Auction 34 - The Arnie Druck Collections
- book (175) Apply book filter
- art (93) Apply art filter
- artist (93) Apply artist filter
- bibliophilia (93) Apply bibliophilia filter
- books. (93) Apply books. filter
- facsimil (93) Apply facsimil filter
- facsimiles. (93) Apply facsimiles. filter
- children (82) Apply children filter
- anti (57) Apply anti filter
- anti-semitism, (57) Apply anti-semitism, filter
- antisemit (57) Apply antisemit filter
- erit (57) Apply erit filter
- ha (57) Apply ha filter
- ha-pleita (57) Apply ha-pleita filter
- hapleita (57) Apply hapleita filter
- holocaust (57) Apply holocaust filter
- pleita (57) Apply pleita filter
- semit (57) Apply semit filter
- she (57) Apply she filter
- she'erit (57) Apply she'erit filter
- sheerit (57) Apply sheerit filter
- hebrew (49) Apply hebrew filter
- literatur (49) Apply literatur filter
- haggadot (42) Apply haggadot filter
- passov (42) Apply passov filter
- communiti (38) Apply communiti filter
- jewish (38) Apply jewish filter
- poster (33) Apply poster filter
- congress (21) Apply congress filter
- congresses, (21) Apply congresses, filter
- herzl (21) Apply herzl filter
- herzl, (21) Apply herzl, filter
- jnf (21) Apply jnf filter
- wine (21) Apply wine filter
- zionism (21) Apply zionism filter
- zionism, (21) Apply zionism, filter
- zionist (21) Apply zionist filter
- various (7) Apply various filter
Displaying 625 - 636 of 703
Auction 34 - The Arnie Druck Collections
November 20, 2013
Opening: $4,500
Unsold
Bonzen und Herrenklub mit dem Juden – mit dem Schaffenden Volk Adolf Hitler, Liste 1, election poster issued by the Nazi Party. Neumeister printing press, Bayreuth, (town in Northern Bavaria in Germany), [ca.1932]. Design of poster by Philip Rupprecht, a caricaturist known mainly for his anti-Semitic caricatures published in "Der Stürmer" under the pen-name "Fips".
Remarkable caricature featuring the campaign for the role of German Prime Minister as a horse race between the candidates. Crossing the finish line first is the representative of the Nazi party. Far behind lag the other parties: The Communist Party, The Center Party and the Social-Democratic Party. Last is the representative of the German National People's Party falling off his horse. Masses of people are seen on the left balcony cheering and flying flags with Swastikas. Two people are holding a sign "Heil Hitler". A group of men are seen on another balcony, dressed in suits and top hats. Behind them is seen a Star of David. The inscription Herrn Klub ["Men's Club"] appears under the grandstand.
The poster was probably printed towards one of two elections campaigns in Germany in 1932. In the elections that took place in July 1932 the Nazi Party was the largest faction in the Reichstag, and it kept its power in the second elections campaign which took place at the end of the same year. Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany in January 1933.
136X50 cm. Good condition. Stains. Creases, tears to edges and corners (professionally restored). Upper margins are somewhat chopped. Cloth backed for display and preservation.
Remarkable caricature featuring the campaign for the role of German Prime Minister as a horse race between the candidates. Crossing the finish line first is the representative of the Nazi party. Far behind lag the other parties: The Communist Party, The Center Party and the Social-Democratic Party. Last is the representative of the German National People's Party falling off his horse. Masses of people are seen on the left balcony cheering and flying flags with Swastikas. Two people are holding a sign "Heil Hitler". A group of men are seen on another balcony, dressed in suits and top hats. Behind them is seen a Star of David. The inscription Herrn Klub ["Men's Club"] appears under the grandstand.
The poster was probably printed towards one of two elections campaigns in Germany in 1932. In the elections that took place in July 1932 the Nazi Party was the largest faction in the Reichstag, and it kept its power in the second elections campaign which took place at the end of the same year. Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany in January 1933.
136X50 cm. Good condition. Stains. Creases, tears to edges and corners (professionally restored). Upper margins are somewhat chopped. Cloth backed for display and preservation.
Category
Anti-Semitism, Holocaust and She'erit Ha-Pleita
Catalogue
Auction 34 - The Arnie Druck Collections
November 20, 2013
Opening: $1,000
Unsold
"Jewish Press about the 'Ha'avara'", a poster against the Ha'avara agreement. A. Moses printing press, Tel-Aviv, [ca.1935].
Citations from articles criticizing the "Ha'avara" agreement which were published in the newspapers "HaYarden", "Do'ar HaYom", "Der Moment", "Dos yidishe tagblat", "HaAretz" and others.
"Ha'avara" agreement was signed in 1933 between Nazi Germany and the Jewish Agency in order to transfer property and capital of German Jews to Eretz Israel. This transfer agreement led to a bitter conflict in Eretz Israel and the Diaspora, amongst other topics, around the moral issue of negotiating with the Nazis and the potential economic profit involved. 63X94.5 cm. Good condition. Stains, creases, minor tears. Folded.
Citations from articles criticizing the "Ha'avara" agreement which were published in the newspapers "HaYarden", "Do'ar HaYom", "Der Moment", "Dos yidishe tagblat", "HaAretz" and others.
"Ha'avara" agreement was signed in 1933 between Nazi Germany and the Jewish Agency in order to transfer property and capital of German Jews to Eretz Israel. This transfer agreement led to a bitter conflict in Eretz Israel and the Diaspora, amongst other topics, around the moral issue of negotiating with the Nazis and the potential economic profit involved. 63X94.5 cm. Good condition. Stains, creases, minor tears. Folded.
Category
Anti-Semitism, Holocaust and She'erit Ha-Pleita
Catalogue
Auction 34 - The Arnie Druck Collections
November 20, 2013
Opening: $200
Sold for: $250
Including buyer's premium
Prisoners of Hope notebook, Yehuda Fatiya. Jerusalem, [1940].
A booklet of prayers, printed during the holocaust- "we were obliged to print it so that all of us can have it and be united in prayer…" 16 pp, 24 cm. Creases and stains.
A booklet of prayers, printed during the holocaust- "we were obliged to print it so that all of us can have it and be united in prayer…" 16 pp, 24 cm. Creases and stains.
Category
Anti-Semitism, Holocaust and She'erit Ha-Pleita
Catalogue
Auction 34 - The Arnie Druck Collections
November 20, 2013
Opening: $300
Sold for: $375
Including buyer's premium
Ehren-Urkunde, certificate on behalf of the Nazi Party for good performance in a professional printing and paper competition. Sarona, June 1939. German.
A certificate given to Rudolf Bohme, in the colony of Sarona (a Templar colony next to Jaffa) for his performance in a professional printing competition. The symbol of Nazi Germany appears on the upper part of the certificate. It is possible that this competition was held during the Reichsberufswettkampf, a professional annual competition organized by the "German Labor Front" in cooperation with "Hitler Jugend" destined to check the theoretical and practical knowledge of various professionals and their affinity to the Nazi ideology.
Sarona is the fourth colony established by Templar Germans in Eretz Israel in the second half of the 19th cent. When the Nazis rose to power in Germany, a branch of the Nazi party was established in the colony. 29X43 cm in a frame 41.5X56 cm. Good condition. Folding marks and creases. Not examined out of frame.
A certificate given to Rudolf Bohme, in the colony of Sarona (a Templar colony next to Jaffa) for his performance in a professional printing competition. The symbol of Nazi Germany appears on the upper part of the certificate. It is possible that this competition was held during the Reichsberufswettkampf, a professional annual competition organized by the "German Labor Front" in cooperation with "Hitler Jugend" destined to check the theoretical and practical knowledge of various professionals and their affinity to the Nazi ideology.
Sarona is the fourth colony established by Templar Germans in Eretz Israel in the second half of the 19th cent. When the Nazis rose to power in Germany, a branch of the Nazi party was established in the colony. 29X43 cm in a frame 41.5X56 cm. Good condition. Folding marks and creases. Not examined out of frame.
Category
Anti-Semitism, Holocaust and She'erit Ha-Pleita
Catalogue
Auction 34 - The Arnie Druck Collections
November 20, 2013
Opening: $200
Sold for: $400
Including buyer's premium
Luach – calendar for September 26 1938 through September 13 1939. Hamburg / Frankfurt, [1938].
Calendar published by "Keren HaTorah" in Germany, Hebrew and German. [2], 41, [1] 13 cm. Fair-good condition. Stains and wear.
Calendar published by "Keren HaTorah" in Germany, Hebrew and German. [2], 41, [1] 13 cm. Fair-good condition. Stains and wear.
Category
Anti-Semitism, Holocaust and She'erit Ha-Pleita
Catalogue
Auction 34 - The Arnie Druck Collections
November 20, 2013
Opening: $1,500
Unsold
Two signs for Jewish businesses. [France? Belgium?, 1940].
1. Judisches Unternehmen [Jewish Business]. A printed paper sign. German, French and Dutch.40X28 cm. Good-fair condition. Foxing-marks. Torn into two and restored with adhesive tape.
2. Unter Verwaltung eines arischen kommissarischen Verwalters auf Grund der Verordnung vom 18. Oktober 1940. A printed paper sign informing that the business has been transferred to an Arian manager, according to a decree from October 18 1940. German and French. 40X19 cm. Good-fair condition. Folding-marks. Several minor tears to folding mark. Moisture-marks.
Three months after the occupation of France, in September 1940, the German regime ordered the Jews to register in police stations. They had to do so prior to October 20 1940, and were ordered to post in the showcases of their businesses a sign "Jewish Business". In an additional decree issued by the Germans a date was determined on which a census will be carried out and all of the Jewish businesses and plants will be recorded and the management will be transferred to Arian supervisors. The signs were then replaced by signs informing the public that "the management was transferred to an Arian manager".
1. Judisches Unternehmen [Jewish Business]. A printed paper sign. German, French and Dutch.40X28 cm. Good-fair condition. Foxing-marks. Torn into two and restored with adhesive tape.
2. Unter Verwaltung eines arischen kommissarischen Verwalters auf Grund der Verordnung vom 18. Oktober 1940. A printed paper sign informing that the business has been transferred to an Arian manager, according to a decree from October 18 1940. German and French. 40X19 cm. Good-fair condition. Folding-marks. Several minor tears to folding mark. Moisture-marks.
Three months after the occupation of France, in September 1940, the German regime ordered the Jews to register in police stations. They had to do so prior to October 20 1940, and were ordered to post in the showcases of their businesses a sign "Jewish Business". In an additional decree issued by the Germans a date was determined on which a census will be carried out and all of the Jewish businesses and plants will be recorded and the management will be transferred to Arian supervisors. The signs were then replaced by signs informing the public that "the management was transferred to an Arian manager".
Category
Anti-Semitism, Holocaust and She'erit Ha-Pleita
Catalogue
Auction 34 - The Arnie Druck Collections
November 20, 2013
Opening: $1,000
Unsold
1. Receipt booklet. Receipts were for donations to the Krankenhilfe für Eingesiedelte [relief organization for local sick people] in the Lodz Ghetto. Signed in print on each receipt is Dr. Oskar Singer, author and publicist, of the Judenrat Statistics department in the Ghetto and one of the leaders of the documentation project in the Ghetto who composed the "Chronicles of the Lodz Ghetto". Each receipt is followed by a voucher to be kept in the booklet. The booklet has not been in use and contains receipts no. 206-250. 7X10.5 cm.Good condition. Worn cover.
2. Receipt booklet of Zwischen-Ressort-Comitè[inter-departmental committee], for use by the Lodz Ghetto Judenrat. The receipts were used for recording workers transferring from one department to another. Lodz Ghetto, 1944. The booklet has not been in use and contains receipts no. 3007-3100. 8X14.5 cm. Good condition. Worn cover.
2. Receipt booklet of Zwischen-Ressort-Comitè[inter-departmental committee], for use by the Lodz Ghetto Judenrat. The receipts were used for recording workers transferring from one department to another. Lodz Ghetto, 1944. The booklet has not been in use and contains receipts no. 3007-3100. 8X14.5 cm. Good condition. Worn cover.
Category
Anti-Semitism, Holocaust and She'erit Ha-Pleita
Catalogue
Auction 34 - The Arnie Druck Collections
November 20, 2013
Opening: $1,000
Unsold
Ten itmes – labels, coupons and notebooks of the Lodz Ghetto, 1939-1943. German and Yiddish. Work permits, food coupon, food notebook, certificates of "in charge of workers", invitation to school, certificate for receiving lodging in the Otwock Ghetto, transit-certificate for a worker traveling from place to place – certificate can be requested only by a person in uniform…a Jew can keep bread only and go through disinfection prior to his departure. Size varies, overall good condition.
Category
Anti-Semitism, Holocaust and She'erit Ha-Pleita
Catalogue
Auction 34 - The Arnie Druck Collections
November 20, 2013
Opening: $2,400
Unsold
A dozen photos portraying a wedding of a Jewish couple. Amsterdam, [early 1940s].
Photos portraying a Jewish wedding: group photos within the synagogue, photos of the couple during the ceremony, prior to the ceremony and following it. The groom, bride and all other participants wear a yellow badge. Photographer's ink stamps on the reverse: "Foto G. Leefmans…Amsterdam".
In May 1940 Germany invaded Holland and several days later occupied Amsterdam. Immediately after occupying Holland the Germans registered all the Jews and imposed many restrictions and decrees. In 1942 Jews were forced to wear a yellow badge. In the same year the Germans started to deport Jews to concentration and extermination camps. 23X17 cm. Good condition.
Photos portraying a Jewish wedding: group photos within the synagogue, photos of the couple during the ceremony, prior to the ceremony and following it. The groom, bride and all other participants wear a yellow badge. Photographer's ink stamps on the reverse: "Foto G. Leefmans…Amsterdam".
In May 1940 Germany invaded Holland and several days later occupied Amsterdam. Immediately after occupying Holland the Germans registered all the Jews and imposed many restrictions and decrees. In 1942 Jews were forced to wear a yellow badge. In the same year the Germans started to deport Jews to concentration and extermination camps. 23X17 cm. Good condition.
Category
Anti-Semitism, Holocaust and She'erit Ha-Pleita
Catalogue
Auction 34 - The Arnie Druck Collections
November 20, 2013
Opening: $1,000
Sold for: $1,625
Including buyer's premium
The Mass Extermination of Jews in German Occupied Poland. London: Hutchinson, [1943]. English.
This pamphlet constitutes the first official report about the Holocaust. Jan Karski-Kozielski was a Polish Government emissary in Nazi-occupied Poland who bribed his way into a German concentration camp and witnessed first-hand the mass extermination of Jews. The report, written in 1942 and printed in 1943 on behalf of the exiled Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs in London, contains the full text of a speech delivered to the United Nations in December 1942 that announces the reality of the Holocaust to the world, and additionally the joint UN declaration issued one week later. Printed in a small print run and never officially distributed in the period, with most copies destroyed.
The contents are divided into three parts:
1. Report about the state of the Jews in Poland, by Edward Raczyński, the Foreign Minister of the exiled Polish government:, "In the hope that the civilized world will draw the appropriate conclusion, the Polish Government desire to bring to the notice of the public, by means of the present White Paper, these renewed German efforts at mass extermination, with the employment of fresh horrifying methods."
2. Declaration of the United Nations dated December 17, 1942, according to which the attention of the governments of the Allied Forces "was drawn to numerous reports from Europe which [reported] that the German authorities do not only refrain from granting basic human rights to people of the Jewish race in all the territories under their barbaric rule, [but] currently manipulate the intentions that Hitler often repeated, to exterminate the Jewish People in Europe… [Governments] reconfirm their decision to ensure that those responsible for these crimes will not evade retaliation, and continue to take steps to [achieve] this goal."
3. Speech by the Polish Foreign Minister broadcasted in December 1942, in which he calls upon the UN governments and the public to admit the tragedy occurring in Europe and to take action.
16 pp, 21.5 cm. Very good condition. Foxing marks surrounding staples.
From the collection of Arnie Druck.
This pamphlet constitutes the first official report about the Holocaust. Jan Karski-Kozielski was a Polish Government emissary in Nazi-occupied Poland who bribed his way into a German concentration camp and witnessed first-hand the mass extermination of Jews. The report, written in 1942 and printed in 1943 on behalf of the exiled Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs in London, contains the full text of a speech delivered to the United Nations in December 1942 that announces the reality of the Holocaust to the world, and additionally the joint UN declaration issued one week later. Printed in a small print run and never officially distributed in the period, with most copies destroyed.
The contents are divided into three parts:
1. Report about the state of the Jews in Poland, by Edward Raczyński, the Foreign Minister of the exiled Polish government:, "In the hope that the civilized world will draw the appropriate conclusion, the Polish Government desire to bring to the notice of the public, by means of the present White Paper, these renewed German efforts at mass extermination, with the employment of fresh horrifying methods."
2. Declaration of the United Nations dated December 17, 1942, according to which the attention of the governments of the Allied Forces "was drawn to numerous reports from Europe which [reported] that the German authorities do not only refrain from granting basic human rights to people of the Jewish race in all the territories under their barbaric rule, [but] currently manipulate the intentions that Hitler often repeated, to exterminate the Jewish People in Europe… [Governments] reconfirm their decision to ensure that those responsible for these crimes will not evade retaliation, and continue to take steps to [achieve] this goal."
3. Speech by the Polish Foreign Minister broadcasted in December 1942, in which he calls upon the UN governments and the public to admit the tragedy occurring in Europe and to take action.
16 pp, 21.5 cm. Very good condition. Foxing marks surrounding staples.
From the collection of Arnie Druck.
Category
Anti-Semitism, Holocaust and She'erit Ha-Pleita
Catalogue
Auction 34 - The Arnie Druck Collections
November 20, 2013
Opening: $1,800
Unsold
"The Red Poster", propaganda poster on behalf of the Vichy Regime and the German authorities in France. [Paris], 1944. French.
On the upper part of the poster appear photos of nine members of F.T.P.- M.O.I. organization, an underground organization active within the French resistance movement (the "resistance") and their commander Missak Manouchian. Under each name appears the name of the photographed, origin (most of them are of Jewish origin), and the number of "terrorist acts" and damages to railways which he carried out. On the lower part are photos of bodies, guns and trains which went off the tracks. Inscription in French: "Des libérateurs? La libération par l'armée du crime!" [liberators? Liberation by the army of crime!].
The F.T.P.-M.O.I. organization (abbreviation of "partisans-snipers" and "power of the immigrant"), was active during the years 1942-1943, and carried out more than 200 armed actions against Germans. Many of the organization's members were immigrants or immigrants' children, and many of them were Jewish. In November 1943 the organization was revealed. Twenty three members, a group called "Manouchian Group", were arrested, sentenced and executed. In 1944, the Vichy Regime issued the "Red Poster" in order to present the organization's members as terrorists and calm down the public severe reaction following the execution. 78X119 cm. Good condition. Stains, professionally restored tears. Cloth backed for display and restoration.
On the upper part of the poster appear photos of nine members of F.T.P.- M.O.I. organization, an underground organization active within the French resistance movement (the "resistance") and their commander Missak Manouchian. Under each name appears the name of the photographed, origin (most of them are of Jewish origin), and the number of "terrorist acts" and damages to railways which he carried out. On the lower part are photos of bodies, guns and trains which went off the tracks. Inscription in French: "Des libérateurs? La libération par l'armée du crime!" [liberators? Liberation by the army of crime!].
The F.T.P.-M.O.I. organization (abbreviation of "partisans-snipers" and "power of the immigrant"), was active during the years 1942-1943, and carried out more than 200 armed actions against Germans. Many of the organization's members were immigrants or immigrants' children, and many of them were Jewish. In November 1943 the organization was revealed. Twenty three members, a group called "Manouchian Group", were arrested, sentenced and executed. In 1944, the Vichy Regime issued the "Red Poster" in order to present the organization's members as terrorists and calm down the public severe reaction following the execution. 78X119 cm. Good condition. Stains, professionally restored tears. Cloth backed for display and restoration.
Category
Anti-Semitism, Holocaust and She'erit Ha-Pleita
Catalogue
Auction 34 - The Arnie Druck Collections
November 20, 2013
Opening: $200
Sold for: $550
Including buyer's premium
Gutyanski, B. [Binyamin]. Zalts in Di Oygn [Salt in the Eyes]. Illustrations A. Hafter. Moscow: Der Emes, 1944. Yiddish.
Twenty-two rhymed stories ridiculing and mocking Hitler and Nazi Germany, illustrated with numerous harsh and humorous anti-Hitler illustrations. The author, Gutyanski (1905-1949), was a Yiddish poet, translator and editor. He composed poems for children and rhymed stories and short sketches for papers in Yiddish and Russian. Gutyanski joined the Red Army in 1942, at first as a writer of anti-Nazi propaganda and later as a soldier. He also translated Don Quixote into Yiddish. Gutyanski disappeared in 1948; he was probably arrested, tortured in a Soviet Prison and executed with other Jewish creators in 1949.
38, [2] pp, 16 cm. Very good condition.
Twenty-two rhymed stories ridiculing and mocking Hitler and Nazi Germany, illustrated with numerous harsh and humorous anti-Hitler illustrations. The author, Gutyanski (1905-1949), was a Yiddish poet, translator and editor. He composed poems for children and rhymed stories and short sketches for papers in Yiddish and Russian. Gutyanski joined the Red Army in 1942, at first as a writer of anti-Nazi propaganda and later as a soldier. He also translated Don Quixote into Yiddish. Gutyanski disappeared in 1948; he was probably arrested, tortured in a Soviet Prison and executed with other Jewish creators in 1949.
38, [2] pp, 16 cm. Very good condition.
Category
Anti-Semitism, Holocaust and She'erit Ha-Pleita
Catalogue