Auction 47 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
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Displaying 37 - 48 of 76
Auction 47 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 8, 2015
Opening: $250
Sold for: $313
Including buyer's premium
Das Judenthum in der Musik [Judaism in Music], by Richard Wagner. Leipzig: J.J. Weber, 1869. German.
Category
Anti-Semitism, The Holocaust and She'erit Hapletah in Europe and Cyprus
Catalogue
Auction 47 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 8, 2015
Opening: $300
Unsold
Juden Stellen Sich Vor, Vierundzwanzig Zeichnungen Vom Stürmerzeichner Fips [24 illustrations by "Der Stürmer" illustrator, Fips]. Nuremberg: "Der Stürmer", 1934. German.
A booklet featuring anti-Semitic caricatures published by the anti-Semitic newspaper "Der Stürmer". Introduction by the editor of "Der Stürmer", Julius Streicher, of the leaders of Nazi regime in Germany, who was eventually sentenced to death in the Nuremberg Trials.
The booklet includes 24 caricatures in black and white (on a full page), depicting stereotypic Jewish figures – rabbi, merchant, lawyer, banker, and more; by Philip Rupprecht, a caricaturist known mainly for the anti-Semitic caricatures which he published in "Der Stürmer" under the pen-name Fips. It is possible that the booklet was meant to be a coloring book for children. [28] leaves, 23 cm. Good condition. Some stains within the booklet. Stains and tears to cover. Torn spine (cover partly detached).
A booklet featuring anti-Semitic caricatures published by the anti-Semitic newspaper "Der Stürmer". Introduction by the editor of "Der Stürmer", Julius Streicher, of the leaders of Nazi regime in Germany, who was eventually sentenced to death in the Nuremberg Trials.
The booklet includes 24 caricatures in black and white (on a full page), depicting stereotypic Jewish figures – rabbi, merchant, lawyer, banker, and more; by Philip Rupprecht, a caricaturist known mainly for the anti-Semitic caricatures which he published in "Der Stürmer" under the pen-name Fips. It is possible that the booklet was meant to be a coloring book for children. [28] leaves, 23 cm. Good condition. Some stains within the booklet. Stains and tears to cover. Torn spine (cover partly detached).
Category
Anti-Semitism, The Holocaust and She'erit Hapletah in Europe and Cyprus
Catalogue
Auction 47 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 8, 2015
Opening: $300
Sold for: $525
Including buyer's premium
Two anti-Semitic booklets printed in Paris in the early 1940s.
1. Un Bon Français…[a good Frenchman]. Paris: G. Mazeyrie printing press, [1941?]. [16] pp.
2. Pourquoi les Nationaux Ne Peuvent Souhaiter le Succès des Communistes [why the national cannot hope for the success of communists]. Paris: G. Mazeyrie printing press, [1941?]. Text by Mars-Trick, illustrations by Pelan. [16] pp.
Size and condition vary.
1. Un Bon Français…[a good Frenchman]. Paris: G. Mazeyrie printing press, [1941?]. [16] pp.
2. Pourquoi les Nationaux Ne Peuvent Souhaiter le Succès des Communistes [why the national cannot hope for the success of communists]. Paris: G. Mazeyrie printing press, [1941?]. Text by Mars-Trick, illustrations by Pelan. [16] pp.
Size and condition vary.
Category
Anti-Semitism, The Holocaust and She'erit Hapletah in Europe and Cyprus
Catalogue
Auction 47 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 8, 2015
Opening: $250
Unsold
Иудаизм без прикрас [Judaism without Embellishment], by Trofim Kichko. Published by the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences. Kiev, 1963. Ukrainian.
An extremely harsh anti-Semitic composition, depicting a Jewish conspiracy against the Soviet Union, and linking Judaism to Zionism, to Western Capitalism and to the Soviet Union's enemies. The text is accompanied by black and white caricatures in the spirit of Nazi anti-Semitic caricatures including caricatures portraying the figures of David Ben-Gurion and Ze'ev Jabotinsky. An illustration in color appears on the front cover.
The book, authored by a lecturer in the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, was initially observed in the Soviet Union as a scientific work and was highly praised, before causing international criticism. Following protests throughout the world, the Soviet government was forced to officially withdraw its support of the book and the author. It was forbidden to distribute the book and the copies were destroyed. 190, [2] pp, 20 cm. Good condition. Slight damages, mainly to binding (softcover). Tears to spine.
An extremely harsh anti-Semitic composition, depicting a Jewish conspiracy against the Soviet Union, and linking Judaism to Zionism, to Western Capitalism and to the Soviet Union's enemies. The text is accompanied by black and white caricatures in the spirit of Nazi anti-Semitic caricatures including caricatures portraying the figures of David Ben-Gurion and Ze'ev Jabotinsky. An illustration in color appears on the front cover.
The book, authored by a lecturer in the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, was initially observed in the Soviet Union as a scientific work and was highly praised, before causing international criticism. Following protests throughout the world, the Soviet government was forced to officially withdraw its support of the book and the author. It was forbidden to distribute the book and the copies were destroyed. 190, [2] pp, 20 cm. Good condition. Slight damages, mainly to binding (softcover). Tears to spine.
Category
Anti-Semitism, The Holocaust and She'erit Hapletah in Europe and Cyprus
Catalogue
Auction 47 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 8, 2015
Opening: $500
Sold for: $625
Including buyer's premium
Anti-Israeli poster, created by an artist of the "Fighting Pencil" group (Боевой карандаш, Boevoi Karandash). Leningrad (St. Petersburg): Художник РСФСР (Xudoznik RSFSR), 1976. Russian.
Illustration of an Israeli soldier appears in the center of the poster (on his cap appears a Star of David), holding a fuse of a huge bomb. Above the illustration – an inscription "The concern about the Near East …" (Russian).
"Fighting Pencil" group – group of artists from Leningrad , active since 1939, created satiric posters and illustrations concerning topics related to Russian and international politics. 56X42 cm. Good condition. Slight damages; mounted on cardboard. Tears and stains at margins of cardboard.
Illustration of an Israeli soldier appears in the center of the poster (on his cap appears a Star of David), holding a fuse of a huge bomb. Above the illustration – an inscription "The concern about the Near East …" (Russian).
"Fighting Pencil" group – group of artists from Leningrad , active since 1939, created satiric posters and illustrations concerning topics related to Russian and international politics. 56X42 cm. Good condition. Slight damages; mounted on cardboard. Tears and stains at margins of cardboard.
Category
Anti-Semitism, The Holocaust and She'erit Hapletah in Europe and Cyprus
Catalogue
Auction 47 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 8, 2015
Opening: $400
Unsold
Hundreds of leaves (most of the leaves are typewritten, few are handwritten) featuring translations of news concerning the state of Jews in Nazi Germany. Eretz Israel, 1938-1939.
Translations of news from foreign newspapers and information-leaflets printed on behalf of the Jewish Central Information Office in Amsterdam, concerning restrictions imposed on Jews in Nazi Germany, pogroms against Jews, reports about the Kristallnacht, etc. The texts were translated in "real time" for publication in Hebrew newspapers in Eretz Israel (enclosed are newspaper cuttings and complete copies of newspapers carrying the translations). Hundreds of leaves, size and condition vary
Translations of news from foreign newspapers and information-leaflets printed on behalf of the Jewish Central Information Office in Amsterdam, concerning restrictions imposed on Jews in Nazi Germany, pogroms against Jews, reports about the Kristallnacht, etc. The texts were translated in "real time" for publication in Hebrew newspapers in Eretz Israel (enclosed are newspaper cuttings and complete copies of newspapers carrying the translations). Hundreds of leaves, size and condition vary
Category
Anti-Semitism, The Holocaust and She'erit Hapletah in Europe and Cyprus
Catalogue
Auction 47 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 8, 2015
Opening: $250
Sold for: $313
Including buyer's premium
Printed leaflet – invitation to Purim festivities, arranged by the youth of the General Organization of Zionists "Theodor Herzl" in Shanghai. Shanghai, March 27, 1940. English. (Title in Hebrew).
Details of the event (date and venue) are printed on one side of the leaflet and on the other side – synopsis of a play to be performed – Zion and Ourselves, by Brunno Guttentag. [1] leaf, printed on both sides, 27 cm. Good-fair condition. Folding marks, stains and tears (open tears at the left margin).
Details of the event (date and venue) are printed on one side of the leaflet and on the other side – synopsis of a play to be performed – Zion and Ourselves, by Brunno Guttentag. [1] leaf, printed on both sides, 27 cm. Good-fair condition. Folding marks, stains and tears (open tears at the left margin).
Category
Anti-Semitism, The Holocaust and She'erit Hapletah in Europe and Cyprus
Catalogue
Auction 47 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 8, 2015
Opening: $400
Sold for: $500
Including buyer's premium
Five photographs portraying Jews scrubbing a street, surrounded by soldiers in uniforms. [Austria? 1930s].
6X8.5 cm. Good condition.
6X8.5 cm. Good condition.
Category
Anti-Semitism, The Holocaust and She'erit Hapletah in Europe and Cyprus
Catalogue
Auction 47 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 8, 2015
Opening: $3,000
Unsold
"The Black Album". Published by the Anti-Nazi League, Tel-Aviv, April 1940. Hebrew, English and French.
Complete postcard binder composed of ten postcards. The presented postcard binder is a very early public visual documentation - maybe the first of its kind - of Nazi crimes in Europe, especially in occupied Poland.
The anti-Nazi league, which published the binder in April 1940, aimed to set up "propaganda and publicity in Israel and abroad against the Nazi regime, the Nazi spirit and racial hate". These ideas were realized in the binder not only in the photographs printed on the postcards, but also and especially in the words of introduction added by the anti-Nazi league members. Printed on the inner side of the cover: "Hitlerism means return to the savagery of the dark Middle Ages. In Poland, the miserable Jews are compelled to wear on their backs the yellow badge as reproduced on the envelope of the Black Album. The Black Album contains the first series of pictures disclosing Nazi atrocities and murders in Poland and offers a vivid description of the Nazi regime and its cruel systems. Everybody is hereby enabled to unmask Hitlerism by sending the postcards of the Album to his friends and acquaintances all over the world”.
Each postcard is titled – “Death in Hitler’s steps”, “Nazi hangmen at work”, “One of the hundreds of victims in Poland”, “Nazi slave traders”, “Kidnapping”, “A horrible race”, “Migration of nations into misery”, “Nazi victims converted into ashes”. The postcards are accompanied by captions, specifying some of the methods of Nazi brutality and destruction which were publicly verified and published only years later: death of thousands from disease, cold and hunger; daily execution and hanging of bodies on gallows in central streets of Polish cities; backbreaking labor; cleaning streets with mouths and hands; cremating bodies to ash, etc. The titles are in English. The introduction is in Hebrew and English. The captions are in Hebrew and French. [8] pp, 10 postcards, [8] pp. Postcards: 10X14 cm. Binder: 10.5X16.5 cm. Good condition. Slightly stained. Stains, scribbles in pen and an ink-stamp on the cover
Complete postcard binder composed of ten postcards. The presented postcard binder is a very early public visual documentation - maybe the first of its kind - of Nazi crimes in Europe, especially in occupied Poland.
The anti-Nazi league, which published the binder in April 1940, aimed to set up "propaganda and publicity in Israel and abroad against the Nazi regime, the Nazi spirit and racial hate". These ideas were realized in the binder not only in the photographs printed on the postcards, but also and especially in the words of introduction added by the anti-Nazi league members. Printed on the inner side of the cover: "Hitlerism means return to the savagery of the dark Middle Ages. In Poland, the miserable Jews are compelled to wear on their backs the yellow badge as reproduced on the envelope of the Black Album. The Black Album contains the first series of pictures disclosing Nazi atrocities and murders in Poland and offers a vivid description of the Nazi regime and its cruel systems. Everybody is hereby enabled to unmask Hitlerism by sending the postcards of the Album to his friends and acquaintances all over the world”.
Each postcard is titled – “Death in Hitler’s steps”, “Nazi hangmen at work”, “One of the hundreds of victims in Poland”, “Nazi slave traders”, “Kidnapping”, “A horrible race”, “Migration of nations into misery”, “Nazi victims converted into ashes”. The postcards are accompanied by captions, specifying some of the methods of Nazi brutality and destruction which were publicly verified and published only years later: death of thousands from disease, cold and hunger; daily execution and hanging of bodies on gallows in central streets of Polish cities; backbreaking labor; cleaning streets with mouths and hands; cremating bodies to ash, etc. The titles are in English. The introduction is in Hebrew and English. The captions are in Hebrew and French. [8] pp, 10 postcards, [8] pp. Postcards: 10X14 cm. Binder: 10.5X16.5 cm. Good condition. Slightly stained. Stains, scribbles in pen and an ink-stamp on the cover
Category
Anti-Semitism, The Holocaust and She'erit Hapletah in Europe and Cyprus
Catalogue
Auction 47 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 8, 2015
Opening: $400
Sold for: $500
Including buyer's premium
Hat badge, made of metal. Jewish police in Lvov Ghetto, [between 1941 and 1943].
Round badge, in its center a Star of David with the initials JOL [Jüdischer Ordnungsdienst Lemberg]. "Jewish Police Service" or "Jewish Police" were the auxiliary-police units in ghettos and in certain settlements during World War II. The units were founded following a direct order imposed by the Nazis and were subordinated to the Judenrat. The unit in Lvov Ghetto consisted of about 500 Jewish policemen. Diameter: 2.7 cm. Fair-good condition. No clasp.
Round badge, in its center a Star of David with the initials JOL [Jüdischer Ordnungsdienst Lemberg]. "Jewish Police Service" or "Jewish Police" were the auxiliary-police units in ghettos and in certain settlements during World War II. The units were founded following a direct order imposed by the Nazis and were subordinated to the Judenrat. The unit in Lvov Ghetto consisted of about 500 Jewish policemen. Diameter: 2.7 cm. Fair-good condition. No clasp.
Category
Anti-Semitism, The Holocaust and She'erit Hapletah in Europe and Cyprus
Catalogue
Auction 47 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 8, 2015
Opening: $250
Sold for: $313
Including buyer's premium
Prayer of thanksgiving for the Day of Victory. Chief rabbinate for Eretz Israel, Jerusalem, Iyar, 1945.
Includes "El Maleh Rachamim" and a "thanksgiving prayer" in honor of “the glorious victory of the Allied Forces against the forces of darkness and cruelty". [4] pp. 23.5 cm. Good condition. Tear at folding mark. Some creases and tears at margins.
Includes "El Maleh Rachamim" and a "thanksgiving prayer" in honor of “the glorious victory of the Allied Forces against the forces of darkness and cruelty". [4] pp. 23.5 cm. Good condition. Tear at folding mark. Some creases and tears at margins.
Category
Anti-Semitism, The Holocaust and She'erit Hapletah in Europe and Cyprus
Catalogue
Auction 47 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 8, 2015
Opening: $300
Sold for: $375
Including buyer's premium
18 photographs depicting the life of the Jewish congregation in the town of Rychbah (Reichenbach / Dzierżoniów), Lower Silesia (present day Poland), ca.1946.
14 photographs taken during a gathering in memory of the Jews of Biala murdered by the Nazis. An additional photograph is a New Year Greeting from the committee of Biala survivors in Rychbach, and three other photographs are of a family, one dated 1946. Four of the gathering photographs are ink stamped on the reverse: "Foto Muza" (located in the town).
In the town of Rychbach Jews tried, in 1945, to found an autonomous communal settlement of holocaust survivors. After the war, survivors of extermination camps in the vicinity (Gross-Rosen and others) congregated in Rychbach and through the leadership of Jakub Egit, a Jewish soldier in the Red Army, tried to found an autonomous Jewish communal settlement. At first the Soviet authorities assisted them and the settlement grew fast and included a school, hospitals, agricultural farms, orphanage, a theater, newspapers and even a publishing house. At its peak 50,000 Jews lived in the settlement and the spoken language was Yiddish. When the Soviet authorities realized what the nature of the settlement was they stopped supporting the project, Egit was sent to jail, and the survivors immigrated to Israel, the USA and South Africa. 8X11 cm – 10X13 cm. Good condition
14 photographs taken during a gathering in memory of the Jews of Biala murdered by the Nazis. An additional photograph is a New Year Greeting from the committee of Biala survivors in Rychbach, and three other photographs are of a family, one dated 1946. Four of the gathering photographs are ink stamped on the reverse: "Foto Muza" (located in the town).
In the town of Rychbach Jews tried, in 1945, to found an autonomous communal settlement of holocaust survivors. After the war, survivors of extermination camps in the vicinity (Gross-Rosen and others) congregated in Rychbach and through the leadership of Jakub Egit, a Jewish soldier in the Red Army, tried to found an autonomous Jewish communal settlement. At first the Soviet authorities assisted them and the settlement grew fast and included a school, hospitals, agricultural farms, orphanage, a theater, newspapers and even a publishing house. At its peak 50,000 Jews lived in the settlement and the spoken language was Yiddish. When the Soviet authorities realized what the nature of the settlement was they stopped supporting the project, Egit was sent to jail, and the survivors immigrated to Israel, the USA and South Africa. 8X11 cm – 10X13 cm. Good condition
Category
Anti-Semitism, The Holocaust and She'erit Hapletah in Europe and Cyprus
Catalogue