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      <header>
        <identifier>oai:jgo:source-117.en</identifier>
        <datestamp>2016-09-22T00:00:00Z</datestamp>
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      <metadata>
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                <dc:language>en</dc:language>
                <dc:title>The Zinnowitz Song, Post Card, 1930</dc:title>
                <dc:identifier>https://dx.doi.org/10.23691/jgo:source-117.en.v1</dc:identifier>
                <dc:creator>N.N.</dc:creator>
                <dc:publisher>Institute for the History of the German Jews</dc:publisher>
                <dc:subject/>
                <dc:type>Online Ressource</dc:type>
                <dc:description>This postcard was sold in souvenir shops in the Baltic resort of
Zinnowitz alongside the usual souvenir postcards. Tourists of an
antisemitic bent could send them to likeminded people as a greeting or
use it to sing along when the Zinnowitz resort band played the song at
the finale of each concert.
The songwriter is unknown, and it is uncertain what the initials “H.
Gr.” on the postcard stand for. In 1922, a postcard featuring the
“Zinnowitz song” was forwarded to the “Centralverein deutscher
Staatsbürger jüdischen Glaubens” [Central Association of German
Citizens of the Jewish Faith], which kept a file on the Baltic resort
of Zinnowitz (island of Usedom). Today the Centralverein’s surviving
files are located at the Osobyi Arkhiv (Special Archive) in Moscow.
There also is a microfiche copy at the Central Archives for the
History of the Jewish People in Jerusalem (a copy of the postcard is
filed in the CV holdings, file no. 2405). This image of the postcard
was taken from a DVD collection titled “Spott und Hetze.
Antisemitische Postkarten 1893-1945. Aus der Sammlung Wolfgang
Haney” (Berlin, 2008).</dc:description>
                <dc:date>2016-09-22</dc:date>
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