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"Mikraot"- Berlin 1936 - from the last Hebrew publications printed in Berlin under Nazi rule

Opening price: $120

Commission: 22%

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09.14.2022 07:00pm

"Mikraot" - "Readings" - Reading chapters for apprentices and schools. Taken from the "Hebrew Supplement" of the Yudisha Rundshaw, 1935 - 1936, edited by Dr. S. Kalko. Siegfried Scholem's printing house, Berlin, 1936 - from the last Hebrew publications published in Berlin under Nazi rule.

Dotted reading passages for youth dealing with the heroes of Hebrew culture, settlement, Judaism, the immigration from Germany to the Land of Israel, and more. For example, an article about the Hebrew class for German immigrants founded in Jerusalem, "Pioneer youth from Germany is coming!" - "A few days ago over eighty boys and girls from Germany came on one ship - The young pioneer and the youth organizations. The majority came to Tel Hai...", An article dealing with the numbers of immigrants from Germany to Eretz Israel in 1933 - 1934 and the percentages of the immigrants from Germany to their various occupationsthere, How many are ready to immigrate to Israel? " - Numerical data on behalf of the Jewish Agency department on the number of training groups in various countries in preparation for their immigration to the Land of Israel. Also appears a section about the establishment of a central mediation office between the Israel children and the children of the diaspora at the initiative of KKL-Junk, an article about ancient manuscripts that were transferred from Cairo to Eretz Israel, and more.

The booklet, which was intended as mentioned for the youth, integrated the Zionist idea into the study of reading. The courage of the publisher and the printer are clearly visible. The booklet was printed in Berlin three years after a public book burning was held on May 10, 1933 in Berlin's Babel Square, where writings by Jewish writers were set on fire. In September 1933, the government established a new culture department, which concentrated the fields of culture. This was after the "Nuremberg Laws" had already been enacted on September 15, 1935, according to which the citizenship of the Jews in Germany was completely canceled at a time when masses of Jews received dismissal letters from the newspaper systems, from the hospitals, from the government, from the universities, from the orchestras and from other workplaces, and the persecution of the Jews was at its peak. In light of this, one must understand the many passages in the booklet that deal with immediate immigration to Israel.

48 p. Good condition.

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95. "Mikraot"- Berlin 1936 - from the last Hebrew publications printed in Berlin under Nazi rule