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Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $150
Unsold
Two booklets dealing with the Birobidzhan Jewish Autonomous Region. Moscow, 1936-1939. Yiddish and English.
1. Birobidzhan in 1935 un in 1936 Yohr [Birobidzhan in 1935 and 1936], by B.A. Trotsky. Moscow: "Emes", 1936. Yiddish.
Transcript of a lecture delivered at the "Gezerd" (Yiddish for OZET – the Society for Settling Toiling Jews on the Land in the Soviet Union) assembly on February 4, 1936. Includes a description of the actions and achievements at the Birobidzhan Jewish Autonomous Region during the years 1936-1939 in the fields of economics, agriculture, culture, immigration and transportation and much statistical data.
60, [3] pp. 17 cm. Good condition. The original cover is missing. The body of the booklet is detached. New leather binding and endpapers.
2. The Jewish Autonomous Region by David Bergelson. Moscow: Foreign Languages Publishing House, 1939. English.
Propaganda booklet by the playwright and writer David Bergelson (1884-1952) depicting the good conditions of the Jews of Birobidzhan under the rule of the Soviet Union. Accompanied by six photographs depicting farmers, governmental buildings and sites in Birobidzhan.
The logo of the USSR pavilion at the New York World's Fair (1939) – a worker holding a red star in his outstretched hand – appears on the front free endpaper (presumably, the booklet was distributed at the fair for propaganda purposes). With a map of Birobidzhan on the front cover.
Not in NLI.
47, [1] pp. 14 cm. Stains to cover. Bound in a new leather binding, with the original cover.
1. Birobidzhan in 1935 un in 1936 Yohr [Birobidzhan in 1935 and 1936], by B.A. Trotsky. Moscow: "Emes", 1936. Yiddish.
Transcript of a lecture delivered at the "Gezerd" (Yiddish for OZET – the Society for Settling Toiling Jews on the Land in the Soviet Union) assembly on February 4, 1936. Includes a description of the actions and achievements at the Birobidzhan Jewish Autonomous Region during the years 1936-1939 in the fields of economics, agriculture, culture, immigration and transportation and much statistical data.
60, [3] pp. 17 cm. Good condition. The original cover is missing. The body of the booklet is detached. New leather binding and endpapers.
2. The Jewish Autonomous Region by David Bergelson. Moscow: Foreign Languages Publishing House, 1939. English.
Propaganda booklet by the playwright and writer David Bergelson (1884-1952) depicting the good conditions of the Jews of Birobidzhan under the rule of the Soviet Union. Accompanied by six photographs depicting farmers, governmental buildings and sites in Birobidzhan.
The logo of the USSR pavilion at the New York World's Fair (1939) – a worker holding a red star in his outstretched hand – appears on the front free endpaper (presumably, the booklet was distributed at the fair for propaganda purposes). With a map of Birobidzhan on the front cover.
Not in NLI.
47, [1] pp. 14 cm. Stains to cover. Bound in a new leather binding, with the original cover.
Category
Autographs, Letters and Manuscripts
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $100
Sold for: $325
Including buyer's premium
Esther Scroll with illustrations by Otto [Nathan] Geismar. Berlin: Dr. H. Löwenstein / M. Lessmann press, 1936.
Mounted unto Efalin paper, which allows for convenient rolling up, and housed in a matching cardboard case. A printed Hebrew inscription at the end of the text names the ritual scribe responsible for the calligraphy: "Manuscript by scribe Weissenberg."
Otto (Nathan) Geismar (1873-1957) was an art teacher at the Jewish community school in Berlin in the years 1904-36. In 1930, he was sent to Palestine on behalf of the community, and spent a number of months there. He emigrated to Brazil along with his wife in 1939. Following the Second World War, the couple moved to England.
Height: 20 cm. Overall good condition. Height of case: 22.5 cm.
Provenance: The Rimon Family Collection.
Mounted unto Efalin paper, which allows for convenient rolling up, and housed in a matching cardboard case. A printed Hebrew inscription at the end of the text names the ritual scribe responsible for the calligraphy: "Manuscript by scribe Weissenberg."
Otto (Nathan) Geismar (1873-1957) was an art teacher at the Jewish community school in Berlin in the years 1904-36. In 1930, he was sent to Palestine on behalf of the community, and spent a number of months there. He emigrated to Brazil along with his wife in 1939. Following the Second World War, the couple moved to England.
Height: 20 cm. Overall good condition. Height of case: 22.5 cm.
Provenance: The Rimon Family Collection.
Category
Autographs, Letters and Manuscripts
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $120
Sold for: $150
Including buyer's premium
Four non-traditional Passover Haggadahs:
1. Passover Haggadah, Kevutzat Hachugim, Kibbutz Hamadia, 5703 [1943].
Accompanied by illustrations (linocuts). [24] pp. Good condition.
2. Passover Haggadah. "Tzurim" Class, "HaHoresh" Chapter of the Scouts ["Hatzofim"] youth movement. Date and place not indicated.
Humorous Haggadah, featuring excerpts from the traditional Haggadah alongside comedic variations on the traditional text, reflecting the atmosphere experienced by members of the Scouts youth movement: "To all class counselors in the city, the ‘Tzurim' class's counselor is planting grass in [Kibbutz] Gonen"; "We were slaves to Naava in the ‘HaHoresh' Chapter, and she delivered us from there to [Kibbutz] Mishmar HaSharon. And her time expired, and she left for Holland and abandoned us." Noted at the bottom of the last page of the Haggadah: "Published with the generous assistance of the Youth and Pioneering Department of the Jewish Agency and the Scouts Secretariat, thank you. With assistance from Hagi Shenhar, Gonen."
[1], 25 pp. Mimeographed on dry and brittle paper. Tears to edges. Stains.
3. Passover Haggadah. Print location not indicated, [after 1948, late 1940s / early 1950s].
Nathan Alterman's poem "Magash HaKesef" ("The Silver Platter") appears in the final pages alongside the first part of Israel's Declaration of Independence.
[11] pp. Good condition. Stains.
4. [Passover Haggadah for children]. Print location and date not indicated [1940s / 1950s].
Contains mostly songs connected to the Passover holiday.
[6] pp. Good-fair condition. May be incomplete.
Size and condition vary.
1. Passover Haggadah, Kevutzat Hachugim, Kibbutz Hamadia, 5703 [1943].
Accompanied by illustrations (linocuts). [24] pp. Good condition.
2. Passover Haggadah. "Tzurim" Class, "HaHoresh" Chapter of the Scouts ["Hatzofim"] youth movement. Date and place not indicated.
Humorous Haggadah, featuring excerpts from the traditional Haggadah alongside comedic variations on the traditional text, reflecting the atmosphere experienced by members of the Scouts youth movement: "To all class counselors in the city, the ‘Tzurim' class's counselor is planting grass in [Kibbutz] Gonen"; "We were slaves to Naava in the ‘HaHoresh' Chapter, and she delivered us from there to [Kibbutz] Mishmar HaSharon. And her time expired, and she left for Holland and abandoned us." Noted at the bottom of the last page of the Haggadah: "Published with the generous assistance of the Youth and Pioneering Department of the Jewish Agency and the Scouts Secretariat, thank you. With assistance from Hagi Shenhar, Gonen."
[1], 25 pp. Mimeographed on dry and brittle paper. Tears to edges. Stains.
3. Passover Haggadah. Print location not indicated, [after 1948, late 1940s / early 1950s].
Nathan Alterman's poem "Magash HaKesef" ("The Silver Platter") appears in the final pages alongside the first part of Israel's Declaration of Independence.
[11] pp. Good condition. Stains.
4. [Passover Haggadah for children]. Print location and date not indicated [1940s / 1950s].
Contains mostly songs connected to the Passover holiday.
[6] pp. Good-fair condition. May be incomplete.
Size and condition vary.
Category
Autographs, Letters and Manuscripts
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $100
Sold for: $125
Including buyer's premium
1. For Passover 1948, Chapters for Passover Parties (Hebrew). Non-traditional Haggadah. Illustrations: Aryeh Allweil. Tel Aviv: Y. Shlomi Press, 1948.
18 pp. [1] back cover, 23.5 cm. Stains. Minor blemishes.
2. Seder Pesach 1948. 1. Songs for the Haggadah. 2. Songs for group singing. [Palestine]: Culture Department for the Soldier, 1948.
[1] cover, 3, 5 ff., 21.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Many stains to cover. Some stains to leaves.
3. Selected Songs for a Sing-Along at the Headquarters Party on July 3, 1948 (Hebrew). [Tel Aviv]: Kiryati/Tarbut [The Headquarters of the Kiryati Brigade / culture], 1948. Not in NLI.
2 ff., 33 cm. Fair-poor condition. Much foxing. Tears to edges and fold lines.
4. Two single printed leaves with lyrics of songs such as "Shir HaNegev", "Shir HaChayal", "Shir Hapartisanim Hayehudim" and more. Place of printing and the year are not indicated.
18 pp. [1] back cover, 23.5 cm. Stains. Minor blemishes.
2. Seder Pesach 1948. 1. Songs for the Haggadah. 2. Songs for group singing. [Palestine]: Culture Department for the Soldier, 1948.
[1] cover, 3, 5 ff., 21.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Many stains to cover. Some stains to leaves.
3. Selected Songs for a Sing-Along at the Headquarters Party on July 3, 1948 (Hebrew). [Tel Aviv]: Kiryati/Tarbut [The Headquarters of the Kiryati Brigade / culture], 1948. Not in NLI.
2 ff., 33 cm. Fair-poor condition. Much foxing. Tears to edges and fold lines.
4. Two single printed leaves with lyrics of songs such as "Shir HaNegev", "Shir HaChayal", "Shir Hapartisanim Hayehudim" and more. Place of printing and the year are not indicated.
Category
Autographs, Letters and Manuscripts
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $100
Sold for: $125
Including buyer's premium
A Special Passover Seder, Prisoners of Zion movement from the Soviet Union, April 11, 1974. Recorded by Rekord Recording Services Ltd., Tel Aviv, 1974.
Transcript (mimeographed typescript) of "A Special Passover Seder," organized by the Prisoners of Zion movement from the Soviet Union. The seder took place in the lobby of Tel Aviv City Hall and was conducted by Rabbi Yisrael Meir Lau (then rabbi of Tel Aviv's northern neighborhoods). Participants included members and board members of the movement, Tel Aviv Mayor Shlomo Lahat, singer Ofira Gluska (who sang "O Zion, will you not ask after the welfare of your prisoners"), Yehezkel Pularevitch, Menahem Klionsky, Barbara Oberman, Yehoshua Gilboa, and others.
A year earlier, in 1973, a Passover seder in a similar vein was held out in the open in Malkhei Yisrael (today Yitzhak Rabin) Square, the plaza in front of City Hall, but rainy weather forced the ceremony indoors in 1974.
[1] Printed cover, 16 ff., 31.5 cm. Good overall condition. Creases and folds to corners. Minute staple holes.
Not in OCLC. Bibliographically unlisted.
Transcript (mimeographed typescript) of "A Special Passover Seder," organized by the Prisoners of Zion movement from the Soviet Union. The seder took place in the lobby of Tel Aviv City Hall and was conducted by Rabbi Yisrael Meir Lau (then rabbi of Tel Aviv's northern neighborhoods). Participants included members and board members of the movement, Tel Aviv Mayor Shlomo Lahat, singer Ofira Gluska (who sang "O Zion, will you not ask after the welfare of your prisoners"), Yehezkel Pularevitch, Menahem Klionsky, Barbara Oberman, Yehoshua Gilboa, and others.
A year earlier, in 1973, a Passover seder in a similar vein was held out in the open in Malkhei Yisrael (today Yitzhak Rabin) Square, the plaza in front of City Hall, but rainy weather forced the ceremony indoors in 1974.
[1] Printed cover, 16 ff., 31.5 cm. Good overall condition. Creases and folds to corners. Minute staple holes.
Not in OCLC. Bibliographically unlisted.
Category
Autographs, Letters and Manuscripts
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $300
Sold for: $450
Including buyer's premium
Die Haggadah von Sarajevo, Eine spanisch-jüdische Bilderhandschrift des Mittelalters, von Dav. Heinr. Müller und Julius v. Schlosser. Vienna: Alfred Hölder, 1898. First volume: Textband [text volume], Second volume: Tafelband [plate volume]. German.
A first, comprehensive research on the Sarajevo Haggadah manuscript, created in Spain in the 14th century.
In 1894, the manuscript was sold to the National Museum of Bosnia in Sarajevo. The present research, by the liturgy scholar David Zvi (Heinrich) Müller and art historian Julius von Schlosser (with an appendix by Prf. David Kauffman) was published four years later.
Fine copy, with the original covers, bound in thick leather.
Text volume: 316 pp. XXXVIII plates; Plate volume: [2] pp. 35 plates, 28 cm. Good condition. Stains. Minor blemishes and stains to covers. Owner's stamps. Thick leather bindings.
A first, comprehensive research on the Sarajevo Haggadah manuscript, created in Spain in the 14th century.
In 1894, the manuscript was sold to the National Museum of Bosnia in Sarajevo. The present research, by the liturgy scholar David Zvi (Heinrich) Müller and art historian Julius von Schlosser (with an appendix by Prf. David Kauffman) was published four years later.
Fine copy, with the original covers, bound in thick leather.
Text volume: 316 pp. XXXVIII plates; Plate volume: [2] pp. 35 plates, 28 cm. Good condition. Stains. Minor blemishes and stains to covers. Owner's stamps. Thick leather bindings.
Category
Autographs, Letters and Manuscripts
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $300
Sold for: $750
Including buyer's premium
A letter by Moses Montefiore, with his signature, addressed to Rabbi Shmuel Salant. Ramsgate, England, November 1882.
A letter on Montefoire's stationery, discussing the transfer of a payment bill for 4.10 pound sterling, from the philanthropist Yaakov Shlomo Rothschild "residing in the community of San Francisco".
The letter is written in Hebrew (by a secretary), and is signed by Montefiore in English.
[1] f., 19.5 cm. good condition. The addressee's name was deleted with black ink.
A letter on Montefoire's stationery, discussing the transfer of a payment bill for 4.10 pound sterling, from the philanthropist Yaakov Shlomo Rothschild "residing in the community of San Francisco".
The letter is written in Hebrew (by a secretary), and is signed by Montefiore in English.
[1] f., 19.5 cm. good condition. The addressee's name was deleted with black ink.
Category
Autographs, Letters and Manuscripts
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $200
Unsold
Postcard bearing the signature of Eliezer Ben Yehuda. Jerusalem, December 2, 1902.
This postcard, written in "Rashi" script, is addressed to "Mr. G. Weil" [Gutthold Weil] in Berlin. It involves payment of the subscription fee for "HaHashkafa" – the periodical published by Eliezer Ben Yehuda: "The sum of seven and twenty franks. We hope he will send it as soon as possible and we shall thank him." Eliezer Ben Yehuda's signature appears at the bottom of the postcard, along with the words "on behalf of the editorial board," and an inked stamp of the "‘Hashkafa' Editorial Board, E. Ben Yehuda, Editor, Jerusalem."
14X9 cm. Good condition. Stains. Minor creases.
This postcard, written in "Rashi" script, is addressed to "Mr. G. Weil" [Gutthold Weil] in Berlin. It involves payment of the subscription fee for "HaHashkafa" – the periodical published by Eliezer Ben Yehuda: "The sum of seven and twenty franks. We hope he will send it as soon as possible and we shall thank him." Eliezer Ben Yehuda's signature appears at the bottom of the postcard, along with the words "on behalf of the editorial board," and an inked stamp of the "‘Hashkafa' Editorial Board, E. Ben Yehuda, Editor, Jerusalem."
14X9 cm. Good condition. Stains. Minor creases.
Category
Autographs, Letters and Manuscripts
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $300
Unsold
Postcard sent by the couple Eliezer and Hemda Ben Yehuda (handwritten by Eliezer Ben Yehuda) to David and Zipporah Judilowitz in Rishon LeZion, on the occasion of the birth of the latter couple's sixth child. "Jerusalem, 24 Tishrei [Year] 1833 of our Exile" [October 1903].
"Our friends David and Zipporah, congratulations and mazal tov [on the occasion of] the sixth child born to you, hooray! If she gives birth to an additional four she will be eligible for a prize according to the laws of France, and seeing as we are an established people, we shall know how to recognize such a blessed mother […] Once again: Congratulations! E. and H. Ben Yehuda."
The letter's recipient, David Judilowitz (1863-1943), was Eliezer Ben Yehuda's protégé, an adherent of the "Bilu" movement, a teacher, and an author. He was one of the first educators in Rishon LeZion to conduct classroom studies in Hebrew, and accordingly he established a Hebrew-speaking kindergarten, the town's first. Among his other noteworthy accomplishments, he authored, edited, and translated books, and served as the editor of the very first Hebrew-language children's journal, "Olam Katan" ("Small World"). He and his wife Tzipporah would eventually raise a total of eight children.
9X14 cm. Good condition. Minor stains and ink smudges.
"Our friends David and Zipporah, congratulations and mazal tov [on the occasion of] the sixth child born to you, hooray! If she gives birth to an additional four she will be eligible for a prize according to the laws of France, and seeing as we are an established people, we shall know how to recognize such a blessed mother […] Once again: Congratulations! E. and H. Ben Yehuda."
The letter's recipient, David Judilowitz (1863-1943), was Eliezer Ben Yehuda's protégé, an adherent of the "Bilu" movement, a teacher, and an author. He was one of the first educators in Rishon LeZion to conduct classroom studies in Hebrew, and accordingly he established a Hebrew-speaking kindergarten, the town's first. Among his other noteworthy accomplishments, he authored, edited, and translated books, and served as the editor of the very first Hebrew-language children's journal, "Olam Katan" ("Small World"). He and his wife Tzipporah would eventually raise a total of eight children.
9X14 cm. Good condition. Minor stains and ink smudges.
Category
Autographs, Letters and Manuscripts
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $100
Unsold
A letter handwritten and signed by Judah Leon (Leib) Magnes. Hedelberg, September 14, 1902. German.
The letter was sent during Magnes' doctoral studies in Heidelberg (from August to December 1902). The addressee's name is not mentioned throughout the letter; its content, however, indicates that he was a member of the Zionist circles of Berlin and, presumably, an editor or journalist.
At the beginning of his letter, Magnes inquires about a leaflet that was published by his correspondent, titled "The Zionist Congress. He continues by telling his correspondent about his future plans: "Unfortunately, I must inform you that the New York Times is unhappy with my travelling east [i.e. to Eastern Europe]… instead of a journey to the East I might go on a short journey in Romania" (Hebrew). At the end, Magnes notes that he has enclosed with the letter 3.75 Mark, which he requests to give on his behalf to Rundschau (presumably, the Israelitische Rundschau periodical in Berlin, which two months earlier published a long article by Magnes about the Higher Institute for Jewish Studies in Berlin) and also asks his friend to give his regards to "Mr. Auerbach".
Judah Leon (Leib) Magnes (1877-1948), one of the prominent rabbis of Reform Judaism in the USA, a Zionist leader, chancellor of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (1925) and its first president (1935-1948). He was close to the Brit Shalom movement and its members – Gershom Scholem, Martin Buber and others. Magnes was born in Oakland, California, to a family that was affiliated with the Jewish Reform community. From his mother, who was of German origin, he acquired his fluent German. After he graduated from the University of Cincinnati and was ordained as a rabbi by the Hebrew Union College, he pursued his doctoral studies at the Berlin University (which he completed at the Department of Language Studies in the Heidelberg University) and at the same time also studied at the Higher Institute for Jewish Studies. In Berlin, he became familiar with the Zionist idea and in 1901 founded the "Agudah Leumit", a Zionist student union whose members included Max Schlesinger, Arthur Biram, Gotthold Weil and others.
[1] f., 22 cm. Good condition. Satins. Fold lines. Filing holes. Creases and small tears to edges.
The letter was sent during Magnes' doctoral studies in Heidelberg (from August to December 1902). The addressee's name is not mentioned throughout the letter; its content, however, indicates that he was a member of the Zionist circles of Berlin and, presumably, an editor or journalist.
At the beginning of his letter, Magnes inquires about a leaflet that was published by his correspondent, titled "The Zionist Congress. He continues by telling his correspondent about his future plans: "Unfortunately, I must inform you that the New York Times is unhappy with my travelling east [i.e. to Eastern Europe]… instead of a journey to the East I might go on a short journey in Romania" (Hebrew). At the end, Magnes notes that he has enclosed with the letter 3.75 Mark, which he requests to give on his behalf to Rundschau (presumably, the Israelitische Rundschau periodical in Berlin, which two months earlier published a long article by Magnes about the Higher Institute for Jewish Studies in Berlin) and also asks his friend to give his regards to "Mr. Auerbach".
Judah Leon (Leib) Magnes (1877-1948), one of the prominent rabbis of Reform Judaism in the USA, a Zionist leader, chancellor of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (1925) and its first president (1935-1948). He was close to the Brit Shalom movement and its members – Gershom Scholem, Martin Buber and others. Magnes was born in Oakland, California, to a family that was affiliated with the Jewish Reform community. From his mother, who was of German origin, he acquired his fluent German. After he graduated from the University of Cincinnati and was ordained as a rabbi by the Hebrew Union College, he pursued his doctoral studies at the Berlin University (which he completed at the Department of Language Studies in the Heidelberg University) and at the same time also studied at the Higher Institute for Jewish Studies. In Berlin, he became familiar with the Zionist idea and in 1901 founded the "Agudah Leumit", a Zionist student union whose members included Max Schlesinger, Arthur Biram, Gotthold Weil and others.
[1] f., 22 cm. Good condition. Satins. Fold lines. Filing holes. Creases and small tears to edges.
Category
Autographs, Letters and Manuscripts
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $300
Unsold
A letter by Menachem Ussishkin to Menachem Sheinkin. Typewritten on the official stationery of the Odessa Committee and hand-signed by Menachem Ussishkin. Odessa, January 22, 1908.
The Association of the Hebrew Gymnasium in Palestine was established by Menachem Sheinkin, the Odessa Committee representative in Jaffa, after his visit to the first location of the Hebrew Gymnasium – in the private and crowded apartment of the teacher Yehuda Leib Matmon. Immediately after the establishment of the Association, Sheinkin embarked on a fundraising campaign throughout Russia and managed to sell founding shares for 40,000 Rubles.
The letter reports payments made by nine share purchasers: Elchanan Leib Levinsky (25 Rubles, first payment); Dr. Shimshon Rosenbaum (925 Rubles, first payment); Dr. Nissan (Hacohen) Katznelson (100 Rubles); and others. "From the other subscribers we received nothing… this is the answer to his question about H.H. Tchelnov, B. Goldberg, Tiomkin" (Hebrew).
[1] f., approx. 26.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines and minor creases. Small tears to edges (mostly restored). Two filing holes restored with strips of paper.
The Association of the Hebrew Gymnasium in Palestine was established by Menachem Sheinkin, the Odessa Committee representative in Jaffa, after his visit to the first location of the Hebrew Gymnasium – in the private and crowded apartment of the teacher Yehuda Leib Matmon. Immediately after the establishment of the Association, Sheinkin embarked on a fundraising campaign throughout Russia and managed to sell founding shares for 40,000 Rubles.
The letter reports payments made by nine share purchasers: Elchanan Leib Levinsky (25 Rubles, first payment); Dr. Shimshon Rosenbaum (925 Rubles, first payment); Dr. Nissan (Hacohen) Katznelson (100 Rubles); and others. "From the other subscribers we received nothing… this is the answer to his question about H.H. Tchelnov, B. Goldberg, Tiomkin" (Hebrew).
[1] f., approx. 26.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines and minor creases. Small tears to edges (mostly restored). Two filing holes restored with strips of paper.
Category
Autographs, Letters and Manuscripts
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $250
Sold for: $313
Including buyer's premium
Handwritten letter by Jacob Israël de Haan, personally signed with his full signature, "Jacob Israël de Haan." Jerusalem, June 12, 1919. Dutch.
In this letter, addressed to a company dealing in diamonds, de Haan gives his personal recommendation to an individual named Simon Tal, and affirms that he is a dedicated Zionist.
Jacob Israël de Haan (1881-1924), Jewish jurist, journalist, and poet, born in the Netherlands. He immigrated to Palestine in 1919 with the hope of fulfilling a role in the Zionist movement. But after experiencing rejection at the hands of the circles and institutions he sought to associate with, he joined the ranks of the ultra-Orthodox (and anti-Zionist) "Edah Haredit" organization in Jerusalem, and began campaigning against the interests of the country's Zionist community. Among other things, he organized for an ultra-Orthodox delegation to meet with King Abdullah of Jordan. De Haan was consequently killed in what is thought to have been the first political assassination in modern Palestine.
[1] f. 25.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines. Tear (approx. 3 cm) to left edge. Few creases.
In this letter, addressed to a company dealing in diamonds, de Haan gives his personal recommendation to an individual named Simon Tal, and affirms that he is a dedicated Zionist.
Jacob Israël de Haan (1881-1924), Jewish jurist, journalist, and poet, born in the Netherlands. He immigrated to Palestine in 1919 with the hope of fulfilling a role in the Zionist movement. But after experiencing rejection at the hands of the circles and institutions he sought to associate with, he joined the ranks of the ultra-Orthodox (and anti-Zionist) "Edah Haredit" organization in Jerusalem, and began campaigning against the interests of the country's Zionist community. Among other things, he organized for an ultra-Orthodox delegation to meet with King Abdullah of Jordan. De Haan was consequently killed in what is thought to have been the first political assassination in modern Palestine.
[1] f. 25.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines. Tear (approx. 3 cm) to left edge. Few creases.
Category
Autographs, Letters and Manuscripts
Catalogue