List of Jewish survivors in Riga registered with the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee in Moscow / submitted to the World Jewish Congress, (ID: 32659)
Authorship or Source:
World Jewish Congress Collection.
Year:
1945
Title or Main Description:
List of Jewish survivors in Riga registered with the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee in Moscow / submitted to the World Jewish Congress, New York City.
Place Published or Holding Institution:
New York, N.Y : World Jewish Congress.
Description:
- 5 p. : tabs. ; 30 cm.
- Number of Names or Other Entries-- 5,384 Names.
Date:
February 6, 1945.
Type of Work:
Photocopy [microfilm]
Museum or Other Institution Holdings:
- Survivor Registry Collection: Document File EE0052[?]
- [See also Survivors Registry Document Files: #AD0035, #AD00036].
- USHMM Archives [microfilm]: Accession Number 1997.A.0235, Reel 6, D20-22.
Provenance:
The approximately 700 name lists that comprise this microfilm collection of World Jewish Congress records held by the American Jewish Archives in Cincinnatti, Ohio (Website: http://www.americanjewisharchives.org) were identified by former Director of the Registry of Holocaust Survivors, Ms. Sarah Ogilvie. The microfilm was purchased by the Registry of Holocaust Survivors from the American Jewish Archives, and then transferred to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives Collections in 1997.
Keywords:
- Holocaust survivors --Latvia --Riga --Registers.
- Jews --Latvia --Riga --Registers.
- Jews, Ukrainian --Latvia --Riga --Registers.
- R¯iga (Latvia) --Registers.
Abstract:
Includes first and last names only.
Language and Other Notes:
- List A) List of Jewish survivors in Riga registered with the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee in Moscow submitted to the World Jewish Congress, New York, New York City., February 6, 1945. [372 Names].
- List B) List of Survivors in Riga. [65 Names].
- "All persons found alive in Riga had fled from concentration camps. One hundred fifty-eight Jews from the entire Jewish population of Riga, some of ten thousands of Jews from the Latvian provinces, and out of more than 1000,000 Jews brought there from the whole of Ukrania."--Appendix note.