I'm currently trying to cite something I found in "The Unwritten Order" by Peter Longerich. I'm hoping to look at the transcript of the document he is citing, I'm guessing the problem here is that it's extremely labor-intensive to digitize and translate documents in archives, so I simply can't get access to this. If it's just a matter of my inability to translate this citation into a database entry or something, that'd be awesome to know. Here is the citation:
... see also Bormann's circular to the Gauleiter of 11.7.43 (lfZ, Party Chancellory, R33/43), in which he says, on Hitler's behalf, 'in the public treatment of the Jewish question every statement must remain subject to a future total solution'.
in particular, the "(lfZ, Party Chancellory, R33/43)" bit is making me feel like I could find what I'm looking for if I just knew how to work with this line of text.
I anticipate that this is either stored in an archive somewhere or is easy to find and I'm failing to do so because it's all in German and Longerich translated a small section to english for the purpose of this book. Any help would be greatly appreciated!
"IfZ" is probably a bibliographical abbreviation, which are unique to each book. The book's contents page will likely give the page number for the list of abbreviations. If not, check the pages right before the bibliography, or before the notes, or sometimes the first few pages of the book, where the author will give a list of the abbreviations he is using for archives and document collections.