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195125321<p><b>AMERCAN CHRISTIAN PALESTINE COMMITEE.</b>Scrapbook compiled by Harrison Fry Religion Editor of the Philadelphia <i>Evening Bulletin</i> one of the twenty-two tour participants. April 1951. Items glued or stapled to several pages with additional papers laid in. In green leatherette boards rules and decorations in yellow. 120 pp. 9½ x 11¾ x 1 in. </p><br /><p>The <b>American Christian Palestine Committee</b> ACPC was created in 1946 by merger of the American Palestine Committee 1931-1946 and the Christian Council on Palestine 1942-1946. Its purpose was to educate American Christian leaders about the post-Holocaust need for a Jewish state to publicize the new states' accomplishments to fight anti-Semitism and to support the country's existence. Over 20000 Christian leaders mostly Protestants were members. The ACPC sponsored seminars published educational materials created a speaker's bureau and conducted study tours taking religious leaders and journalists to Israel and adjoining Arab lands.</p><p>This scrapbook documents a trip from March 31 - April 28 1951. Its goals include making a "comprehensive study of Arab-Israel problems" including finding "suggested solutions for the resettlement of these tragic victims of the Arab-Israel War of 1948." The tour visited Israel Jordan and Lebanon and was the first ACPC group to visit to Palestinian refugee camps.</p><p>The group met Israeli Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion; Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan Foreign Minister Achmed Tooqan; Rabbi Jaacov Herzog son of the Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem; and American Ambassador to Israel Monnet Davis as well as other government and university officials and mayors. Early items in the scrapbook are typed copies of their itinerary including stops in Beyrouth Beirut Jerusalem Tel Aviv Haifa and Nazareth; a list of participants with their affiliations; and memoranda. It also includes airline tickets postcards hotel reservations including the King David Hotel and ephemera. Of particular interest is a printed pamphlet with basic information about the Knesset that includes Fry's notes of the group's meeting with Ben-Gurion 1886-1973. After about two weeks in the Middle East Fry also briefly visited Rome Paris and London. He used his notes for an article in the Philadelphia <i>Evening Bulletin</i>.</p><p>The scrapbook collects printed ephemera that illustrate Israel presented itself including a large color "tourist guide map" of Tel-Aviv 13½ x 9½ in. a 24- x 17-inch folding color "motor map" of Israel laid in with their route highlighted in red and with tourist information on each city on the verso; and a small program for a production of "Carmen" by the Hebrew National Opera. Other items include a Vocabulary for Visitors to Israel; and the post-return typed or handwritten letters Fry received including messages of friendship from other tour attendees.</p><p>Black-and-white photographs include an 8 x 10-inch photo of the group of travelers boarding their PanAm plane; a 5 x 7-inch photo of them at the Mosque of Omar; a photograph of settlers at the "future site of 'Kfar Truman'"; and photographs of the group at other sites that they visited such as the Garden of Gethsemane.</p><p><b>Excerpts:</b></p><p>Harrison W. Fry "People of Israel and Neighboring Nations Hope for Peace Despite Border Quarrels" <i>Evening Bulletin </i> Philadelphia April 22 1951</p><p>"<i>In Jerusalem—which means City of Peace—there is much talk of peace. In the Arab countries of Lebanon and Jordan there is more talk of co-operation than of hate. It may be a hopeful index. But no one agrees as to where it will start…</i> <i>if you look carefully there is the desire for peace down at the grass roots among Arabs living as displaced persons in caves and tents and among Israelis living under an austere program.</i>"</p><p>Harrison W. Fry "Ben-Gurion Wants U.S. Help to Bring Peace in Near East" <i>Evening Bulletin</i> Philadelphia April 25 1951</p><p>"<i>Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion of Israel would welcome the good offices of the United States in establishing peace in the Near East. Israel and the Arab states are now operating under an uneasy armistice with frequent border incidents</i>… <i>The shaggy white-haired leader of the modern miracle that is the State of Israel interrupted conferences in connection with the meeting of the Knesset Israel's Parliament now in session to greet the members of the American Christian Palestine Committee study group of which the writer is a member. With all the frankness of a long-time friend he talked of Israel's plans and problems and answered questions with a refreshing frankness free of diplomatic double talk.</i>"</p><p>Harrison W. Fry "Architects of New Israel Are Building Up from Soil" <i>Evening Bulletin</i> Philadelphia April 27 1951</p><p>"<i>In the valley of the Armageddon the old Biblical plains of Esdraelon the scene of many ancient victories and disasters of the Jews the modern Jews won their first victory of the land in the early twenties when the drained the malarial swamps. Today the valley is a Garden of Eden of fragrant orange citrus and olive groves and garden crops—a delight to the eyes after days of traveling in the eroded dust-storm swept Arab lands to the east of Israel… In the Hula Lake section north of the Sea of Galilee and Capernaum where Christ performed his miracles the Jews are today performing modern miracles by reclaiming further swamp areas.</i>"</p><p>Harrison W. Fry "Debris of Intolerance Bears Fruit of Freedom in Israel" <i>Evening Bulletin</i> Philadelphia May 2 1951</p><p>"<i>In a cave on Mt. Zion ancient citadel of Jerusalem are the ashes of thousands of Jewish martyrs to Nazi intolerance—a symbol of 6000000 who so perished. About them are the sacred scrolls desecrated by the Nazis. One of these had been made into a house coat by a Nazi who apparently did not read Hebrew because it bears on its back the warning that the Lord will wreak vengeance upon those who persecute his people… Atop a tower on this hill which borders no-man's land in the uneasy truce with the Arab kingdom of Jordan an Israeli soldier keeps vigil above these shrines that appeal for peace and tolerance. The Jews have put the terrible evidence of intolerance underground and are building a new tomorrow. They want to talk of peace in the Near East the whole refugee problem including the Arabs.</i>"</p><p>Carl Herman Voss to Members of ACPC Study Tour May 11 1951</p><p>"<i>I want to express appreciation for the cooperative spirit all of you manifested on the Tour. You were really a wonderful crew! Thanks too to all of you once again for the lovely Menorah and plate for Hanukkah with which you surprised me during our last evening together in Israel</i>."</p><p>"Assignment Well Covered" <i>Jewish Exponent</i> May 11 1951</p><p>"<i>Harrison W. Fry seasoned newspaperman and religious editor of the</i> Evening Bulletin<i> did a splendid job in reporting and interpreting the events in Israel as he observed them during his two weeks' tour of the country at the invitation of the American Christian Palestine Committee. His articles that have appeared in the</i> Evening Bulletin <i>during these past few weeks have given the readers of the</i> Bulletin <i>a clear insight into some of the problems concerning the country and the manner in which the Government and the people of Israel are grappling with these problems.</i>"</p><p>Carl Hermann Voss to Harrison Fry July 6 1951</p><p>"<i>I did have a chance to hear from my friends that you have given some excellent reports since you returned from the Middle East and that you were as stimulated and thrilled by the trip as was I… I was a bit disappointed not to have your assent to our reiterated invitation to be listed among the speakers for the Club Program Service the speakers' bureau of the American Christian Palestine Committee but I presume that compelling reasons determined your decision. Won't you still reconsider We would look upon your addition to the list of speakers for Club Program Service as a real boon for the ACPC.</i>"</p><p>Memo of Harrison W. Fry to Walter Lister n.d.</p><p>"<i>Judge Levinthal called me late yesterday to say that he and some of his friends were thinking of nominating me as a member of a small party of Christian clergymen from all parts of the United States who are being sent expenses paid to visit Palestine and get first had information of conditions there. Would I accept if the full committee approved. Had I been to Palestine.</i>"</p><p>"<i>I told him the prospect thrilled me as I had never been to Palestine. I told him that Fry disassociated form The Bulletin did not mean anything and much as I would like to go on my own I felt I should not unless the matter was cleared through The Bulletin.</i>"</p><p><b>Harrison W. Fry</b> 1892-1973 was born in Pottstown Pennsylvania and married Laura V. Umstead 1894-1967 in 1918. He entered journalism before World War I with the <i>Public Ledger</i> and then served as religion and education editor for the Philadelphia <i>Evening Bulletin</i>for forty-two years. Fry interviewed every president from Theodore Roosevelt to Harry S. Truman. He served as a charter member and later president of the Education Writers Association in 1948-1949 and was a founding member of the Religion Newswriters Association in 1949.</p><p><b>Carl Hermann Voss</b> 1911-1995 was a Congregational minister who served in Brooklyn; Pittsburgh; Raleigh North Carolina; and Saratoga Springs New York. During World War II he founded and led the Christian Council on Palestine before becoming one of the founding members of the American Christian Palestine Committee.</p><p><b>Louis E. Levinthal</b> 1892-1976 received three degrees from the University of Pennsylvania and was a judge of the Court of Common Pleas for Philadelphia County from 1937 to 1959. He was president of the Zionist Organization of America from 1941 to 1943 and special adviser for Jewish affairs to the postwar European Command in 1947-1948. He served as chairman of the board of governors of Hebrew University in Jerusalem from 1962 to 1968.</p><p>Starting in 1951 the group's activities were opposed by the pro-Arab American Friends of the Middle East later proven to be funded in part by the CIA. The ACPC wound down in the early 1960s when the Israeli embassy and consulates took over the task.</p> hardcover books
1961242500New York: American Christian Palestine Committee 1961. 39 issues of the magazine spanning the period from January 1950 to May 1961. Issues present are Volume 1 Numbers 1 6 and 7 Volume 2 Numbers 1 3 4 and 6 Volume 3 Numbers 1 2 4 5 and 6 Volume 4 Numbers 1 4 5 and 6 Volume 5 Numbers 1-4 Volume 6 Numbers 1-4 Volume 7 Numbers 1 3 and 4 Volume 8 Numbers 1-4 Volume 10 Numbers 1 3 and 4 Volume 11 Numbers 1 and 3 and Volume 12 Number 1. Various pagination 7.5 x 10 inches illus. all with worn wraps and "Library of Congress-Surplus Duplicate" stamped on front wraps most with address labels on rear wraps many with pencil notations on front wraps a few with underlining in pen or red pencil Vol. 1 No. 1 with 2 inch closed tear and sticker scar on front wrap and two small sections torn out of front wrap with no loss of text Vol. 3 No. 5 with pages 7-10 torn out and badly taped back in with non-archival tape else generally good condition. "The American Christian Palestine Committee is concerned with the fulfillment of Zionist apirations in palestine and in the spread of democratic ideas and democratic living throughout the entire Middle East.the proclamation of the new Jewish state is only the first chapter in Israel's significant history."-from introductory issue. American Christian Palestine Committee unknown books
1917556611917. BRITISH PALESTINE COMMITTEE. PALESTINE. The organ of the British Palestine committee. The British Palestine committee seeks to reset the ancient glories of the Jewish nation in the freedom of a new British dominion in Palestine. Brittian: British Palestine Committee Vol. II. No. 16. November 24th 1917. First edition. 12mo. pamplet format 26 pp. Lightly dogeared with some discoloration to the upper wrapper. A very good copy. Judaica. unknown books
193884160London: HMSO 1938. 1st ed. Paperback. Fair. 11 of 13 maps all but one folding 310p. Original blue wrapper. 25cm. Moderate soiling chipping and wear. Lacks Maps 11 Map illustrating Jewish Proposals with regard to Jerusalem and 12 The Proposed Boundary between Jaffa and Tel Aviv both of which should have been in the cover pocket. Former owner's name and stamp Philip W. Ireland. Two of the four members of the Commission expressed reservations about the various partition plans partly because of: 1 fairness; 2 Arab objections; and 3 the difficulty of putting together a contiguous Jewish state without a large minority or even majority Arab population. <br/><br/> HMSO paperback books
17059Palestine Map. A Plan of Jerusalem By Vester & Company. This is a vintage trade card advertisement and map from the American Colony Stores in Jerusalem. It measures 3 7/8" x 5 11/16" when folded. The front has an image of the Dome of the Rock with steps from the Temple Mount and reads: Compliments of Vester & Company The American Colony Stores Oriental Articles of Every Description. Jaffa Gate Jerusalem Palestine. When you open it the inside has an early color map of Jerusalem Issued by Fr. Vester & Co. American Colony Stores. Jerusalem Palestine. <br/><br/>The American Colony was founded in 1881 as an independent utopian Christian sect whose religious pilgrims emigrated to Jerusalem from the United States and Sweden. At the turn of the century they became involved in the tourist trade and produced souvenirs opened a store and opened a hostel which later became the American Colony Hotel that still operate in Israel today. This card and map is circa 1920's in great condition. unknown books
188225034Philadelphia PA: O.W. Gray & Son 1882. One sheet printed with 2 maps from the 1882 O.W. Gray National Atlas New York Edition: Gray's New Map of Australia by Frank A. Gray 1878 engraved by W.H. Holmes and Palestine. With hand-coloring in pastel tones; Approx. 14 3/8" x 17 1/4" overall size; a little even toning to the paper; in very good condition. . Map. Not Bound. Very Good. O.W. Gray & Son paperback books
189912769Meadville PA: Keystone 1899. Sepia-toned stereoptical view of this scene; Keystone card number 11017; photographer's identifiers on card at edges; fairly clear image and with decent detail; light edge tips wear & dustiness to card very good condition. Very Good. Keystone unknown books
1984142139New York: Palestine Arab Delegation 1984. 24p. staplebound wraps. Includes statement by anti-Zionist ultra-orthodox Jews repudiating Israel. Palestine Arab Delegation unknown books
1970304787New York 1970. 26 single-sided press releases plus three pamphlets. 4to and folio. Generally fine condition. Pamphlets are stapled. 26 single-sided press releases plus three pamphlets. 4to and folio. The Palestine Arab Delegation came to prominence through their demand that the Balfour Declaration be abrogated. With the advent of the United Nations they established themselves in New York City and continued to lobby for the interests of Palestinians. <br/><br/>This collection provides a in depth look into the concerns and strategies of the group. The heart of it naturallyis devoted to the Six Day War in June 1967 and includes a substantial press release dated 29 July 1968. Nine pages of which are "A Diary of Crimes by Zionist Jews in the Gaza Strip."<br/><br/>Pamphlets include:<br/>1. Proof of Guilt. Zionist in Occupied Palestine are Guilty of War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity. 19 August 1963. Illustrated. 12pp<br/>2. A Statement submitted by the Palestine Arab Delegation to the Fifth Emergency Special Session of the General Assembly. 28 June 1967. 12pp<br/>3. Proof of Guilt. The War Criminals: Dayan Allon Begin Rabin Bar-Lev Hod Eban Carmel Galili Ben Gurion are Guilty of War Crimes. March 1969. Illustrated. 30 pp<br/><br/>Although most of the press releases are untitled some bear the following: "Mayor of Jerusalem Exposes Jewish Crimes and Atrocities Hails Commando Action" "Security council Debate" "The Zionist Gemini in the Security Council" "Jewish War Crimes: Israel Resorting to More Presure to Drive Arabs from Occupied Lands. unknown books
196679423New York: The Palestine Arab Delegation 1966. Pamphlet. 38p. 3.5x8 inch upright pamphlet in stapled wraps; edgewear and faint soiling one corner-tip is torn off. Inside find a leaflet "Arab refugees still yearn for their home" stapled to last page. Pamphlet of anti-Zionist material. The Palestine Arab Delegation unknown books
1916315694London: privately printed 1916. Only edition. With 15 captioned plates after the author's photographs large folding map at back two original photographs tipped to the pastedowns. 78 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Original red buckram titled in gilt on upper cover. Some soiling to cloth long closed tear to map light foxing. Very good plus. Only edition. With 15 captioned plates after the author's photographs large folding map at back two original photographs tipped to the pastedowns. 78 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. WITH 2 ORIGINAL PHOTOS. A trip to Sinai Palestine and Transjordan starting from Charing Cross in March 1914. From Port Said Egypt the party travelled to Suez and then overland along the west coast of the Sinai Peninsula to Mount Sinai and the monastery St. Katherine. From there to Aqaba Ain Kadis in the Wilderness of Zin the Wadi el Arabah to Mount Hor and Petra Kerak before reaching Bethlehem and Jerusalem. The author and his friend Hensman spent 5 weeks of travel crossing 400 miles on camel and 700 miles on horseback. <br/>A remarkable trip through some of the same terrain covered in January and February 1914 by T.E. Lawrence and C.E. Woolley and the military surveying team under the guise of an archaeological survey.<br/>Uncommon. privately printed unknown books
1943211867New York: Palestine Economic Corporation 1943. 74p. staplebound pamphlet format very good. Includes eight pages of black and white photos. Report on Jewish settlement and development over three years with the preface noting that wartime conditions had prevented the compilation of annual reports since the 1939 issue. Palestine Economic Corporation unknown books
1884784161884. Hardcover. Very Good. Uniformly bound in old 1/2 leather marbled boards with leather backstrips and corners. Original wrappers not bound in. 21cm. Some foxing mostly on page edges and at beginning and end of volumes. Old price written heavily on verso of free endpapers. An attractive set. Quarterly Statement was first issued in 1869 to inform their supporters about the ongoing work undertaken or supported by the organization. The original first series apparently consisted of only eight numbers. Our set contains the first 56 quarterly issues of the "New Series." The first volume also contains an 80p. plus a folding map work titled: "The Exploration of Palestine" A Brief Statement of the Principal Work Accomplished by the Exploration Fund from Its Foundation to December 1870." <br/><br/> hardcover books
1994UPALMAS00LAWPalestine Human Rights Information Center 1994. Good. Palestine Human Rights Information Center. The Massacre in Al-Haram Al-Ibramhimi Al-Sharif: Context and Aftermath a PHRIC Palestine Human Rights Information Center Special Report. Jerusalem: Palestine Human Rights Information Center 1994. 152pp. Indexed. 8vo. Paperback. Book condition: Good with gently bumped corners and light damp staining on rear cover. Rear cover and pages 126 to 152 gently wavy. Palestine Human Rights Information Center paperback books
1890316991London: Frederick Warne 1890. Color frontispiece and Illustrated throughout. liv. 435pp. 4to. Bound in three quarters mottled modern brown calf marbled boards orange leather title label. Fine. Color frontispiece and Illustrated throughout. liv. 435pp. 4to. Frederick Warne unknown books
182211199Boston: Crocker & Brewster 1822. Paperback. Very Good. 52p. Disbound pamphlet removed from a bound volume. 21cm. Includes at the end several shorter pieces from the same occasion including the Constitution of the Palestine Missionary Society which was apparently set up to sponsor Temple's work. Temple and Bird were Protestant missionaries in the Middle East. <br/><br/> Crocker & Brewster paperback books
1814002129New York: Van Winkle and Wiley 1814. Hardcover. Second American edition translated from the French by F. Shoberl; 8 3/4 x 5 1/2; pp. 9 4-471 1 1-46 2; full polished speckled calf over boards; red morocco label with gilt title to spine; a few scuffs to leather on spine and a bit of wear to corners; small penciled-in signature of previous owner to ffep and title page; illustrated with a large fold-out map three copper and four wood engravings; map with a closed cut to one of the panels but complete; very good condition.François-Rene Vicomte de Chateaubriand 1768 - 1848 was a French diplomat historian and author largely regarded as the father of Romanticism in French literature. An avid traveller Chateaubriand based the current book on his field notes taken during a research trip in 1806 and 1807 which would later become part of his prose epic "Les Martyrs" set during the Roman persecution of early Christianity. New York: Van Winkle and Wiley hardcover books
194784089London: HMSO 1947. Paperback. Very Good. iv 103p. Original wrapper. 25cm. Lacks the three folding maps in the cover pocket. Recent label mounted on front identifying this as coming from the library of H. A. R. Gibb. About the creation of the State of Israel. <br/><br/> HMSO paperback books
1944753711944. ISRAEL. UNITED PALESTINE APPEAL. FUNDRAISING APPEAL FOR REFUGEES OVERSEAS NEEDS AND PALESTINE ISSUED BY THE UNITED PALESTINE APPEAL CIRCA 1944. A fundraising packet comprised of five pieces stored in a pictorial envelope 10 1/2 x 7 1/2 in. 1. "The Redeemed become the Redeemers" a broadside plea for contributions; printed on the reverse is a New York Times article from January 15 1944. NY: United Palestine Appeal n.d. 2. The Facts about Palestine. By Arthur Lourie. NY: American Zionist Emergency Council n.d. 20 pp. Pamphlet format: paper wrappers stapled. 3. The Future of the Jews. By Dorothy Thompson. NY: United Palestine Appeal n.d. 14 pp. Pamphlet format: paper wrappers stapled. 4. An American Soldier in Palestine. NY: United Palestine Appeal n.d. Illus. 20 pp. Pamphlet format: paper wrappers stapled. 5. "Sabbath Eve on the Palestine War Front" a photograph showing a young woman dressed in military uniform lighting the Sabbath candles. The photograph is also printed on the envelope. The contents of the envelope are fine except for the photo which has just a slight trace of adhesive from the missing envelope flap and some faint creasing at the top-edge. The envelope is generally dust-soiled occasionally nicked and just starting at one fold. unknown books