Auction 7 Eretz Israel, settlement, anti-Semitism, Holocaust and She'erit Ha-Pleita, postcards and photographs, letters by rabbis and rebbes, Chabad, Judaica, and more
Aug 18, 2020
Israel
 Abraham Ferrera 1 , Jerusalem
The auction will take place on Tuesday, August 18, 2020 at 18:00 (Israel time).
The auction has ended

LOT 37:

"The Lion in the pit of the Jews" - Antisemitic Issue - Berlin 1937 - Color illustrations

catalog
  Previous item
Next item 
Sold for: $150
Start price:
$ 150
Auction house commission: 22%
VAT: 17% On commission only
Users from foreign countries may be exempted from tax payments, according to the relevant tax regulations

"The Lion in the pit of the Jews" - Antisemitic Issue - Berlin 1937 - Color illustrations


Issue of the illustrated anti-Semitic journal Kladderadatsch - [a nonsense cartoon world, such as "Kishkush" in Hebrew], Berlin, December 5, 1937.


The title page has a particularly stingy anti-Semitic cartoon. Underneath it is the anti-Semitic caption: "Palestine - Der Löwe in Danielsgrub", Palestine - The Lion in the Daniel 's pit - the "poor" "lion" fell to the Jewish pit (named after Daniel the Prophet who fell into the Lion's Pit - in the book of Daniel). The illustrator has "replaced" the roles, supposedly the Jews are so powerful and frightening that they threaten the lion king of the animals, while the "strong" lion is the poor scared of the Jews in Palestine.

In the interior pages, further anti-Semitic cartoons, at one, Jews in the wine bar deal with espionage and the discovery of enemy secrets. In another cartoon entitled:"The Armament Madness", supposedly the sick earth, and one of the diseases is the struggles between Jews and Arabs - on the left is an Arab beating a Jew. Another cartoon in which the 'informant' Jews were caught on a man hiding weapons, and more.

Kladderadatsch is a German satirical magazine founded by Albert Hoffman and David Kalisch  began in Berlin on May 7, 1848, and appeared "daily, except for weekdays", published continuously until 1944. Considered one of the best quality magazines in terms of color graphics that Published in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Originally, the Kladderadatsch was a liberal magazine, but became more nationalistic over the years. During the Weimar period, the magazine's position was German-nationalist. After the takeover by industrialist Hugo Stains in 1923, the magazine was ruled by the Nazi party and its contents became increasingly anti-Semitic.

[16] p. 31 cm. Complete sheet. Filing holes. Very good condition.


catalog
  Previous item
Next item