Abstract

Libraries and reading rooms were set up in almost all of the large DP camps, for after years of privation, without access to education or information, there was a great thirst for knowledge. Jewish DPs worked hard to establish their own presses, a task made difficult by postwar conditions (e.g., paper rationing and shortages of typewriters and other technical equipment). Nonetheless, almost every camp published several newsletters, which were printed for the most part in Yiddish and Hebrew. This photograph shows a staffer in the office of “Unterwegs” [“On the Move”], a newsletter published in the Zeilsheim DP camp.

Working on the Camp Newsletter “Unterwegs” (1945-48)

  • E.M. Robinson

Source

Source: Israel Shochor works in the office of the Zeilsheim camp newspaper, "Unterwegs" [The Transient]. Photo by E.M. Robinson. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, courtesy of Alice Lev.