The Holocaust Papers
Between 1934 and 1947, Europe was gripped by a darkness that reshaped history. Under the Nazi regime, ordinary people became witnesses and participants in acts of cruelty, silent complicity, quiet resistance, and desperate hope. But time has a way of softening the edges of history, turning lived experiences into distant echoes and faded photographs.
Through its incredible collection of documents, manuscripts, letters, journals, and photographs, The Holocaust Papers unveils the harrowing truth behind life—Jewish, Polish, and German—during the Holocaust. Taken from the private collection of author and Holocaust scholar Avraham Linhart, the book’s hundreds of raw, unedited documents—photographed in their original form—offer an unapologetic look into the machinery of oppression, the lives it shattered, and the voices nearly silenced by history:
- Letters from Auschwitz commander Franz Hess to his wife and children, dated five nights before his execution.
- Rare photographs of Jewish weddings inside the infamous Lodz Ghetto.
- Authentic government decrees prohibiting the employment of Jews in Berlin.
- A handwritten note containing Shema Israel made by an eight-year-old girl in Auschwitz, minutes before she was sent to the gas chambers.
Covering the first days of Nazi Germany through the concentration camps and the survivors’ lives after the war, The Holocaust Papers breaks the silence of time and distance, turning chilling historical documents and evidence into a canvas of living memory.