The Archive will be available for research and education. We will be cataloguing, indexing and digitizing to the History of the 20th Century: official records, daily press, literary work, personal correspondences, memoirs and family photo-documents.
We are focusing on the documented history in the regions of interest: Los Angeles, East-Central Europe, Middle East and on the oral histories of a broad personal experience.
See also articles by our staff on Academia.edu and Academia and Academia Letters: https://www.academia.edu/50926698/UKRAINIAN_AND_JEWISH_VICISSITUDES_EAST_GALICIA_1918_1923_OBJECT_SUBJECT_RELATIONSHIPS_AND_INTERSUBJECTIVITY_Existential_Analysis
http://www.lamoth.info/ Interwar East Central European and the Holocaust related German Collections
http://ncpla.libraryhost.com/ Collections related to Psychoanalytic Movement and Discourse in historical context
The Online Archive will be available for research and education. We will be cataloguing, indexing and digitizing to the History of the 20th Century: official records, daily press, literary work, personal correspondences, memoirs and family photo-documents.
We are focussing on the documented history in the regions of interest: Los Angeles, East-Central Europe, Middle East and on the oral histories of a broad personal experience.
Below are examples of documents we have curated
The Rabbi Wilhelm Weinberg papers consist of the personal papers of the first post-Holocaust Chief Rabbi of Hesse and Frankfurt am Main. The papers include biographical materials, correspondence, printed materials, records relating to legal cases, writings, and, audio recordings. The collection documents Weinberg’s work in reorganizing the surviving German Jewish community after the war and his examination of philosophical and ethical issues stemming from the Holocaust.
These documents were donated by Dr. Norbert Weinberg, his son, to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and are accessible on line at:
https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn502232?rsc=207716&cv=0&x=1796&y=1248&z=1.0e-4
Additional documents can be found at the Holocaust Museum Los Angeles
http://www.lamoth.info/index.php?p=collections/classifications&id=208
JEWISH SUBJECTIVITIES IN EAST-CENTRAL EUROPE: WHO THE JEWS SIDED WITH: CROSSED PARALLELS.
JEWISH AND UKRAINIAN SUBJECTIVITIES IN INTERWAR EAST GALICIA, 1918 -- 1939
UKRAINIAN AND JEWISH PERIODICALS IN INTERWAR POLAND: PRESS COVERAGE OF EXISTENTIAL SITUATIONS, 1918 -- 1939
ORGANIZED AND UNSOLICITED COLLABORATION IN THE HOLOCAUST IN STATE AND STATELESS NATIONS: JEWISH AND GENTILE PERSPECTIVES
The HOLOCAUST: ORAL HISTORIES AND DISTORTED MEMORIES: WHO WERE GOOD WHO WERE BAD FOR THE JEWS
JEWISH COURTS OF HONOR IN ALLIED-OCCUPIED GERMANY: REFLECTIONS ON JEWISH COLLABORATION: 1945 -- 1949
RUSSO -- UKRAINIAN WAR: COLONIAL WAR OF PUTIN OR THE WAR OF RUSSIA AGAINST UKRAINE
IF UKRAINE WILL EVER HAVE RELIABLE ALLIES: THE THIRD YEAR OF THE WAR AGAINST RUSSIAN AGGRESSION. THERE WILL BE NO ESCAPE BUT INDEPENDENT UKRAINE.
ACADEMIALetters
Dr. Vladimir Melamed
This chapter attempts to reify the vicissitudes of Ukrainian and Jewish political paradigms in the Time of a Ukrainian strive for an independent state in East Galicia, 1918 – 1923. The article analyzes geo-political realities as they were perceived by the Ukrainian and Jewish political establishments and public opinion. The course of analysis follows the line of existential borderline situations pertaining to each of the given community. These existential situations overall relate to the call of choice with regard to political and military alliances, electoral support and acceptance or unacceptance of the governing power (Poland). In conceptual terms the article elicits paradigms of mutual Ukrainian and Jewish mistrust, lack of compassion and often implementations of typical but not reflective clichés. Proclamation of West Ukrainian National Republic, the Battle for Lviv in November 1918, the course of Polish-Ukrainian War in 1918, 1919, the electoral campaign of 1922 for Polish Parliament (Sejm) and the corresponding mutual reflections, all in all comprise the contextual background, presented in this article. The article draws on the periodical of the Time, personal statements and memoirs and on the interwar monographs and collective works with regard to the Ukrainian, Jewish and Polish mutual vexations. Modern secondary literature on the subject has also been taken into consideration.
Keywords: Eastern Europe; Ukraine; Austro-Hungary; collective memory; historical narrative
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