Subasta 4 Eretz Israel, settlement, anti-Semitism, Holocaust and She'erit Ha-Pleita, postcards and photographs, letters by rabbis and rebbes, Chabad, Judaica, and more
Por DYNASTY
22.1.20
1 Abraham Ferera, Jerusalem., Israel

The auction will take place on Wednesday, January 22, 2020 at 18:00 (Israel time).

La subasta ha concluído

LOTE 150:

A poster calling for a demonstration against 'English terror' in the midst of the 'Exodus' affair. Wroclaw [Poland] ...


Precio inicial:
$ 300
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22.1.20 en DYNASTY

A poster calling for a demonstration against 'English terror' in the midst of the 'Exodus' affair. Wroclaw [Poland], August 1947


Poster on behalf of the Jewish uprising committee in Wroclaw to reach mass protest against attacks and 'English Terror' in the illegal immigration ship 'Exodus' In the midst of the affair. announcing the Jewish public to attend a demonstration on Monday, August 18 at 6:00 pm, in the courtyard of the Jewish Committee House, 5 Vladivskaya Street, Wroclaw (Poland) ). 'Come one and all'. Yiddish and Polish.


The date set for the demonstration was about a month after the immigrants in Haifa boarded the deportation ships back to the Port of De Boque in southern France. The photos in which the deportation ships, including refugees from the concentration camps behind barbed wire fences, flooded the local and global press, and sparked outrage in Israel and abroad. In France, the illegal immigrants barricaded themselves for three weeks on board the ships, and the British's attempt to remove the illegal immigrants on the coast from which they failed. All the while, the British were severely criticized, both in the local press and the global press, and the fate of the illegal immigrants was unclear. The stay in the port in France has caused a great deal of world media turmoil, as well as protests throughout the Jewish world, which have intensified due to the British's initial refusal to provide food for their prisoners. The world press commissioned for the port described the immigrants as inmates at Auschwitz View. Against this backdrop, a proclamation was published before us in Wroclaw, Poland, calling for the protest against British malice. Four days later on August 22, the ships sailed into the British Occupation Zone in Germany due to the British's failure to take down the illegal immigrants to France.


Rare poster. Does not appear in the ephemera collection in the National Library. It is interesting to note that the collection in the National Library has a poster calling to the jews to protest against the British on the streets of Munich.


70x49 cm. Affixed to linen for preservation.