Online Auction - Israeli Culture of the 60s, 70s and 80s
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Online Auction - Israeli Culture of the 60s, 70s and 80s
June 22, 2016
Opening: $200
Sold for: $250
Including buyer's premium
Album featuring 31 photos of various facilities run by the Association for the Wellbeing of Israel's Soldiers in Tel Aviv. Photographer not credited.
The large Beit HaChayal auditorium on Weitzman Street was yet to be constructed, and the album features a photo of the lot where construction was to take place. (The building was completed in 1963.)
The album features large, professional photos of various facilities, such as a soldiers' restaurant, a sleep-in for soldiers, a club, a buffet, etc. The photos feature the buildings' fronts as well as libraries, rooms, a recreation spot, a kitchen and a bakery, a bus stop and a soldier's wedding attended by Prime Minister David Ben Gurion.
Black and white photos. Most photos have a glued caption. Album is Bezalel-style, with Skye binding and a copper relief.
Album size 36x23 cm. Photos are mostly around 18x13 cm. Very good condition. Minor creases.
The large Beit HaChayal auditorium on Weitzman Street was yet to be constructed, and the album features a photo of the lot where construction was to take place. (The building was completed in 1963.)
The album features large, professional photos of various facilities, such as a soldiers' restaurant, a sleep-in for soldiers, a club, a buffet, etc. The photos feature the buildings' fronts as well as libraries, rooms, a recreation spot, a kitchen and a bakery, a bus stop and a soldier's wedding attended by Prime Minister David Ben Gurion.
Black and white photos. Most photos have a glued caption. Album is Bezalel-style, with Skye binding and a copper relief.
Album size 36x23 cm. Photos are mostly around 18x13 cm. Very good condition. Minor creases.
Category
Politics and society
Catalogue
Online Auction - Israeli Culture of the 60s, 70s and 80s
June 22, 2016
Opening: $100
Sold for: $225
Including buyer's premium
Seven publications by and about Shurat HaMitnadvim, late 1950s. For a detailed list of the publications please see Hebrew description.
At first Shurat HaMitnadvim ("Line of Volunteers") was founded as a non-political charity based civic association, helping new immigrants and supporting social change, but soon focused on fighting corruption and nepotism, rampant in the Israeli political establishment.?Its founders included Elyakim HaEtzni (later a settler activist and MK), Hanan Rapopport, Yeshayahu Leibowitz, future president Ephraim Katzir, future MK and minister Amnon Rubinstein, and poet Yitzhak Shalev (father of writers Meir Shalev and Zruya Shalev).
In 1955 the association published a booklet titled Sakana Orevet MiBifnim (Danger Lurks from Within), accusing David Ben-Gurion's son, Amos Ben-Gurion, who served as deputy police commissioner, of ordering to halt a criminal investigation involving his friend Shayke Yarkoni, husband of popular singer Yaffa Yarkoni. The accusation was that Yarkoni and his associates used Jewish Agency funds in a scam allowing them to pocket huge sums by inflating costs of tourism equipment.
Amos Ben-Gurion sued Shurat HaMitnadvim for libel; Shmuel Tamir, an attorney at the Kastner trial, represented the association. Police commissioner Yeheskel Sahar was proven to have given a false testimony, but still the court ruled in favor of Ben-Gurion, ordering the association to pay an unprecedented sum in reparations. This, in turn, led to the huge crises in the association and the halting of most its activities, while the appeal was being heard in the Supreme Court.?The Supreme Court accepted most of the association's claims, and drastically cut the amount of reparations - ordering Ben-Gurion to return the sums already paid with interest. The Justices slammed Ben-Gurion and Sahar, as well as the judges of the District Court. Sahar was charged and found guilty for perjury.
Various conditions. General condition: good.
At first Shurat HaMitnadvim ("Line of Volunteers") was founded as a non-political charity based civic association, helping new immigrants and supporting social change, but soon focused on fighting corruption and nepotism, rampant in the Israeli political establishment.?Its founders included Elyakim HaEtzni (later a settler activist and MK), Hanan Rapopport, Yeshayahu Leibowitz, future president Ephraim Katzir, future MK and minister Amnon Rubinstein, and poet Yitzhak Shalev (father of writers Meir Shalev and Zruya Shalev).
In 1955 the association published a booklet titled Sakana Orevet MiBifnim (Danger Lurks from Within), accusing David Ben-Gurion's son, Amos Ben-Gurion, who served as deputy police commissioner, of ordering to halt a criminal investigation involving his friend Shayke Yarkoni, husband of popular singer Yaffa Yarkoni. The accusation was that Yarkoni and his associates used Jewish Agency funds in a scam allowing them to pocket huge sums by inflating costs of tourism equipment.
Amos Ben-Gurion sued Shurat HaMitnadvim for libel; Shmuel Tamir, an attorney at the Kastner trial, represented the association. Police commissioner Yeheskel Sahar was proven to have given a false testimony, but still the court ruled in favor of Ben-Gurion, ordering the association to pay an unprecedented sum in reparations. This, in turn, led to the huge crises in the association and the halting of most its activities, while the appeal was being heard in the Supreme Court.?The Supreme Court accepted most of the association's claims, and drastically cut the amount of reparations - ordering Ben-Gurion to return the sums already paid with interest. The Justices slammed Ben-Gurion and Sahar, as well as the judges of the District Court. Sahar was charged and found guilty for perjury.
Various conditions. General condition: good.
Category
Politics and society
Catalogue
Online Auction - Israeli Culture of the 60s, 70s and 80s
June 22, 2016
Opening: $150
Unsold
The original document of a petition to the High Court of Justice by Reuven (Romek) Greenberg, against Israeli chiefs of police, the Minister of Police, the Prime Minister, judges and others, on the grounds of persecution, staging criminal lawsuits, discrimination, slander and more.
Greenberg claimed that being a Lehi member, his activity against the Mapai government and the corruption of the police caused him to be unfairly accused of robbery, founding an underground movement, threats, fraud, interference with an investigation and attempting to influence witnesses, etc. 78 pages with copies of documents are added to the 19 page statement of claim.
The copy includes a circular notice from 1963 from an organization named "Keren Haadam - Igud Bnei Adam LeMaan HaAdam," with this particular letter addressed to Yitzhak Rafael, deputy Health Minister at the time. The letter calls on its readers to "read through these 99 pages in your hands… this isn't the story of Romek but the unlikely story of today's reality here and now… Romek's High Court of Justice documents are a stunning indictment against the way law and order are run in this country… this is a mine under our very feet…"
Reuven (Romek) Greenberg was a Lehi member active in the occupation of Dir Yassin, and was the one who placed a flag of Israel on the home of the village's Mukhtar. Romek was among those who assisted the escape of Geulah Cohen from British jail, and helped the assassins of Swedish Count Folke Bernadotte escape to Tel Aviv. Greenberg defended the Arabs of Abu Gosh after the 1948 war, supported Malchiel Gruenwald during the Kastner Trial and was involved in the activities of "Shurat HaMitnadvim," (see previous item) that was active in exposing corruption.
33X21 cm. Good condition, wear, rusted staples and rust marks from an old paper clip. Library ink stamps in several places.
Greenberg claimed that being a Lehi member, his activity against the Mapai government and the corruption of the police caused him to be unfairly accused of robbery, founding an underground movement, threats, fraud, interference with an investigation and attempting to influence witnesses, etc. 78 pages with copies of documents are added to the 19 page statement of claim.
The copy includes a circular notice from 1963 from an organization named "Keren Haadam - Igud Bnei Adam LeMaan HaAdam," with this particular letter addressed to Yitzhak Rafael, deputy Health Minister at the time. The letter calls on its readers to "read through these 99 pages in your hands… this isn't the story of Romek but the unlikely story of today's reality here and now… Romek's High Court of Justice documents are a stunning indictment against the way law and order are run in this country… this is a mine under our very feet…"
Reuven (Romek) Greenberg was a Lehi member active in the occupation of Dir Yassin, and was the one who placed a flag of Israel on the home of the village's Mukhtar. Romek was among those who assisted the escape of Geulah Cohen from British jail, and helped the assassins of Swedish Count Folke Bernadotte escape to Tel Aviv. Greenberg defended the Arabs of Abu Gosh after the 1948 war, supported Malchiel Gruenwald during the Kastner Trial and was involved in the activities of "Shurat HaMitnadvim," (see previous item) that was active in exposing corruption.
33X21 cm. Good condition, wear, rusted staples and rust marks from an old paper clip. Library ink stamps in several places.
Category
Politics and society
Catalogue
Online Auction - Israeli Culture of the 60s, 70s and 80s
June 22, 2016
Opening: $100
Sold for: $150
Including buyer's premium
A collection of seven items related to the poor quarters and suburbs of Tel Aviv
Five items are related to the struggle of the Tel Aviv-Jaffa Poor Quarters Committees to receive "a flat for a flat", in all "Renewal Project" and "city development" plans. The items include an 8-page booklet titled "the Struggle of the Poor Quarters of Tel Aviv-Jaffa", and a flier by "Neighborhoods and Suburbs Union," affiliated to Shinui party, whose candidate was Rafael Halperin (formerly winner of Mr. Israel body-building contest, who later became religious and founded the successful Optika Halperin chain). Several of the items are dated, 1962-1965.
Also in this lot - a booklet published by the Ministry of Labor and the Jewish Agency titled "Liquidating the Wooden Housings" "a plan to house dwellers of temporary wooden housings and former British Army camps…" The colorful, illustrated booklet was probably published in 1957 or 1958; a single page, published even earlier by "the Society of Dwellers of Tent and Wooden Housingsin Tel Aviv", titled "Payment Terms for the Lots." No date, but the currency is Egyptian Piasters, used in Palestine until 1927.
Various sizes and conditions. General condition: good.
Five items are related to the struggle of the Tel Aviv-Jaffa Poor Quarters Committees to receive "a flat for a flat", in all "Renewal Project" and "city development" plans. The items include an 8-page booklet titled "the Struggle of the Poor Quarters of Tel Aviv-Jaffa", and a flier by "Neighborhoods and Suburbs Union," affiliated to Shinui party, whose candidate was Rafael Halperin (formerly winner of Mr. Israel body-building contest, who later became religious and founded the successful Optika Halperin chain). Several of the items are dated, 1962-1965.
Also in this lot - a booklet published by the Ministry of Labor and the Jewish Agency titled "Liquidating the Wooden Housings" "a plan to house dwellers of temporary wooden housings and former British Army camps…" The colorful, illustrated booklet was probably published in 1957 or 1958; a single page, published even earlier by "the Society of Dwellers of Tent and Wooden Housingsin Tel Aviv", titled "Payment Terms for the Lots." No date, but the currency is Egyptian Piasters, used in Palestine until 1927.
Various sizes and conditions. General condition: good.
Category
Politics and society
Catalogue
Online Auction - Israeli Culture of the 60s, 70s and 80s
June 22, 2016
Opening: $100
Unsold
Abie Nathan election poster for the Sixth Knesset election, 1965. Nathan founded a party called Ness (Miracle), whose platform dealt with the need for peace with Arab states. He received only some 2,000 votes, far below the electoral threshold. Three months later, Nathan took off to Egypt in his famous flight for peace.
"The best to the Knesset! Abie Nathan - the fighting pilot willing to fight for peace. Vote Ness, Abie Nathan's party - the only individual party! Put Ness in the Knesset!"
69X49 cm. Very good condition. Restored flaw. The poster is linen-backed for display and preservation.
"The best to the Knesset! Abie Nathan - the fighting pilot willing to fight for peace. Vote Ness, Abie Nathan's party - the only individual party! Put Ness in the Knesset!"
69X49 cm. Very good condition. Restored flaw. The poster is linen-backed for display and preservation.
Category
Politics and society
Catalogue
Online Auction - Israeli Culture of the 60s, 70s and 80s
June 22, 2016
Opening: $150
Sold for: $688
Including buyer's premium
The iconic photo of Israeli paratroopers at the Western Wall immediately after its conquest, taken by David Rubinger on June 7th, 1967. Pen signature by Rubinger on top right corner.
The photo features three paratroopers from the 66th regiment (Haim Oshri, Yitzhak Yifat and Zion Carasanty), looking at the Western Wall, moments after it was conquered.
20X25 cm. Fair condition. Creases and folding lines, slight tear. Tack holes on margins, loss in two corners without damage to photo.
The photo features three paratroopers from the 66th regiment (Haim Oshri, Yitzhak Yifat and Zion Carasanty), looking at the Western Wall, moments after it was conquered.
20X25 cm. Fair condition. Creases and folding lines, slight tear. Tack holes on margins, loss in two corners without damage to photo.
Category
Politics and society
Catalogue
Online Auction - Israeli Culture of the 60s, 70s and 80s
June 22, 2016
Opening: $300
Sold for: $400
Including buyer's premium
Handwritten notes by Oded Kapelyuk, IDF Radio correspondent who accompanied Arik Sharon on the southern front during the Six-Day War. Among others, Kapelyuk drove in Sharon's command car for three days during the Um Katef (Abu Ageila) battle.
* Eighteen page handwritten article, describing the days he spent with Sharon, the Um Katef battle moves, and Sharon's personality, that impressed him deeply. At the conclusion of the article, Kapelyuk relates that after the victory "we sat next to an Egyptian trench. 'To tell the truth,' Arik said in a hoarse voice, almost in a whisper - my mood isn't good after seeing this 'valley of death'. An hour earlier he led the troops to victory… called on them vigorously to destroy the enemy. From that moment on I consider myself one of Arik Sharon's admirers." This article is presented in two versions - one consisting of 18 handwritten pages with many corrections, and a 14 page version, missing the first page, a carbon copy with corrections. The article was eventually published in Maariv, on June 23rd, 1967.
Also included are fragments of Kapelyuk's notes from the time: a three-page column titled "with Arik on the Half-Track - Armored Corps in the heart of the Sinai," three pages, numbered 4-6, with a different description of the same days with Sharon; and an extra page, (numbered 7), from another manuscript.
The Um Katef battle is considered one of the most brilliantly led battles in the IDF's history, and is studied in various military academies around the world. The Israeli victory in that battle deeply affected ensuing battles in the Sinai Peninsula in the following days.
* Six page article "Where the Hell is the Front?" describing how the war broke out when Kapelyuk was in a military infirmary, and was sent by the IDF Radio to bring stories and recordings from the front. Kapelyuk describes the drive south following Southern Front Commander, Major-General Yeshayahu Gavish's car, until, with the help of a friend, a major, he managed to get a seat in Gavish's car. The story was published in Davar, on June 21st, 1967 (enclosed).
* Over 40 pages of transcriptions of recording during the war, and several notes, including the transcription of an interview held in Tel HaShomer with regiment commander Natke Nir, who was severely injured in both legs in the battle of Battle of Um Katef, but recuperated and served as brigade commander in the 1973 War; an interview with Mordechai Tzipori, commander of the 14 brigade, about the Um Katef Battle; interview with armored corps regiment commander Sasson Yitzhaki, and more.
* Improvised sign reading "IDF Radio", drawn of the verso of a military form.
* Yom Kipur War - photocopy of the transcription of the "meeting of the chief of staff with military correspondents, on October 28th, 1973, at 15:00." Classified as 'secret,' second of three copies. According to the text, this was the first meeting of the chief of staff with military reporters since the end of the war. Among the journalists: Zeev Shif, Eitan Haber, Nachman Shai. The meeting was held a week after the start of the Geneva Conference, and ten days after the Agranat Commission was declared. (See next item).
* Handwritten materials dealing with the period following the 1973 War and the Agranat Commission - including transcriptions of talks with Abba Eban, Yigal Alon, Shimon Peres and others.
Various sizes and conditions. General condition: good.
* Eighteen page handwritten article, describing the days he spent with Sharon, the Um Katef battle moves, and Sharon's personality, that impressed him deeply. At the conclusion of the article, Kapelyuk relates that after the victory "we sat next to an Egyptian trench. 'To tell the truth,' Arik said in a hoarse voice, almost in a whisper - my mood isn't good after seeing this 'valley of death'. An hour earlier he led the troops to victory… called on them vigorously to destroy the enemy. From that moment on I consider myself one of Arik Sharon's admirers." This article is presented in two versions - one consisting of 18 handwritten pages with many corrections, and a 14 page version, missing the first page, a carbon copy with corrections. The article was eventually published in Maariv, on June 23rd, 1967.
Also included are fragments of Kapelyuk's notes from the time: a three-page column titled "with Arik on the Half-Track - Armored Corps in the heart of the Sinai," three pages, numbered 4-6, with a different description of the same days with Sharon; and an extra page, (numbered 7), from another manuscript.
The Um Katef battle is considered one of the most brilliantly led battles in the IDF's history, and is studied in various military academies around the world. The Israeli victory in that battle deeply affected ensuing battles in the Sinai Peninsula in the following days.
* Six page article "Where the Hell is the Front?" describing how the war broke out when Kapelyuk was in a military infirmary, and was sent by the IDF Radio to bring stories and recordings from the front. Kapelyuk describes the drive south following Southern Front Commander, Major-General Yeshayahu Gavish's car, until, with the help of a friend, a major, he managed to get a seat in Gavish's car. The story was published in Davar, on June 21st, 1967 (enclosed).
* Over 40 pages of transcriptions of recording during the war, and several notes, including the transcription of an interview held in Tel HaShomer with regiment commander Natke Nir, who was severely injured in both legs in the battle of Battle of Um Katef, but recuperated and served as brigade commander in the 1973 War; an interview with Mordechai Tzipori, commander of the 14 brigade, about the Um Katef Battle; interview with armored corps regiment commander Sasson Yitzhaki, and more.
* Improvised sign reading "IDF Radio", drawn of the verso of a military form.
* Yom Kipur War - photocopy of the transcription of the "meeting of the chief of staff with military correspondents, on October 28th, 1973, at 15:00." Classified as 'secret,' second of three copies. According to the text, this was the first meeting of the chief of staff with military reporters since the end of the war. Among the journalists: Zeev Shif, Eitan Haber, Nachman Shai. The meeting was held a week after the start of the Geneva Conference, and ten days after the Agranat Commission was declared. (See next item).
* Handwritten materials dealing with the period following the 1973 War and the Agranat Commission - including transcriptions of talks with Abba Eban, Yigal Alon, Shimon Peres and others.
Various sizes and conditions. General condition: good.
Category
Politics and society
Catalogue
Online Auction - Israeli Culture of the 60s, 70s and 80s
June 22, 2016
Opening: $400
Sold for: $500
Including buyer's premium
Original copy of the first interim report of the Agranat Commision, titled "National Inquiry Commission - Yom Kippur War, Interim Report." 33 pages, dated April 1st, 1974. The five commission members' signatures appear in print.
The Commission recommended the resignation of Chief of Military Intelligence, Major General Eliyahu Zeira, charged Southern Command chief Shmuel Gonen (Gorodish) with failures, and found Chief of Staff David Elazar responsible for intelligence and operation failures before the war, which caused its sad results. Still, the Commission found nothing wrong with the conduct of Defense Minister Moshe Dayan, and praised the conduct of Prime Minister Golda Meir.
Following the interim report, Elazar resigned, Zeira and Gonen were dismissed and Meir resigned a week later, following sustained public pressure, despite the report's praise.
33 pages, attached with staples, with a blank white carton cover, no title. Pen marks on many of the pages. Library stamps.
The Commission recommended the resignation of Chief of Military Intelligence, Major General Eliyahu Zeira, charged Southern Command chief Shmuel Gonen (Gorodish) with failures, and found Chief of Staff David Elazar responsible for intelligence and operation failures before the war, which caused its sad results. Still, the Commission found nothing wrong with the conduct of Defense Minister Moshe Dayan, and praised the conduct of Prime Minister Golda Meir.
Following the interim report, Elazar resigned, Zeira and Gonen were dismissed and Meir resigned a week later, following sustained public pressure, despite the report's praise.
33 pages, attached with staples, with a blank white carton cover, no title. Pen marks on many of the pages. Library stamps.
Category
Politics and society
Catalogue
Online Auction - Israeli Culture of the 60s, 70s and 80s
June 22, 2016
Opening: $100
Sold for: $325
Including buyer's premium
Four Issues of a left-wing pamphlet published by the "Acting Committee of Students of the Faculty of Humanities, Tel Aviv University."
The issues, published between February 1974 and January 1975 feature articles dealing with the Yom Kipur War and the Agranat Commission, the Palestinian attack on civilians in Kiryat Shmona, and the urgent need to open dialogue with Palestinian representatives, as well as social and feminist critique, sketches, caricatures and more.
Editor: Ehud Ein Gil. Not in the National Library of Israel.
Three of the issues are 6 pages each, the fourth is a one-page issue, printed after the Kiryat Shmona attack. 46 cm. Good condition. First page of the first issue is damaged with minor text loss.
The issues, published between February 1974 and January 1975 feature articles dealing with the Yom Kipur War and the Agranat Commission, the Palestinian attack on civilians in Kiryat Shmona, and the urgent need to open dialogue with Palestinian representatives, as well as social and feminist critique, sketches, caricatures and more.
Editor: Ehud Ein Gil. Not in the National Library of Israel.
Three of the issues are 6 pages each, the fourth is a one-page issue, printed after the Kiryat Shmona attack. 46 cm. Good condition. First page of the first issue is damaged with minor text loss.
Category
Politics and society
Catalogue
Online Auction - Israeli Culture of the 60s, 70s and 80s
June 22, 2016
Opening: $80
Sold for: $100
Including buyer's premium
Seven photographs by David Rubinger of an improvised concert conducted by Zubin Mehta on the Israeli-Lebanese border, at the opening ceremony of the "Good Fence." The audience includes both Israeli and Lebanese citizens.
Photographer's stamp on the back of all seven photographs.
19X13 cm. Very Good condition.
Photographer's stamp on the back of all seven photographs.
19X13 cm. Very Good condition.
Category
Politics and society
Catalogue
Online Auction - Israeli Culture of the 60s, 70s and 80s
June 22, 2016
Opening: $150
Sold for: $188
Including buyer's premium
Four posters produced by "Shomer Achi Anochi", an organization active in the 1970s and 1980s for the right of Jews to leave the Soviet Union. The organization was headed by students of Rabbi Zvi Yehuda Kook, and took part in the struggle to free Refuseniks, focusing on Natan (Anatoly) Sharansky.
No date on posters. One of them declares: "A sixth of the People of Israel are in the Russian Prison," while the others announce activities for Soviet Jewry - gifts for Hanukkah, fruit for Tu Bishvat and sending Hebrew calendars. Various sizes.
Also included is a small sign "Let My People Go to Israel," as well as ten photos, size 13X18 cm, of a street stand for filling greeting cards to be sent to Jews in the Soviet Union. The photos are stamped on verso with photographer's stamp "Yisrael Sun."
Very good condition. Posters have folding lines and slight flaws, one of them has filing holes.
No date on posters. One of them declares: "A sixth of the People of Israel are in the Russian Prison," while the others announce activities for Soviet Jewry - gifts for Hanukkah, fruit for Tu Bishvat and sending Hebrew calendars. Various sizes.
Also included is a small sign "Let My People Go to Israel," as well as ten photos, size 13X18 cm, of a street stand for filling greeting cards to be sent to Jews in the Soviet Union. The photos are stamped on verso with photographer's stamp "Yisrael Sun."
Very good condition. Posters have folding lines and slight flaws, one of them has filing holes.
Category
Politics and society
Catalogue
Online Auction - Israeli Culture of the 60s, 70s and 80s
June 22, 2016
Opening: $200
Sold for: $275
Including buyer's premium
Four items related to the Israeli Black Panthers. Early 1970s.
1. Leaflet - "Wanted!" - featuring caricatures of Golda Meir, Moshe Dayan and Minister of Finance Pinchas Sapir. The leaflet declares that the three are wanted for "Violence against the Black Panthers… robbery of families with limited means and many children… slander of striking workers and incitement against them… misleading of the voters…"?"The wanted [criminals] serve as government ministers… one can see them in fancy restaurants, expensive hotels or driving in their government American cars… they forgot when they really worked at a real job… the expected punishment: removal from power and transformation into regular mortals, living on the wages of an agriculture worker, since each and every one of them takes pride in once being an agriculture worker."
25X34 cm. Folding lines, wear, slight foxing and tears.
2. Pashish, journal of the Black Panthers and "Yisrael HaShnia Movement," including stories, articles and photos, as well as a call to join the Black Panthers.
Probably from 1971. Despite announcing on the inner cover that this was a 'weekly,' it seems that this was the only issue ever published.
[12] pages. 24X17 cm. Good condition.
3. Leaflet, 1971, in which the Black Panthers call on Hebrew University students to attend an open discussion on questions of discrimination at the Wise Auditorium. 24x17 cm. Very good condition.
4. Two-sided leaflet, October 1973, featuring two speeches of MK Shalom Cohen (Haolam Hazeh), from the beginning of the 1973 War, following the cease-fire agreements. Cohen noted that while the state of Israel sent its children to fight to defend the borders, it continued to mistreat families with many children and limited means whose children were at the front. Very good condition.
1. Leaflet - "Wanted!" - featuring caricatures of Golda Meir, Moshe Dayan and Minister of Finance Pinchas Sapir. The leaflet declares that the three are wanted for "Violence against the Black Panthers… robbery of families with limited means and many children… slander of striking workers and incitement against them… misleading of the voters…"?"The wanted [criminals] serve as government ministers… one can see them in fancy restaurants, expensive hotels or driving in their government American cars… they forgot when they really worked at a real job… the expected punishment: removal from power and transformation into regular mortals, living on the wages of an agriculture worker, since each and every one of them takes pride in once being an agriculture worker."
25X34 cm. Folding lines, wear, slight foxing and tears.
2. Pashish, journal of the Black Panthers and "Yisrael HaShnia Movement," including stories, articles and photos, as well as a call to join the Black Panthers.
Probably from 1971. Despite announcing on the inner cover that this was a 'weekly,' it seems that this was the only issue ever published.
[12] pages. 24X17 cm. Good condition.
3. Leaflet, 1971, in which the Black Panthers call on Hebrew University students to attend an open discussion on questions of discrimination at the Wise Auditorium. 24x17 cm. Very good condition.
4. Two-sided leaflet, October 1973, featuring two speeches of MK Shalom Cohen (Haolam Hazeh), from the beginning of the 1973 War, following the cease-fire agreements. Cohen noted that while the state of Israel sent its children to fight to defend the borders, it continued to mistreat families with many children and limited means whose children were at the front. Very good condition.
Category
Politics and society
Catalogue