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Documentation of the Jewish community in Split regarding the help for refugees

Documentation of the Jewish community in Split regarding the help for refugees - Correspondence of the Jewish community in Zagreb with its activists regarding fundraising for the Jewish National Fund (JNF); - Correspondence of Dr. Schick from Zagreb with Michael Engelmann from Eretz Israel regarding the grave of Theodor Herzl's grandfather in the Jewish cemetery in Zemun; - Articles written by Dr. Alexander Licht regarding Herzl, Dr. Engelmann, "Pulido I Klerikalci" [?]; - Newspaper clippings from "Jevrejski Glas" and "Sarajevo Br" [?], 1936-1937 [?]; - Folklore photographs from Sarajevo and Bitola, 1921; - Photographs of Zionist movements and their enterprises in Nis, 1934; the Theodor Herzl High School in Zemun, 1912; - Zionist activity, 1921; "Gayla" aliya training program in Mostar, 1912; - Visit of Nachum Sokolov in Sarajevo; Zionist activity of Maccabi in Zagreb, 1927 and 1930; - Photographs of the Jewish community in Wizo, 1939 [?]; - Jewish schools [in Split?], 1935-1936; - Various photographs including one of a summer camp that took place in Prcanj, 1930; aliya training program in Bijelina, Simchat Torah, 1939; - Photograph of the founders of the first Jewish school in Belgrade; [photograph of ?] the Jewish school in Belgrade, 1902; - Theodor Herzl and Bar Kochba clubs in Vienna; - Photographs of Schick, Aleksander Licht and Ferramonti camp, 1942-1943.
details.fullDetails.itemId
3684621
details.fullDetails.materialType
Letter
Photograph
details.fullDetails.fileNumber
JM/24
details.fullDetails.language
Italian
Serbian-Croatian
details.fullDetails.recordGroup
O.10 - Yugoslavia Collection
details.fullDetails.earliestDate
28/01/1943
details.fullDetails.latestDate
28/01/1943
details.fullDetails.submitter
איגוד הקהילות היהודיות ביוגוסלביה
details.fullDetails.numOfPages
780
details.fullDetails.originalLocation
SPALATO - COMUNITA ISRAELITICA - 149/43; 119/43
details.fullDetails.belongsTo
O.10 - Documentation regarding the Jews of Yugoslavia, mainly during the Holocaust period