Auction 42 General auction include items from the estate of the poet and editior Israel Har
Jul 24, 2019 (your local time)
Israel
 Ella st' 33 Truman village

our address: Hala 33 (farm no. 33), Kfar Truman.

In this auction and subsequent auctions will include items from the estate of the poet and editor Israel Har.

Among other items include books with dedications, Typewriters, special uncommon books and more.

Buyer's premium is 20% + VAT on the commission only.

Payments must be complete whitin a week after auction, a fee of 5% will be added to late payments.


Shippments can be choosen in one of 2 ways:

Register shippping (Israel post) prices:

Up to 2 kilo at a cost of 20 NIS

2-5 Kilo for 25 NIS.

5-10 kilo cost 32 NIS

10-20 kilo cost 40 NIS


Courier delivery of the Israeli post in the costs of 60 NIS regardless of weight up to 20 kg (only in Israel).

In cases of complecated items and fragile items, the auction house may take an additional cost to ensure the proper packaging of the items.

With certain items, large or particularly complex items, the buyer will have to coordinate collection from the Auction House.

About the vat, buyers from abroad can request to remove the vat with scan of their passport only!  

The auction has ended

LOT 29:

Holocaust. Correspondence (130 letters) of two Jewish sisters, one of them - Miriam was brought to England on ...

Start price:
$ 500
Auction house commission: 20% More details
VAT: 17% On commission only
Users from foreign countries may be exempted from tax payments, according to the relevant tax regulations
tags:

Holocaust. Correspondence (130 letters) of two Jewish sisters, one of them - Miriam was brought to England on program “Kindertransport” and the other one – Ruth, reached Palestina, Photos (87) of the "Children and Youth Village of Love” where she lived and the other views of Palestine with her friends, 1930-40s, In German, Hebrew and English.
Holocaust. Correspondence (130 letters) of two Jewish sisters, one of them - Miriam was brought to England on program “Kindertransport” and the other one – Ruth reached Palestina, Photos (87) of the "Children and Youth Village of Love” where she lived and the other views of Palestine with her friends, 1930-40s, In German, Hebrew and English. Sisters names are Ruth and Miriam Renzer, German refugees
Miriam lived in Willesden home for refugee children and Ruth lived in Palestine in “the Children and Youth Village” and worked and lived there. In 1939 Ruth was 17 years old.
The Kindertransport (German for "children's transport") was an organised rescue effort that took place during the nine months prior to the outbreak of the Second World War. The United Kingdom took in nearly 10,000 predominantly Jewish children from Nazi Germany, Nazi-occupied Austria, Czechoslovakia and Poland, and the Free City of Danzig. The children were placed in British foster homes, hostels, schools and farms.
Lot of paperwork and photographs related to the beginning of the establishment of the "Children and Youth Village of Love", the end of the 1930s and the 1940s, including dozens of photographs, many letters correspondence between Ruth Renzer in Haifa and family and friends in England. Children's Village "Ahava" is a youth village located in Kfar Bialik, near Kiryat Bialik, and is run by the "Children and Youth Village", a society for the benefit of the community. The children who stay in "love" are between the ages of 6 and 18, and these children have been removed from their families because of risk and traumatic experiences. In 1914 a number of Zionist women set up a soup kitchen for Jewish children in Berlin, at Auguststrasse 14-16. After two years the program expanded, and the place also served as a shelter for Jewish children. Since 1922, the place has become a boarding school for children and the name "House of Love" has been established. Mrs. Beata (Bata) Berger was appointed as the local director. Children in the children's home in Berlin were dressed up for Purim 1933. In 1924 Berger arrived in Israel and purchased 12 dunams in the Zevulun Valley. But only ten years later, the first groups of children and staff came from Germany to Israel, and lived in temporary apartments in Haifa until the building of the "Ahava" institution in Kfar Bialik in 1935. In 1940, Berger died and Yosef Yishuvi was appointed head of the village. Under his administration the village population grew to 180 children in 1945. From 1948 to 1960 the village expanded, children and youth joined the village through Youth Aliyah.