16 033 résultats
No place, No Publisher, No Date. Comb binder; 4to. 12 pages. In English and Hebrew. Likeness of King on cover. OCLC lists no copies worldwide. Lower right-hand corner of front cover bent. Very good condition. (AM-3)
Softcover, 31 pages, 8vo. In German. SUBJECT (S) : Jews. OCLC lists 3 copies worldwide (Yale, Duke, Cornell) . Ex-library. Chipping and tears to edges of cover. Back cover missing. Sunning to cover. Otherwise, very good condition. (BIB-15-10)
8vo; Kiev: Kultur-lige, 1928.Cloth, 8vo, 23 cm, 69 pages. Includes fold-out "Tabele fun ortografishe forshlagn." Subject: Yiddish language -- Orthography and spelling. JTSA keeps their copy in their restricted collection. Paper browning with some damp stains, bound in later boards, with original paper covers intact. Good Condition. Scarce (heb-1-25)
Includes: Jack Wertheimer, "Amerikanisches Judentum in der Gegenwart." This copy warmly inscribed and dated on the cover by Wertheimer to Ismar Schorsh, then Chancellor of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America: "1/3/95 For Ismar--/Who, 24 years ago, urged me/ to read Graetz in the original /The rest is history./ Jack." Wertheimer is the leading historian of the Jewish Theological Seminary, authoring TRADITION RENEWED: A HISTORY OF THE JEWISH THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY OF AMERICA. (New York, 1997). JTSA, of course, figures prominently in Wertheimer's article in this issue, and is, of course, in German, the language in which Schorsh advised the young Wertheimer to read Graetz a wonderful JTSA association item. Very Good Condition. (MX-7-31dw)
Trading card, Very Small (slightly less than 2x1) . Dominion Athletic Stars Sports Card (Card Nr 14) from a series of 120 pictures of Canadian athletes which were given away in Dominion Chocolate Bars in the mid-1920s. This card features a photo on the front of the champion Toronto Y. W. H. A. Basketball Team, featuring 8 female team members in their YWHA jerseys, plus their 2 coaches. The Canadian Jewish Review of June 8, 1923, reported that at the Primrose Club last Tuesday, the Y. M. And Y. W. H. A. Of Toronto celebrated their victories in sports by tendering a banquet to the winning teams and presenting the cups and trophies to the successful players. The best feature of the evening was the presentation of the Griff Clark Trophy to the Y. W. H. A. Basket ball team, champions of the city. Text on reverse. Quite probably the only explicitly Jewish womens sports team featured on a mass-market trading card in the 1920s, and probably the first ever. Light wear, photo is clear, Good Condition. (women-4-13)
Period-style half leather and marbled boards, 12mo, 70 pages ; 20 cm. In Hebrew with German translation on opposite pages. Attractive American Haggadah from just before the Centennial. SUBJECT (S) : Seder -- Liturgy -- Texts. Judaism -- Liturgy Haggadah -- Texts. Haggadah. Toning and light wear to pages, period margin stamps on 2 pages, Very Good Condition. Attractive. (AMR-51-5)
1st edition. Period-style gilt tooled Morocco leather. 12mo, various pagination (aprox 475 pages total) . Singerman 1284 (listing only 1 copy anywhere) , Goldman 40. The first Ashkenazi machzor printed in America. Based upon the celebrated Wolf Heidenheim edition, Henry (Chaim) Frank of New York published in 1854 2 prayer-books for the Days of Awe: This volume for the New Year, as well as a volume for Yom Kipur. This enabled the newly rising community of German American Jews to conduct services according to their own custom, as opposed to that of the Sephardic rite. Frank went on in later years to issue other volumes for other Holidays, and reflecting the customs of the Polish Jews as well. OCLC lists only 2 copies of this volume anywhere (Columbia and Yale) . A set (New Year and Yom Kipur) with repairs sold at auction for over $17, 000 with commissions in 2012. No copies have appeared at auction since then. Faint blindstamps on title pages. Exquisite tooled binding, an absolutely stunning copy. (KH-9-9-KK)
Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. 160 pages. In Yiddish with Spanish title page. On the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Covers worn and detached but present. Internal pages in good condition. (HOLO2-10-12).
Paper wrappers; 8vo. 79 pages. Illustrated. OCLC lists 17 copies worldwi de. Excellent condition. (W-62)
Original Wraps. 8vo. 26 pages. 23 cm. First edition. 25 Hebrew songs for unison singing. Sabbath, Israel, fellowship. Unharmonized melodies with Hebrew (romanized) words; Hebrew words with English translation also printed as text. Subjects: Songs, Israeli. OCLC lists 11 copies. Light wear to wraps, otherwise fresh and clean. Very good condition. (MUSIC-2-39)
Paper-wrappers, 8vo, pages, in English, Originals, illustrated. Issues: May 12, 1981; June 23, 1983; February 1, 1984; June 26, 1984; December 05, 1984; November 25, 1985; December 18, 1986; March 16, 1999; December 12, 2000. SUBJECT (S) : auction --- catalog. Light wear, very good condition. (BIBLIOG-26-10)
1st edition. Original paper wrappers. 8vo. 72 pages, 23 cm. In English. Front wrapper is marked Confidential print. Early (1943) confidential internal discussion by the US congress of rescue of the Jews of Europe, as well of how to deal with refugees abroad, including whether to admit them to the United States and other topics concerning anti-semitism and Nazi abuses. SUBJECTS: World War, 1939-1945 -- Refugees. World War, 1939-1945 -- Civilian relief. Ex-library with usual, minimal markings. Edgewear to wrappers, zionist stamp, number penned on cover, tape repair to spine, Good Condition. Very important, a core Holocaust document. (YID-41-20A) xx
[GERMAN] [2 VOLUME SET] 16x22.5 CM. I+495+I+358 Pages. Hardcover. Band I+II: Cover slightly chaffed. Else in good condition
No Date [1934]. [2] typewritten pages, 30cm x 21 cm. 2-page membership list from the first full-year of Hitlers full power in Germany, showing approximately 75 current members with city and address. Agudath Israel was founded in Kattowitz, German Empire (now Katowice, Poland), in 1912, with the purpose of providing an umbrella organization for observant Jews who opposed the Zionist movement. In Erez Israel, Agudat Yisrael was established as a branch of this movement, to provide opposition to the organized Jewish community (the "Yishuv"). One of its most authoritative spokesmen against the formation of a Jewish State, the Dutch poet Jacob Israël de Haan, was assassinated by the Haganah in 1924. In the wake of the Holocaust, anti-Zionist rabbis who led Agudat Israel recognized the great utility of a Jewish state, and it became non-Zionist, rather than anti-Zionist. It did not actively participate in the creation of Israel, but it ceased its opposition to it. In 1933, it entered into an agreement with the Jewish Agency, according to which Agudat Yisrael would receive 6.5% of the immigration permits. Eventually, at the eve of the Israeli Declaration of Independence (1948), Agudat Yisrael yielded to pressure from the Zionist movement, and has been a participant in most governments since that time. age staining, few tears, very brittle. (Holo2-146-8)
The Central Information Bureau for Jewish War Sufferers in the Far East was founded in 1917 by The Hebrew Sheltering and Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS) to deal with the problems of refugees attempting to reach America via the Far East. The main office was established in Harbin. The Bureau changed its official name to The Far Eastern Jewish Central Information Bureau in 1923 and took its cable address "Daljewcib", which became the organization name in everyday use. The organization was instrumental to rescue efforts through Shanghai. Not in OCLC. Very good condition with prominent Daljewcib stamp. (HOLO2-142-3)
1st Edition. 5 ¼ X 3 ¼ inches. An artists depiction of Temple Sinai in Lake Charles, Louisiana with the caption Jewish Temple. Sometime during the year 1879 when the present city of Lake Charles was a small village of five hundred people, two Jews migrated from Washington, LA. To that village and became the first Jewish residents of this city. Those two were Leopold Kaufman and David Block. With the coming of those two men the Jewish community in Lake Charles came into existence. The congregation of Temple Sinai originated in September, 1894 Temple Sinai was erected in 1904. The onion domes on the original structure were blown off during the storm of 1918. (templesinai. Info) . Jewish Bibliographer Joshua Bloch served there as his first pulpit position, during WW I. This depiction of the temple is from its early days, and depicts the onion domes on the original structure before they were blown off. The Temple celebrated 100 years with its rededication in October, 2004. In very good+ condition. Early Small-town American synagogue postcards are rare, especially in this condition. (AMR-49-14)
1st edition.10 X 15 cm. Period photograph of three refugee children admiring one of the drawings, with caption on the back. Press photograph from 1943 British exhibit, The War As Seen By Children. The exhibition, publicly supported by leading modern artist (and refugee) Oskar Kokoschka, opened January 4, 1943, in the Cooling galleries, New Bond street, a fund-raiser for the German refugee school at Theydon Bois. It was put together by the Refugee Childrens Evacuation Fund. Some edgwear. Overall good+ condition. (HOLO2-126-16a)
"Alors que les cultes catholique et protestants (réformé et luthérien) ont vu leurs relations avec l’État être réorganisées au début du Consulat, avec la signature du Concordat (1801) et l’adoption des articles organiques (1802), aucune réflexion sur l’intégration des juifs ne fut entreprise avant 1806. L’Empire compte alors 170 000 juifs, dont un tiers en France. Aucune instance générale n’organise ou dirige les différentes communautés. Alerté de la montée de l’anti-judaïsme (le terme d’antisémitisme est apparu à la fin du XIXe siècle), et du risque de pogromes dans les régions de l’Est (en Alsace), Napoléon Ier décide de se pencher sur le sujet, davantage soucieux de l’ordre public que de religion. En mai 1806, il décide la tenue d’un assemblée de notables juifs, puis en novembre la réunion d’une assemblée, le Grand Sanhédrin, chargée de rédiger les positions doctrinales pour les juifs de France". Source: Napoléon.org. Rare.
3 Original tickets. 11x6, 11x7, 11x8. In Yiddish. The earliest ticket is from 1926 and is for a night of music by Shalom Aleichem, as part of a Hebrew theater series. The second is for a night of music put on by Poalei Zion and features Hazzan Isaac Glickstein and Miss. Mildred Breger. The last ticket is from 1939 for an event with Zalman Shneur, the famed Yiddish poet. All events took place in Roxbury, Massachusets, a major center of Jewry on the east coast and home to the original Hebrew Union College. SUBJECTS: Hebrew theater Yiddish. No copies on OCLC. Very Good Condition. (ZION-14-67)
Olivewood raditional rocker style wooden ink blotter used to blot out extra ink when writing with a fountain pen. No Date (ca. 1920-1930) . Features a beautiful wood engraving of the Dome of the Rock. Light use wear, Very Good Condition (ZION-14-54)
Paper wrappers, 12mo. 174 pages. OCLC lists ten copies worldwide. Very good conditi on. (PC-1)
Paper wrappers; 8vo. 38 pages. OCLC lists 12 copies worldwide. Cover chipped, bottom corner bumped, good condition. (ComHist-10-16)
Paper wrappers; 8vo. 38 pages. OCLC lists twelve copies worldwide. Some cover soil. Very good condition. (W-62)
Boston, Jewish Boston, 1977. Paperback, 12mo, 121 pages. This is volume 5, No. 1, the final issue of "Jewish Boston (1969-1977) and bears the cover title, "A guide to Jewish Boston. " Ex-library, very good condition (Comhist-18-8)
Paper wrappers; 16mo. 32 pages. OCLC lists no copies worldwide. Some cov er wear and soil; very good condition. (W-62)