Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
Including: Items from the Estate of Ruth Dayan, Old Master Works, Israeli Art and Numismatics
December 21, 2021
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Displaying 49 - 60 of 63
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $300
Sold for: $375
Including buyer's premium
Five books signed by Moshe Dayan (four with his Hebrew signature and one with his signature in Latin characters): 1. Arabs, Oil and History, the Story of the Middle East, by Kermit Roosevelt. London: Victor Gollancz, 1949. English. 2. "In the Enemy's Eyes, Three Arab Publications on the War of Independence", translated by S. Sabag [Samuel Segev]. Tel-Aviv: Ma'arachot, 1954. Hebrew. 3. "Arab States", by Yaakov Shimoni. Tel-Aviv: Am Oved, 1959. Hebrew. 4. "Moshe Dayan, a Portrait", edited by Pinchas Yurman. Massada, 1968. Hebrew. Presentation inscription by Moshe Dayan: "To Rachel and Zvi with love, 15.5.68, Moshe" (Hebrew; presumably, the inscription refers to Rachel and Zvi Schwartz, parents of Dayan's first wife, the social activist Ruth Dayan [Schwartz]). 5. Breakthrough, a Personal Account of the Egypt-Israel Peace Negotiations, by Moshe Dayan. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1981. English.
Size and condition vary.
Provenance: Estate of Ruth Dayan.
Category
Items from the Estate of Ruth Dayan
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $300
Sold for: $375
Including buyer's premium
Collection documents relating to the assets of the Dayan family in Nahalal. Hand signed by Moshe Dayan, Ruth Dayan, and Shmuel Dayan. Nahalal, 1945 and 1968. Hebrew.
1. "Agricultural lease contract between the company, Jewish National Fund Ltd. Jerusalem (registered in England) and Mr. Moshe Dayan and his wife, Mrs. Ruth." Nahalal, March 23, 1945. Printed form issued as booklet, filled in by hand, with all pages bearing the signatures of Ruth and Moshe Dayan (full signatures on final page and initials everywhere else). 16 pp., 30 cm. 2. Deed of mortgage: A loan given to Ruth and Moshe Dayan by Ruth's parents, Tzvi and Rachel Schwartz. March 23, 1945. Typewritten, with all pages bearing the signatures of Moshe Dayan and Ruth Dayan (full signatures on final page and initials everywhere else). [5] ff., 33.5 cm. 3. Last will and testament of Shmuel Dayan, typewritten, hand signed by Shmuel Dayan, August 2, 1968 (he passed away nine days later). 3 ff., 32.5 cm. 4. Explanatory letter attached to last will and testament of Shmuel Dayan, addressed to his son, Moshe. Printed; hand signed "Aba" ("Dad") by Shmuel Dayan. August 2, 1968. f., 28 cm.
Condition varies. Overall good-fair condition.
Enclosed: Nine documents related to the Dayan family farmstead in Moshav Nahalal: Cancellation of the lease contract of the previous owner, Shmuel Halleli; official receipt issued by Moshav Nahalal for payments remitted by Ruth and Moshe Dayan; form listing the expenses and income of the farmstead in its first year of management by the Dayan family; and more.
Provenance: Estate of Ruth Dayan.
Category
Items from the Estate of Ruth Dayan
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $400
Sold for: $625
Including buyer's premium
A lengthy, poetic letter sent by Moshe Dayan from Nahalal to Jerusalem, a few months after first meeting Ruth Schwartz, his future wife, soon to become Ruth Dayan. Written when Moshe Dayan was 20 years old. In it, Dayan describes his days living in Nahalal as a young "halutz" (Jewish pioneer). Hand-signed by Dayan. Nahalal, February 4, 1935. Hebrew.
The present letter was published (with some omissions) in the Hebrew edition of the book "…Or Did I Dream a Dream? The Story of Ruth Dayan" (written by Ruth Dayan and Helga Dudman; published by Sifriyat Poalim, 1973); a few lines from it are quoted in the English edition (published by Steimatzky's Agency together with Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1973; p. 20). According to Dayan, the letter was sent when she returned to her parents' house at the winter of 1935. At the time of the writing, Moshe Dayan was still a young "halutz, " a member of the Labor Zionist Movement, and this particular letter offers a unique glimpse into his character, revealing a number of interesting aspects of his personality – his family home and upbringing, his spiritual mind-set, his thoughts as a young man – many years before he developed into an Israeli cultural hero. In the letter, he writes as follows: " Everything is dirty, damp, and cold, every motion – parting the Red Sea, and the boots are wet from both sides, and the reins are slippery and the mares stubborn… If only I was given a heater and the right to sit and not work! " Further on, he discusses matters related to his own family: " Actually, it isn't the work that upsets me, but rather the atmosphere back home… Zohar is ill, and Grandma is moaning. Everyone gets mad, and everyone finds faults in the other… and everything is so petty to the point of being nauseating ." Elsewhere in the letter, Dayan discusses his likely future and what lies in store for him: " I would find myself all sorts of ‘kibbutzim' and ‘kevutzot' and professions in construction and writing and painting and God knows what [else]… But when I look truthfully inward, I know I'll find no satisfaction there… " Several times in the letter, Dayan speaks of his admiration for the Russian author Fyodor Dostoevsky: "Blessed be Dostoevsky. Two or three pages and you're purified and refined through the suffering of humanity… the suffering of humanity is apparently always one and the same, and I am momentarily uplifted in light of that ." A number of segments of the letter were omitted from the version published in Ruth Dayan's book, including a lengthy and interesting section relating to the subject of Arab laborers: " On a night such as this, all my humanitarian instincts are obviously awakened, and I recall how I actually came to meet the government workers involved in drilling (that is, ‘fellahin' from the vicinity of Nablus)… they live there in a tent, and the tent is leaking, and the ‘floor' is all mud… in order to be frugal, they go barefoot, holding their shoes in their hands. This evening, I'd be capable of writing an entire book about this ." Signed at the bottom of the final page: "Yours, Moshe."
3 ff. (6 written pages), approx. 26.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines, creases, and minor stains. Minor tears to edges.
See: "…Or Did I Dream a Dream? The Story of Ruth Dayan" (Hebrew Edition), by Ruth Dayan and Helga Dudman. Jerusalem: by Sifriyat Poalim, 1973, pp. 23-27.
Provenance: Estate of Ruth Dayan.
Category
Items from the Estate of Ruth Dayan
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $150
Sold for: $200
Including buyer's premium
Two autograph letters by Ruth and Moshe Dayan, addressed to Ruth's parents, Tzvi and Rachel Schwartz. London, 1935.
• Letter dated October 6, 1935. One sheet folded in half – three and a half pages, handwritten and signed by Ruth Dayan, and half a page handwritten and signed by Moshe Dayan. Ruth writes to her parents about the new apartment Moshe and she found in London, to which they had recently moved, about Israelis and English Jews she encountered (including a close relationship that developed between her and Dov Hoz), a visit to Karl Marx's grave, and the various difficulties she is experiencing, including her meager chances of finding employment, her dislike of the London Jewish community, etc. Moshe briefly writes about his experience of the city, and tells of his plan to start learning English. [1] ff. folded in half (4 written pages), 20 cm. Good condition. Minor fold lines and creases. Minor stains. Minor tears to edges. • Letter dated December 12, 1935. One sheet, folded in half – approx. two pages handwritten and signed by Moshe Dayan, and approx. one page handwritten and signed by Ruth Dayan. Moshe writes about his miserable mood, stemming from the great challenge of integrating in London and the difficulty to land a job, mentions Ruth's pottery course, the speakers in Hyde Park, reacting to the Italo-Ethiopian War, and nationalist demonstrations against England's involvement in the conflict. Ruth writes about their move to a new apartment, about her new job, the bicycles Moshe and she bought, and her hopes for the future. [1] ff. folded in half (three written pages), 20 cm. Good condition, minor fold lines and creases. Minor stains. Some minor tears to edges.
Ruth and Moshe Dayan spent roughly 6 months in London, and returned to Palestine in February 1936. According to Ruth's autobiography, their stay in London was cut short due to Moshe's difficulty in assimilating, his homesickness, and the deteriorating state of security in Palestine, which made it all the more clear to him that he must return home (for further reading see: "…Or did I dream a dream? The story of Ruth Dayan", by Ruth Dayan and Helga Dudman, 1973).
Provenance: Estate of Ruth Dayan.
Category
Items from the Estate of Ruth Dayan
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $100
Sold for: $163
Including buyer's premium
Autograph letter signed by Moshe Dayan, on the official stationery of the Minister of Defense. Addressed to Ruth Dayan. February 21, 1971. Hebrew.
Letter by Moshe Dayan, addressed to Ruth Dayan. Written while he was serving as Israel's Minister of Defense, a few months before the couple divorced after over 35 years of marriage. Dayan writes briefly about his meetings with family members. Later in the letter he apparently makes reference to Egyptian President Anwar Sadat's proposals regarding potential peace talks: "[Yitzhak] Rabin arrived for consultations and Golda [Meir] holds endless meetings and they argue and make decisions, but I don't feel that matters are being seriously managed ." The State of Israel's official response to Sadat's proposal was delivered on February 26, 1971, five days after this letter was written. At the end of the letter, Dayan writes the following to his wife Ruth: "You'll no doubt manage to also get to see a good play or enjoy [some decent] entertainment, after all, the US is not Tzahala [an upscale residential neighborhood in Tel Aviv, where the couple was residing]." And he signs "Yours, Moshe."
[1] f., written on both sides, 20 cm. Good condition. Fold lines. Few stains.
Provenance: Estate of Ruth Dayan.
Category
Items from the Estate of Ruth Dayan
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $150
Sold for: $300
Including buyer's premium
Photograph of Ruth and Moshe Dayan, by Lou Landauer, with postcard back. Inscribed by Ruth and Moshe (Nahalal, 1935). Postcard ink-stamped on verso with photographer Lou Landauer's stamp and inscribed by Ruth Dayan: "To grandmother as a keepsake from Ruth and Moshe. Nahalal, Tamuz 1935". The dedication was written close to Ruth and Moshe Dayan's wedding, which took place in Nahalal on July 12, 1935.
Approx. 14X9 cm. Good condition. Stains. Wear and minor creases to edges. Photographer's stamp faded.
Category
Items from the Estate of Ruth Dayan
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $100
Sold for: $125
Including buyer's premium
…Or Did I Dream a Dream? – The Story of Ruth Dayan, by Ruth Dayan and Helga Dudman. Jerusalem: Steimatzky's Agency / Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1973. English.
Ruth Dayan's autobiography, signed by Dayan (English) on the endpaper. [4] ff., 275 pp. + [4] photographic plates, 21.5 cm. Good condition. Foxing. Minor creases. Pen notation and adhesive label to back endpaper. Leather-covered binding, with stains and minor blemishes. • Enclosed: Military pass issued to Ruth Dayan by the 6th Brigade headquarters. With passport photo. Valid until October 1st, 1948.
Ruth Dayan (1917-2021) was famous for her numerous social activism initiatives. She founded the Maskit fashion house, was active in multiple platforms for peaceful co-existence of Jews and Arabs in Israel, co-founded Variety Israel and more. Was married to Moshe Dayan until their divorce in 1971.
Provenance: Estate of Ruth Dayan.
Category
Items from the Estate of Ruth Dayan
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $1,000
Sold for: $3,000
Including buyer's premium
Rich and varied collection of over a thousand items from the estate of Ruth Dayan – photographs, letters, documents, catalogues, weave samples, and additional items, mostly related to the Maskit Fashion House. Israel and other countries, 1950s-1990s. Hebrew and English (some items in Spanish and Italian).
The collection includes hundreds of letters written by Ruth Dayan or received by her (most concerning Maskit, some concerning personal matters; including letters received from Teddy Kollek, Yaakov Dori, Giora Yoseftal, Miriam Feinman, and many others); hundreds of photographs depicting Dayan and Maskit; documents related to the management of Maskit; catalogues of the company's products; audio tape from a Maskit fashion show; and more.
Among the items: • Photographs of Ruth Dayan and various Maskit pieces (in black and white and in color); fashion photographs; photographs from receptions and official events. • Letters received by Ruth Dayan from friends, acquaintances, and business partners, including Neora Warshavsky (Maskit's chief textile designer), Miriam Feinman (director of the women's division of the Israel Bonds), Teddy Kollek, Yaakov Dori, and Giora Yoseftal, and a letter from Haifa municipality (signed by Abba Hushi) – typewritten or handwritten; signed. • Many business letters pertaining to Maskit, various financial reports, and protocols of Maskit executive meetings (mimeographed). • Official letter of appointment for the employment of Ruth Dayan in the Labor Ministry (as manager of the government-owned company Maskit).
• Three handwritten notebooks written in South America, containing addresses of contact persons, and various business-related entries. • Loan applications submitted by Maskit artisans, intended for the purchase of tools and materials. • Maskit weave samples. • Technical drawings (in pen and pencil), and work instructions for the operation of a weaving loom. • 1/4-inch magnetic audiotape, containing a recording of a Maskit fashion show. • Numerous personal documents belonging to Ruth Dayan, including contracts, insurance claims and various reports; and additional documents. • Numerous newspaper clippings pertaining to Ruth Dayan and Maskit. • And more.
The government-owned company Maskit was established in 1954 by the Israeli Labor Ministry, as part of the professional development department. It was managed by Ruth Dayan from the day of its establishment until 1978, when it was privatized; the company has closed down in 1994. Maskit was founded with the purpose of providing work for immigrants who arrived to Israel in the large immigration waves of the 1950s, aiming to assist them in their assimilation in the country, and preserve traditional arts and crafts, which were brought by them from their countries of origin. Maskit employed Palestinian Arabs and Bedouins as well, and traditional Palestinian handicrafts were featured in the company's catalogues. The company's first chairman was Teddy Kollek (a letter from whom appears in the present collection). Under Dayan's vigorous management, and owing to her skills and connections, Maskit grew – at the peak of its activities it employed hundreds of artisans in different fields, in several locations across the country, offering training courses in a variety of handicrafts. The company operated seven stores, becoming a leading Israeli design brand, known throughout the world to combine traditional crafts with cutting-edge designs, a combination which reflected the spirit in which the young country of Israel perceived itself. The company's products – garments, fabrics, rugs, jewelry, furniture, housewares, dolls and various decorative objects – were successfully marketed in Israel and abroad. Maskit's unique designs, which were created by professional designers (the first of whom was Fini Leitersdorf) based on traditional handicrafts, became a byword for quality products and a milestone in the history of Israeli design. The items in the present collection document Dayan's widespread connections with social activists, entrepreneurs, investors, and politicians across the globe, with whom she stood in close contact as part of her efforts to market Maskit products, and offer training in Maskit's work and organizational methods, throughout the world – with an emphasis on South America and Africa.
For more information see: "Maskit, a Local Fabric" (exhibition catalogue), Tel Aviv: Eretz Israel Museum, 2003.;"…Or did I dream a dream? The story of Ruth Dayan", by Ruth Dayan and Helga Dudman.
Approx. 1300 items: approx. 340 photographs; approx. 840 paper items (letters, documents, notes, receipts, reports, and more – printed and handwritten), 3 handwritten notebooks; weave samples; approx. 20 catalogues of Maskit and other companies; approx. 120 newspaper clippings; 1/4-inch audiotape (English inscription reads "Ruth Dayan, Maskit fashion show, 03/16/71"), and one audio cassette. The items are placed in folders, binders and albums.
Size and condition varies. Overall good-fair condition.
Provenance: Estate of Ruth Dayan.
Category
Items from the Estate of Ruth Dayan
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $100
Sold for: $125
Including buyer's premium
Letter sent by IDF Chief of General Staff Yigael Yadin to Moshe Dayan on the day of Yadin's retirement from the IDF. Typewritten on official stationery bearing the IDF emblem, and signed by Yadin. December 1952. Hebrew.
On December 7, 1952, the Israeli army's second Chief of General Staff, Yigael Yadin – who served as de facto chief of staff during Israel's War of Independence – retired from his post. Upon his retirement, he sent the present letter to Moshe Dayan. It reads as follows: " Dear Moshe, allow me to write you a few words as I conclude my tour of duty – you are in no small measure ‘guilty' for the fact this [duty] fell on my shoulders […] even though we did not always agree with one another, I always recognized the special qualities that distinguish you: initiative, courage, independent thinking, a sense of humor, leadership skills, and a wonderful understanding of both operational and political issues. I am certain your contribution to the future of the army will be of paramount importance ."
Yigael Yadin (1917-1984), second Chief of General Staff of the IDF, serving in the position for a period of three years, and one of the most instrumental individuals responsible for molding the character of the regular standing army, still in its formative years at the time. Yadin retired from his post in December of 1952 in the wake of serious differences of opinion that arose between him and David Ben-Gurion, who was then serving as both prime minister and defense minister. Shortly after his resignation, Moshe Dayan (1915-1981) was appointed Chief of Operations Branch of the IDF, and subsequently, within a year, he was promoted once again to become the IDF's fourth Chief of Staff.
[1] f., approx. 26 cm. Good condition. Fold lines. Few stains.
Provenance: Estate of Ruth Dayan.
Category
Items from the Estate of Ruth Dayan
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $200
Unsold
20 letters, handwritten and signed by Leila Mantoura, addressed to Ruth Dayan. England, Turkey, France, Malta, 1977-95. English.
20 letters, sent by Leila Mantoura to Ruth Dayan over a period spanning three decades (thirteen typewritten letters; the remainder handwritten; most containing a number of pages; hand-signed). The letters deal with a variety of subjects; some are of a personal nature, venturing into subjects such as love, intimate relationships, children, grandchildren, and career issues; others involve various business affairs; and still others relate to politics – both inside and outside Israel – and touch on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the conflicts in Lebanon, and more.
Leila Mantoura (1927-?), Christian Palestinian, native of Jerusalem, daughter of the physician, ethnographer, and nationalist Palestinian author and intellectual, Dr. Tawfiq Canaan. With the termination of the British Mandate in Palestine, she moved to Beirut, and from there, in the 1970s, to England, where she settled and opened the gallery "Al-Mashreq" ("the Orient"), devoted to art and ethnic objects. Played an active role in the struggle for Palestinian liberation, partly under the auspices of the public relations firm she headed, "Free Palestine and Eurabia, " and partly through the humanitarian aid society she also directed, "Medical Aid for Palestinians." In her autobiographical work, "...Or Did I Dream a Dream?, " Ruth Dayan wrote the following about Leila Mantoura: "On rare occasions throughout my life I have met women who have become my friends in the deepest sense [...] Not long before I decided to divorce Moshe, I met a woman who quickly became this kind of friend. Our relationship is, first and foremost, based on understanding as people. But it is terribly complicated by the fact that she is an Arab patriot just as much as I am an Israeli, and the tension in our conflicting feelings is a powerful emotion between us. We both spent our youth in Jerusalem, and that is part of it, too. She is the "Theresa" whose mother I visited at the leper home near Jerusalem, and she has lived away from her homeland for more than twenty years." (Ruth Dayan and Helga Dudman. "...Or Did I Dream a Dream?", Steimatzky's Agency / Weidenfeld and Nicolson, London & Jerusalem, 1973, p. 260).
Size and condition vary. Overall good condition.
Enclosed: Five color photographs of Ruth Dayan and Leila Mantoura (1994; handwritten captions on backs of three of them). Provenance: Estate of Ruth Dayan.
Category
Items from the Estate of Ruth Dayan
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $2,000
Unsold
Six printed paper items with handwritten presentation inscriptions by Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Albert Schweitzer, to members of the Dayan family. Gabon, 1961.
Six paper items with presentation inscriptions by Albert Schweitzer (Handwritten in German), to Moshe, Ruth, Assaf (Assi) and Ehud (Udi) Dayan. All are signed by Schweitzer and dated January 3, 1961.
1-3. Three pictures of Albert Schweitzer sitting at his office desk. One picture inscribed to Ehud, another to Assaf, and a third to Moshe and Ruth Dayan. [3] ff., 10X14.5 cm. Good Condition. Stains (many stains to one picture). Minor tear to one picture. 4. Picture of islands in the Ogooué river, Gabon, with a long inscription handwritten by Schweitzer. According to the inscription, the picture depicts the place in which Schweitzer first formulated the idea of "reverence for life" ("Ehrfurcht vor dem Leben"), which became his life philosophy. At the bottom of the page, a short, handwritten presentation inscription to Moshe and Ruth Dayan. 15X21 cm. Good condition. Stains (mostly to verso). 5. "Plan of the Hospital of Dr. Albert Schweitzer at Lambarene"; with a legend. Handwritten presentation inscription to Moshe and Ruth Dayan above the legend. Approx. 30X23.5 cm. Fair condition. Stains. Creases and fold lines. Tears to edges (some open). 6. Hopital du Docteur Albert Schweitzer. Illustration of the hospital founded by Schweitzer in Lambaréné, Gabon, with a legend in French. Presentation inscription to Moshe and Ruth Dayan. Approx. 21X30 cm. Good condition. Stains. Horizontal fold line and minor creases. Few minor tears to edges.
Enclosed: two large photographs of Albert Schweitzer (one damaged, with creases, closed and open tears).
Albert Schweitzer (1875-1965), physician, philosopher, and musician; native of Alsace, then part of the German Empire. Schweitzer was awarded the 1952 Nobel Peace Prize for his philosophical teachings, exemplified by the idea of "reverence for life" (German: "Ehrfurcht vor dem Leben"), an ethical stance which emphasizes the intrinsic value and sanctity of life itself, be it human lives, animal lives or nature as such. Schweitzer made a name for himself as a theologian and an organ player; at the age of 30 he began studying medicine, with the intention of engaging in humanitarian aid work in Africa. In 1913, Schweitzer and his wife, Helene Bresslau Schweitzer, established a hospital in Lambaréné, Gabon, situated on the banks of the Ogooué river, then under French colonial rule, where he worked intermittently for many years. The hospital served the local population; its funding came from Schweitzer and from donations he raised in America and Europe. The money awarded to Schweitzer by the Norwegian Nobel Committee was used to establish a Leper colony in the vicinity of the hospital. In 1960 Ruth Dayan visited Schweitzer in the Lambaréné hospital, where she spent about four weeks, alongside her friend, Clara Urquhart. Urquhart was a friend of the 85 years old Schweitzer, and regularly visited him in his hospital, taking care of his correspondence, and busying herself with translating his writings to English. Dayan spent her time in the hospital volunteering in the various hospital wards, befriending the doctors and nurses. She was deeply impressed with Schweitzer, whom she perceived as a person strictly abiding by his own creed of "reverence to life". She dedicated an entire chapter of her autobiography to her time in Lambaréné and her impressions of the doctor, his philosophy, and his work.
Provenance: Estate of Ruth Dayan.
Category
Items from the Estate of Ruth Dayan
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $300
Unsold
Seven books presented to Moshe Dayan, inscribed to him by the photographer and archaeologist Beno Rothenberg, the journalist and writer Kalman Katzenelson, the orientalist and writer Shmuel Segev (Sabag) and others. Hebrew and English.
1. The Story of the Arab Legion, by John Bagot Glubb. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1948. Presentation inscription (English) to Moshe Dayan (unidentified signatory). 2. The Army of Israel, by Moshe Perlman. New York: Philosophical Library, 1950. Inscribed by the author (in Hebrew): "To Moshe Dayan with friendship, Moish Perlman ('Lay not the sin upon me' for the book – nor for page 40)" [referring to Dayan's portrait, featured on p. 40]. 3. "Nahalat Jabotinsky, The History of the Settlements of Betar" (Hebrew), by Yeshayahu Mahanai. Tel-Aviv: The Cooperative Center for the Settlements of the Cherut-Betar Movement, [1952]. Inscribed by the author: "To Moshe Dayan, the Minister of Agriculture, in recognition of your special help to one of the 'attempts at easy Zionism'…" (Hebrew). 4. "Behind the Curtain, Iraqi Parliamentary Commission on the War against Israel" (Hebrew), translated by S. Sabag [Shmuel Segev]. Tel-Aviv: Ma'arachot, 1954. The book was presented to Moshe Dayan by the Ma'arachot press. 5. "Three Arrows and a Spade, the Campaigns of the Negev and the Efforts to Revive It", by Shlomo Tanai. Tel Aviv and Jerusalem: Sifrei Gadish, and Kiryat Sefer, 1955. Inscribed by the author: "To lieutenant general Moshe Dayan, with true appreciation" (Hebrew). 6. "The Crisis of Modern Hebrew" (Hebrew), by K. [Kalman] Katznelson. Tel-Aviv: Anach, 1960. Enclosed: a short, typescript letter signed by the author: "To lieutenant general M. Dayan… following your words about the Israeli youth, I present you with my book 'The Crisis of Modern Hebrew'…" (Hebrew). 7. The Story of Jerusalem, a Pictorial Report (Hebrew), edited by Beno Rothenberg. Am Oved, 1967. Inscribed by Rothenberg to Dayan.
Size and condition vary.
Provenance: Estate of Ruth Dayan.
Category
Items from the Estate of Ruth Dayan
Catalogue