Yad Vashem Studies is an academic journal featuring articles on the cutting edge of research and reflection on the Holocaust. Yad Vashem Studies is a must for any serious library seeking to offer the essential texts on the Nazi era and the Holocaust. “Yad Vashem Studies has been at the forefront of research into the Nazi persecution and mass murder of the Jews, its origins and its consequences… indispensable for researchers and teachers alike. David Silberklang, as editor, has displayed a remarkable talent for balancing the output of grizzled veterans with the challenging findings of younger researchers… No library that purports to offer students and teachers the essential historical texts on the Nazi era and the fate of the Jews can afford to be without Yad Vashem Studies.” [David Cesarani, The Journal of Holocaust Education]; Beginning with volume 35, Yad Vashem Studies comes out twice annually, in spring and fall, making our contributors’ important research available to our readers more quickly and more readily. We have also redone our layout in order to make it more reader friendly. Our rigorous high standards remain unchanged. Table of Contents: Introduction; David S. Wyman: A Scholar Who Turned a Field on Its Head (Deborah E. Lipstadt(; “You’ll Yet Tell the World What These Eternal Miscreants Did”: On Aharon Appelfeld’s Art on the First Anniversary of His Passing (Yehudit Winograd(; Salonican Jews in Auschwitz: Sephardi Language, History, and Memory (Robin Buller(; Tracing Their Steps: Symbolic Topography and Anti-Jewish Politics in Budapest (Zoltán Kékesi(; German Consul Fritz Schellhorn’s Interventions on Behalf of Jews in Czernowitz (Hartwig Cremers(; Competitive Cooperation: The Society for the Protection of Science and Learning, the American Emergency Committee, and the Placement of Refugee Scholars in North America (David Zimmerman); Reviews: The Final Battle of Warsaw’s Jews: Review of Havi Dreifuss, Geto Varsha – HaSof: April 1942 – June 1943 (Hebrew) (Avinoam Patt); Arnošt Frischer: Dilemmas of Zionist Diaspora Politics under the Shadow of the Holocaust: Review of Jan Láníček, Arnošt Frischer and the Jewish Politics of Early 20th-Century Europe (Michal Frankl); The Prisoner Community in the Nazi Model Ghetto: Review of H. G. Adler, Theresienstadt 1941–1945: The Face of a Coerced Community (Jan Láníček); Work in Progress: Review of Yvonne Kozlovsky Golan, Forgotten from the Frame: The Absence of the Holocaust Experiences of Mizrahim from the Visual Arts and Media in Israel (Hebrew) (Omer Bartov);