Auction 5 Eretz Israel, settlement, anti-Semitism, Holocaust and She'erit Ha-Pleita, postcards and photographs, letters by rabbis and rebbes, Chabad, Judaica, and more
Apr 1, 2020
Israel
 1 Abraham Ferera, Jerusalem.

The auction will take place on Wednesday, April 1, 2020 at 18:00 (Israel time).


 According to the instructions, we are unable to display the items in this auction to the audience In our office. We apologize to the audience who requested to come to the items display. Health and happiness to our customer, and to all Beit Israel!

The auction has ended

LOT 46:

Immigrant card of a jewish child issued by the Ministry of Palestine in the British Zone in Belsen 1947

Sold for: $100
Start price:
$ 100
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

Immigrant card of a jewish child issued by the Ministry of Palestine in the British Zone in Belsen 1947


Immigrantcard # 132 of Abraham Nuremberg issued in Belsen on April 14, 1947 by the Ministry of Palestine in the British Zone of Belsen, Rare.


On the front appears the Nuremberg Passport picture born in 1940 (when he was 7 years old), ink stamp of the Jewish Agency, and personal handwriting details. As part of the requested information printed: "If a member of a pioneering movement and what" and if "Undergoing training". The certificate is signed by Dr. Kurt Levin.

The Bergen-Belsen camp served as a refugee camp in its beginnings for refugees and after a few months served only Jews after World War II, and was in fact the largest in the DP camps in Germany, and the only one in the British occupation area. The camp operated in Lower Saxony in northwestern Germany, from the summer of 1945 to September 1950. It operated under British authority and supervised by the United Nations Relief and Reconstruction Manager (UNRRA). Many displaced people began to leave the camp in 1947, with improvement in immigration opportunities. From the spring of 1947, the British government allocated 300 immigration permits a month to Jews in the British Occupation Zone. These allowed legal immigration to the Land of Israel. Between April 1947 and the establishment of the State of Israel in May 1948, 4,200 Jews from the British area Immigrated to Israel, most of them from Bergen-Belsen DP camp, including the child Abraham Nuremberg.

Size (open): 21x15 cm. Stains. Good condition.