277 résultats
Annette Damm, edNot in perfect condition. unknown
1920218041920. Early views of life under British colonial rule in Mandatory Palestine. 1920s photo archive consisting of 12 silver gelatin photographs measuring around 3.5" x 2.5" each. Circa 1920s. An evocative and unusually varied visual archive from 1920s Mandatory Palestine this collection captures everyday life and social hierarchies during the British occupation of the Levant. Taken during a critical era following the fall of the Ottoman Empire and before the full thrust of Zionist settlement these images offer rare glimpses of Palestinian Arab communities-including women clerics children merchants and street workers-across both rural and urban landscapes. Several photos appear to depict scenes in and around Jerusalem including a striking street portrait of an elder man in traditional Arab dress with a keffiyeh and striped abaya standing beside a fez-capped official or guard in front of a stone façade possibly in the Old City. Another image shows a procession of clergy and camel handlers near what appears to be a medieval gate or fortress wall-indicative of pilgrimage traffic or religious observance with camels loaded for transport. A powerful composition captures three women in dark veils and flowing garments speaking beneath a tree with rural hills and a village in the distance.<br /> Street life and labor are emphasized in one image where a young boy and several veiled women draw water at a stone cistern; one woman balances a large vessel on her head her face and body almost entirely obscured. A separate print shows a group of women-some in Western dress and hats others in religious garb-posing together at the edge of a sea or lake possibly near Tiberias or the Sea of Galilee. . Another photograph depicts a group of men in keffiyehs and Western suits gathered in what may be a town square-possibly Amman or Ramleh-with modern construction visible in the background illustrating the mixing of colonial infrastructure and traditional society. Photographs of Mandatory Palestine from this transitional decade-between Ottoman defeat and the Arab Revolt -are increasingly rare especially those depicting ordinary Palestinians rather than military or Zionist institutions. Very good condition overall. unknown
1999205042Roma: Palazzo delle Esposizioni 1999. Brossura wrappers. Molto buono Very Good. Catalogo dell'esibizione "4 pianoforti" eseguita a Roma Palazzo delle Esposizioni 17-21 novembre 1999 da <strong>Charlemagne Palestine</strong> <strong>Michael Harrison</strong> <strong>Philip Glass</strong> <strong>Terry Riley</strong> in prima mondiale/europea. Il festival era a cura di Fabio Sargentini Associazione Attico Associazione Silenzio. Testi di Renato Nicolini e Fabio Sargentini. Biografie dei performers note sulle composizioni interviste. In appendice "Breve storia della musica minimalista" di Paolo Coteni e Giovanni Antognozzi. Fotografie in bianco e nero. Edizione in italiano e inglese. 8vo. pp. 58. Molto buono Very Good. . <em>Il Palazzo delle Esposizioni guidato da <strong>Renato Nicolini</strong> ospitava il festival ideato da <strong>Fabio Sargentini</strong> con <strong>Charlemagne Palestine</strong> <strong>Michael Harrison</strong> <strong>Philip Glass</strong> <strong>Terry Riley</strong>. Un pianista per ogni serata e la quinta eccezionalmente tutti e quattro insieme nei quattro bracci del Palazzo in una sorta di jam session del<strong> pianoforte minimalista</strong> unica nel suo genere. "Non tutti sanno che Roma è"; stata negli anni Sessanta il quartier generale in Europa dei <strong>musicisti americani minimalisti</strong> che oggi vanno per la maggiore. Si esibivano nella mia <strong>galleria-garage</strong> <strong>L'Attico</strong> accanto ai migliori artisti della danza contemporanea dando luogo alle prime manifestazioni di performances che si conoscano in assoluto. Grandi tempi! . Lo spazio della galleria divenne l'alveo il letto pronto a ricevere l'ondata concettuale e minimalista che si annunciava . I giovani musicisti rispondevano ai nomi di La Monte Young Terry Riley Phil Glass Steve Reich Charlemagne Palestine. Tutto ciò accadeva nel 1968-1969 e durò per circa 10 anni è . Memori dei loro trascorsi romani trent'anni esatti fa per l'appunto nel 1969 gli stessi nomi con ben altra notorietà tornano ora in una sede prestigiosa istituzionale come è" giusto che sia" dal testo di Sragentini.</em> Palazzo delle Esposizioni, unknown
18385116<b>1</b> Dr. Conradus Leemans <i>Lettre a M. Francois Salvolini sur les Monumens Egyptiens portant des legendes royales dans musees d'antiquites de leide de londres et dans quelques collections particulieres en angleterre</i> 1838. Chez H. W. Hazenberg et Comp. Leide. 160 pp. XXXII 32 plates<br /><b>2</b> Palestine Exploration Society <i>No. 2 Second Statement </i>September 1873 Hackensack N.J. 76 pp. vi<br /><b>3</b> Henrico Brugsch <i>De Natura et Indole Linguae Popularis Aegyptiorum. Fasciculus prior de Nomine de Dialectis de Litterarum Sonis</i> 1850. Prostat in Libraria Dummleriana Berolini. 40 pp.<br /><b>4</b> Dr. Heinrich Brugsch <i>Die Adonisklage und das Linoslied</i> 1852. Ferd. Dummler's Verlagsbuchhandlung Berlin. 33 pp.<br /><b>5</b> Heinrich Hubschmann <i>Die Umschreibung der Iranischen Sprachen un des Armenischen</i> 1882. Druck und Verlag von Breitkopf und Hartel Leipzig. 44 pp. <br /><b>6</b> Dr. Martin Haug <i>Das achtzehnte Kapitel des Wendidad ubersetzt und erklart</i> 1869. F. Straub Munchen. 54 pp.<br /><b>7</b> Dr. Richard Lepsius <i>Das Allgemeine Linguistische Alphabet. Grundsatze der ubertragung fremder schriftsysteme und bisher noch ungeschriebener sprachen in Europaische Buchstaben</i> 1855. Wilhelm Hertz Berlin. 64 pp.<br />Majority are first editions. Text in French English German and Latin. Quarter cloth over marbled boards. 4 fold-out reproductions of Egyptian tablets and/or hieroglyphs; 4th fold-out has a large tear at first interior fold still intact p. 76 of Palestine Exploration Society. 1 fold-out illustration. Some occasional spotting throughout. Loss to cloth of spine and rubbing to exterior edges of covers. 160 pp. XXXII 32 plates; 76 pp. vi; 40 pp.; 33 pp.; 44 pp.; 54 pp.; 64 pp.; ~503 pp. total. 6 x 8 1/2 inches. Chez H. W. Hazenberg et Comp.; Hackensack; Prostat in Libraria Dummleriana; Breitkopf und Hartel; F. Straub; Wilhelm Hertz hardcover
0282312269.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1332744583.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
20032074ml2003. Soft Cover. Good. Gd. condition / PB / . . A observation of the Israel / Palestinian occupation . TI6 paperback
1950003798New York: American Christian Palestine Committee 1950. Very good. A pamphlet and a gathering of mimeographed sheets 1940s - 1950s; pamphlet - 8 x 5 1/4; pp. 6; illustrated with photographs; stapled mimeographed sheets - 14 x 8 1/2; pp. 8 text to recto only; minor wear and creasing and light age-toning - in very good condition. The American Palestine Committee was founded in 1932 as a political lobby group with the aim of influencing American policy towards establishing a Jewish national homeland in Palestine. It would later merge with the Christian Council on Palestine to become the American Christian Palestine Committee in 1946. By that time its members numbered over 15 000 many of them prominent American figures. In the 1950s after the successful creation of Israel in 1948 the organization felt its work was done and it ceased to exist. The pamphlet presented its history and goals while the mimeographed document contained a list of films from the organization's lending library which depicted various phases of Israel's birth and growth. American Christian Palestine Committee unknown
S02OS-00348The Institute for Palestine Studies. Used - Good. Good condition. Good dust jacket. Three book set: Volumes 1 2 and supplement. middle east palestine history NOT AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT OUTSIDE OF THE UNITED STATES. The Institute for Palestine Studies unknown
Z1-I-022-02089Inst for Palestine Studies. Used - Good. Ships from UK in 48 hours or less usually same day. Your purchase helps support Sri Lankan Children's Charity 'The Rainbow Centre'. Ex-library so some stamps and wear but in good overall condition. 100% money back guarantee. We are a world class secondhand bookstore based in Hertfordshire United Kingdom and specialize in high quality textbooks across an enormous variety of subjects. We aim to provide a vast range of textbooks rare and collectible books at a great price. Our donations to The Rainbow Centre have helped provide an education and a safe haven to hundreds of children who live in appalling conditions. We provide a 100% money back guarantee and are dedicated to providing our customers with the highest standards of service in the bookselling industry. Inst for Palestine Studies unknown
24766672 original photograps size 25 x 31 cm mounted on 64 heavy cardboards. Contemporary red half calf rubbed inner hinges cracked. Some foxing to cardboards. . hardcover
MA08D-02238World Jewish Congress. Relief and Rehabilitation Dep.; Jewish Agency for Palestine. Rescue Committee. Collectible - Acceptable. Stockholm: World Jewish Congress. Relief and Rehabilitation Dep.; Jewish Agency for Palestine. Rescue Committee 1946. List No. 1. 8vo brown paper wraps. 158pp. Near Good book. Covers slightly dampstained and soiled. Pages toned. Tearing at head of spine and lower corner of front cover torn off. Ink initial on front cover and page 115. In polypropylene bag. 12 copies on OCLC. Sweden Holocaust Survivors Jewish Refugees Inquire if you need further information. World Jewish Congress. Relief and Rehabilitation Dep.; Jewish Agency for Palestine. Rescue Committee. paperback
193047228Tel Aviv: Tel Aviv Publishing House 1930. First edition. Softcover. poor to vg. Quartos. Vol.1: 100pp. Vol.2: 68pp. Vol.3: 92pp. Vol.4: 109pp. Vol.5: 96pp. Vol.6: 120pp. Vol.7: 175pp. 2. Photo-illustrated tanned wrappers with dark blue or black lettering on the covers. Pages uncut and unopened. The full and conclusive text of the historically important Shaw Report aka the Shaw Comission Report of the Commission on the Palestine Disturbances of August 1929 consisting of the commission's findings regarding the events and causes of the infamous 1929 Palestine Riots. The text of these volumes was taken from transcripts appearing in the reports of three major newspapers in Palestine - Davar Haaretz and The Palestine Bulletin now the Jerusalem Post in addition to other submitted documents. The commission which investigated and held hearings from October - December 1929 was chaired by Sir Walter Shaw the highly regarded British jurist and included three other members British politicians Henry Snell 1865-1944 Sir Rhys Hopkin Morris 1888-1956 and Henry Bucknall Betterton 1872-1949. The final page of the last volume credits the text to these four men. The front cover of the first volume shows Betterton and Shaw in suits. It scarce to find the complete set of these publications.<br /> <br /> Text in Hebrew.<br /> <br /> Most wrappers with with some minor to light chipping rubbing and/or creasing to extremities as well as foxing to the edges. Most of the images on the covers are unaffected. Vol.1 with cover detached but present. Foxing to edges of book blocks. Interior with some sporadic minor to light water stains to pages. Most pages clean and bright. Book blocks tight overall. These copies seem to have never been read as they for the most part contain unopened pages. Wrappers in poor to very good interiors in good to very good condition overall. Hebrew title: דין וחשבון ×ž×œ× : מעבודת ועדת החקירה ×”×¤×¨×œ×ž× ×˜×¨×™×ª ×‘×™×¨×•×©×œ×™× ×”×—×œ ×ž×™×•× 24 ב×וקטובר 1929<br /> Alternate: ועדת החקירה. Tel Aviv Publishing House unknown
1923181603London: His Majesty's Stationery Office 1923 but 1924. Lines in the sand First trade edition one of 250 copies of the text of the Paulet-Newcombe Agreement including three maps delineating the newly agreed Palestine-Syrian border. The agreement was signed in March 1923 a few months before the Britain's Palestine mandate came into force. Whitehall was represented in the Anglo-French negotiations by Lieutenant-Colonel Stewart Francis Newcombe 1878-1956 a close wartime associate of Lawrence of Arabia who is cited frequently in Seven Pillars of Wisdom. Newcombe was commissioned into the Royal Engineers in 1898 and transferred into the Egyptian Army in 1901. Shortly before the outbreak of war he travelled to southern Palestine in the company of Lawrence and Leonard Woolley to complete a secret survey for the British government - "this initial encounter with Lawrence set up a lifelong friendship between the professional soldier and the young scholar-archaeologist. Newcombe's extraordinary exploits and courage coupled with an inexhaustible supply of energy made him a legend in the desert causing the Arabs to complain that 'Newcombe is like fire he burns friend and enemy'" ODNB. In 1935 he was one of the six pallbearers at Lawrence's funeral. According to the printer's slug the agreement was first published in July 1923 in the Parliamentary Papers series. Octavo pp. 16. With 3 folding colour maps. Text in English and French. Original printed self-wrappers. Wrappers and maps repaired with archival tape rear cover chipped: very good. Khalidi & Khadduri 1648. unknown
19707379New York: Palestine Liberation Organization New York Office 1970. Staple bound pamphlet 14 pages. Very good. Minor soiling and age toning to cover. Previous owner initials marked out in pen to verso of front cover. Pages crisp and clean in very nice shape. Palestine Liberation Organization, New York Office unknown
189257643<p>PHOTOGRAPHS 1890s INCLUDING SOME OF JEWISH COLONISTS</p><p>oblong folio album 28 x 27.5 cms. 22 thick card leaves on guards on the card sides are mounted 170 original sepia tinted photographs 9.5 x 12 cms. 4 photographs per 'page' except two 'pages' at the end with 3 photographs and the last 'page' blank all photographs neatly captioned in pen bound in contemporary half black morocco spine with gilt decorated raised bands black cloth on sides front cover boldly lettered at centre 'Palestine' and at foot "M. & A. W." and 1892 or 3 final numeral defaced cloth on fore edges of both boards damp stained with loss of the final numeral of the date see below front endpapers likewise damp stained at fore edges contents otherwise very good.</p><p>The damp damage to the fore-edge of the cloth has caused the loss of the gilt on the last numeral of the date but a trace remains of the top part of the impressed numeral and from that shape it must be either a 2 or a 3.<br />This album records a visit and tour through Palestine by two English speaking persons "M & A. W" that we have not been able to identify. The photographs obviously taken by one of the party record their progress guides local people villages bedouin encampments encountered buildings horses etc. One photograph on the first page clearly shows a member of the travelling party a fairly elderly woman about to travel on a mule-borne palanguin. Another of the party in a boat about to cross the Sea of Galilee appears to show two women. Places depicted include Sebastiych in Samaria Shumem modern Sulan of which there are many views Bethel Mount Tabor region Sea of Gallilee and the River Jordan Atlit Castle Tanturah modern Tantura Calvary Mar Saba monastery views along the road to Hebron and of the Russian hospice there etc. Very many of photographs show local people encountered along the way and three photographs at Tanturah show "Jewish colonists" there. Baron Rothschild owned land there and had in 1884 a Russian Jewish farmer establish a farm there and "In 1891 Baron Rothschild financed the development of a bottle factory in Tantura as he planned to use the fine sand on the shore to manufacture glass bottles for the fledgling wine industry . A building was constructed . dozens of workers were hired and three ships were purchased to transport raw material and bottles. But he abandoned the factory in 1895 after a string of failures" wikipedia. Presumably these colonists were attached to that enterprise. A number of photographs include Abraham Lyons their dragoman translator and guide the only person actually here identified by name. Lyons is recorded as a Jerusalem based dragoman in Baedeker's <em>Palestine and Syria Handbook for Travellers</em> 1867 and in "Letter from Jerusalem" in <em>The Rockland Co Journal</em> vol.xxxiii May 1883 "dragoman Lyons" is described as a "Christian Israelite".<br />The photographs are in good condition with only a few faded.</p> hardcover
1940ABC_484251940. Contemporary embossed brown calf with flowers on the front and back board and an aluminium view of David's Tower and Jerusalem's old city wall embedded in the front board. Oblong album 30 x 20 cm. With 128 gelatin silver prints most ca. 6.5 x 9.5 cm. Beautiful album with 128 photographs of Egypt and Palestine present day Israel and the West Bank during the British Mandate. It was likely compiled by a British soldier who was stationed in the Middle East during the 1940s. Some of the photographs are numbered in the negative and may have been made by important photographers active in the area at the time like G. Eric Matson and his wife Edith the founders of the Matson Photo Service. The images show Cairo and various locations in Palestine including Jerusalem Bethlehem Nazareth Tiberias Sea of Galilee Nathanya Tel Aviv the Jordan river Haifa Beirut and the Dead Sea. Other than important locations like churches and gates the photographs also show many locals including for example street barbers in Cairo shepherds and farmers in Palestine and beautifully dressed women in Haifa. In the back of the work a few dried leaves from local plants have been mounted namely orange lemon fig eucalyptus grapevine and mulberry. The eucalyptus leaf still retains some of its scent.The edges and vorners of the boards are somewhat scuffed with some loss of material at the head and foot of the spine and around the edges of the embedded aluminium plate. The photographs mounted on the inside of the front board are slightly stained the fig leaf mounted on one of the final pages is damaged and the cyprus leaf is missing. Otherwise in good condition. unknown
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
0853220New York no Date; Ca. 1942-6: United Palestine Appeal. First Edition. Paperback. Very Good-. B/W Photographs. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. In pictorial stapled wraps 4to 22pp. Illustrated profusley with b/w photographs. Extremely scarce United Palestine Appeal publication showing the progress of the refugees in Palestine following WWII. Includes many b/w photographs showcasing the sights people and circumstances at the dawn of the Israeli state. light shelfwear slight center crease sm. punch hole to upper cover at lower margin. United Palestine Appeal paperback
1839271075American Sunday School 1839. Boards. Good-. front map creased and torn hinge started boards worn leather spine tornmany images intrnally 139 pp. American Sunday School hardcover
1922N2417CJerusalem: Greek Convent Press 1922. 1st Edition . Original Wrappers. Good. 4to. 66 pp. Spine repaired with professional linen some smalll losses on reinforced margins of front and back covers inside very good and fresh. <br/> <br/> Greek Convent Press, unknown
0267763646.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1870177646London. Circa1870. Three original albumen print photographs all approx 15 x 21 cm mounted on album card two with the original labels of the Palestine Exploration Fund and reference numbers No. 261 Ashkelon:-Grove of Trees & No. 273. Rafat the mounts creased and ragged with edge tears and loss more pronounced in the mount of the Aqueduct image which has archival repairs to the verso of the mount but the photographs in very good condition. Historic large format photographs dating from the Survey of Palestine begun in 1865 conducted by the Palestine Exploration Fund the oldest organization in the world created specifically for the study of the Levant. . unknown
0259109606.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1952193208Cairo: Matba'a Fa'wad 1952. First edition of this report on the activities of the Arab Higher Commission for Palestine. Formerly the organization representing Palestinian interests during the British Mandate it continued to operate after the Nakba from Cairo and Beirut until the creation of the Palestine Liberation Organization in 1964. Its activities in the early 1950s focused on the consequences of the Nakba the forced emigration of Arab Palestinians and the arrival of the Israeli settlers with chapters also devoted to Gaza. Several illustrations show images of Jerusalem at that time. The final tables provide financial details on expenditures for humanitarian and military aid and for publications. Quarto 240 x 170 mm. With 3 folding tables 23 half-tone photographic illustrations 1 folding. Text in Arabic. Original printed wrappers wire-stitched as issued. Ink stamp of the Arab Higher Commission for Palestine on title page and following leaf. Extremities a bit rubbed a couple of chips on wrapper edges minor loss at foot of spine a few lower outer corners creased contents toned: a very good copy. unknown