder 336: Shevchenko Scientific Society
1953-1959
Folder 337: Stanford University
1951-1956
Folder 338: Vermont University
1957
Folder 339: Wayne State University
1957
Folder 340: Wiener Library
1947-1961
London
Folder 341: Yad Vashem
1947-1958
see also folders 58, 116, 162
Folder 342: Yeshiva University
1951-1957
Folder 343: YIVO Institute
1946-1969
Folder 344: YIVO - Friends in Israel
1957
Subseries 3: Newspapers, Periodicals and Publishing Houses
1946-1963
This subseries contains Friedman’s correspondence with various periodicals, including several newspapers for which he wrote articles, and various publishers that published his works.
Folders: 46
Folder 345: Arani Verlag Publishing
1956-1960
Folder 346: Ararat Publishing Society
1953-1954
Folder 347: Aufbau
1955
Folder 348: Befreiung
undated
Munich

Folder 349: Ballantine Books, Inc.

R.R. Bowker Co.

1956
Folder 350: Bitzaron
1954-1956
Folder 351: Bundeszentrale fur Heimatdienst
1956-1957
Folder 352: Commentary
1948-1959
Folder 353: Crown Publishing Inc.
1957-1963

Folder 354: Der Emes

Der Weg

1946-1952
Folder 355: Encyclopedia - The American Peoples
1954
Folder 355A: Encyclopedia of the Jewish Diaspora
1951-1956
Folder 356: Encyclopedia Hebraica
1954-1957
Folder 357: Exposition Press
1958
Folder 358: Fellowship Publications
1957
Folder 359: Free Europe Press
1958
Folder 360: From the Last Extermination
1948
Munich
Folder 361: Gazith Art and Literary Publishers
1952
Folder 362: Goldene Keyt
1949-1958
Folder 363: Hadoar
1956
Folder 364: Heimish
1957-1958
Israel
Folder 365: Historical Abstracts
1958
Folder 366: Information Bulletin on the Jewish Community of the Philipines
1951
Folder 367: Jewish Information Bureau (Office of Jewish Information)
1946-1960

Folder 368: Jewish Social Studies

Jewish Review

1946-1959
Folder 369: Jewish Encyclopedic Handbooks
1953-1959
Folder 370: The Jewish Forum
1955-1956
Folder 371: Jewish Frontier
1950-1953
Folder 372: Judishe Rundschau (Jewish Review)
1946-1947
Munich

Folder 373: Kiyoum (Existence) Journal

Ksiazka (Book)

1947-1954
Folder 374: Le Monde Juif
1958
Folder 375: Massadah, Ltd.
1951-1955
Folder 376: Monde Publishers
1955-1957
Folder 377: Nasza Trybuna
1949
Folder 378: New York Post
1958
Folder 379: Neue Welt
1948
Folder 380: Ofsnai
1947
Folder 381: Pergamon Press
1959
Folder 382: Pyramid Books
1958
Folder 383: The Reconstructionist
1946-1959
Folder 384: Spedron
1958
Folder 385: Tog-Morgen Journal
1954-1961

Folder 386: Universal Jewish Encyclopedia

Unzer Shtimme

The Washington Star

1953-1959
Folder 387: Yiddish Dictionary
1952-1955
Folder 388: Das Yiddishe Kemfer
1953-1956
Folder 389: Zukunft
1948-1958
see also folder 92
Subseries 4: Organizations, Federal and State Offices
1945-1964
This subseries is made up of correspondence with various organizations and official offices in the United States and elsewhere. Most of the materials concern Friedman’s research about Jewish experiences in the post-war period.
Folders: 46

Folder 390: American Committee for Liberation

American Committee for Émigré Scholars, Writers and Artists

1954-1959
Folder 391: American Federation of Jews from Central Europe, Inc.
1952-1954
Folder 392: American Jewish Committee
1951-1958
Folder 393: American Jewish Congress
1949-1954
Folder 394: American Joint Distribution Committee
1946-1953
Folder 395: Anti-Defamation League
1952-1959
Folder 396: Anti-Fascist Jewish Committee
undated
USSR
Folder 397: Arbeiter Ring (Workmens Circle)
1949-1958

Folder 398: British Joint Services Mission

B'nei Brith

1946, 1958

Folder 399: Canadian Council of Christians and Jews

Polish Institute of Canada

1958
Folder 400: Canadian Jewish Congress
1949-1958
Folder 401: Centralny Komitet Zydow Polskich
1945-1946
Folder 402: Club of Polish Jews
1952-1959
Folder 403: Common Council for American Unity
1956
Folder 404: Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany
1950-1959
Folder 405: Conference on Jewish Relations
1947-1950
Folder 406: Congress for Jewish Culture
1948-1962
Folder 407: Congress for Jewish Culture
1952-1959
Argentina
Folder 408: Council for Middle Eastern Affairs
1956
Folder 409: Danish Information Office
1957
Folder 410: General Consulate
1948-1964
Germany
Folder 411: Gesellschaft fur Christlich-Judische Zusammenarbeit
1952-1959
Hamburg
Folder 412: Histadruth
1953-1957
Folder 413: Immigration and Naturalization Service
1950-1957
Folder 414: Institute of Judeo-Christian Studies
1958
Folder 415: International Tracing Service
1952-1953
Folder 416: Jewish Agency for Israel (Palestine)
1947-1955
Folder 417: Jewish Book Council
1949-1959
see also folder 93
Folder 418: Jewish Labor Committee
1947-1956
Folder 419: Jewish Temples and Synagogues
1950-1958

Folder 420: Labor Zionist Order

Jewish Socialist Verband

1949-1958
Folder 421: National Foundation for Jewish Culture
1958-1960
Folder 422: Oberlandsgericht
1947-1958
Stuttgart
Folder 423: OSE (Œuvre de secours aux enfants) - American Committee
1948-1951
Folder 424: Polish Jewry
1948-1954
Argentina
Folder 425: President's Office
1952-1959
Israel
Folder 426: State Department - Historical Section
1959
United States
Folder 427: Union of American Hebrew Congregations
1947-1955
Folder 428: Unione della Comunita Israelitche-Italiane
1948-1957

Folder 429: United Jewish Relief Appeal

United Jewish Survivors of Nazi Persecution

1947-1955
Folder 430: United Restitution Office (URO)
1951-1959
see also folder 94
Folder 430A: Vatican City
1958-1963
Folder 431: World Jewish Congress
1946-1964
Folder 432: World Memorial for the Jewish Martyr, Inc.
1952-1957
Folder 433: Yiddish Writers Union
1951-1955
United States
Folder 434: Zionist Organization of America
1951
Subseries 5: Landsmanshaftn
1946-1959
This subseries of correspondence with various landsmanshaftn is organized alphabetically by community, such as Bialystok, or by country, such as Germany and Lithuania.
Folders: 22
Folder 435: Belchatow
1950
Folder 436: Bessarabia - Romania
1952
Folder 437: Bialystok
1953-1954
Folder 438: Briansk
1951
Folder 439: Chmielnik
1957
Folder 440: Czestochowa
1956

Folder 441: Galician Jews of America

Frampol

1946-1958
Folder 442: Germany
1946-1959
Folder 443: Grajewo
1951
Folder 444: Hungary
1954
Folder 445: Kalisz
1952

Folder 446: Kolomyja

Kobryn

1951-1958
Folder 447: Lithuania
1954

Folder 448: Miedzyrzecz (Mezricz)

Markuszow

1953
Folder 449: Ratno
1955
Folder 450: Siedlce
1957
Folder 451: South Africa - Chelm, Rakiszok
1951-1955
Folder 452: Strzegom
1951

Folder 453: Warsaw

Vitebsk

1955-1956
Folder 454: Wyszkow
1956
Folder 455: Yugoslavia
1957
Folder 456: Zelechow
1955
Subseries 6: Personal Correspondence of Dr. and Mrs. Friedman
1944-1982
This subseries is arranged chronologically. There is also correspondence written to Mrs. Friedman after Philip Friedman’s death.
Folders: 17
Folder 457: Personal Correspondence
1944-1947
Folder 458: Personal Correspondence
1948
Folder 459: Personal Correspondence
1949
Folder 460: Personal Correspondence
1950
Folder 461: Personal Correspondence
1951
Folder 462: Personal Correspondence
1952
Folder 463: Personal Correspondence
1953
Folder 464: Personal Correspondence
1954
Folder 465: Personal Correspondence
1955
Folder 466: Personal Correspondence
1956
Folder 467: Personal Correspondence
1957
Folder 468: Personal Correspondence
1958
Folder 469: Personal Correspondence
1959
Folder 470: Personal Correspondence
1960
Folder 471: Personal Correspondence - To Mrs. Friedman
undated
Folder 472: Personal Correspondence - To Mrs. Friedman
1960-1982
after Philip Friedman's death
Folder 473: Personal Correspondence - To Mrs. Friedman
1960-1982
after Philip Friedman's death

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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