The auction will be on Monday, 9.6.25 at 18:00 P.M.
We will present in the auction 600 rare items of the spiritual treasures of the Jewish people and other cultures. Among the special items we will present :
1. Bibliographic discovery, an unknown novel! Called "Neurim Netule Shemesh". Unicom. Signed autograph.
2. Biblical Images : A limited edition of 50 copies of Bible illustrations. Copy number 16!! Including international telephone cards with Bible illustrations!!
3. Book Binat Issachar, Prague 1785. A copy of the Rebbe Nahum Dover Fridman. Handwritten notes!!
4. Haggadah for the Independence Day Seder and a guide to the Independence Day Seder. Two booklets. Completely unknown. Hebrew and English. Unicom. Unknown who wrote it and when. A historical mystery.
5. HaMIkdash HaAharon al pi Masekhet Midot - By Peleg Yehoshua. A research that attempts to prove that there was also a third temple that was built in 119 AD.
6. Retsuat Azah [Gaza Strip] - Tsava uMimshal. Copy No. 16! Unicom!.
7. Museum item : A booklet with stamps of The Central Prison in Jerusalem during the Mandate Period!!
8. Rare bulletin "8200 Unit" from "Efrat" base in Sinai. Unicom!!
9. Rare publications of the Opening ceremony of "Bar Ilan University".
10. Important posters and letters.
11. Rare Jewish calendars that are not in any library.
And other special items, culture and knowledge. We've made a lot of affort in cataloging and photographing the items in order to enlight the cultural wealth embodied in the catalog and auction ahead.
Shipping prices :
Registered shipment - 30 NIS [till 2 kg.]
Package shipment - 40 NIS [over 2 kg.]
Courier shipment - 45 NIS till 5 kg.
Courier shipment over 5 kg. - 60 NIS.
Courier shipment over 10 kg. - 80 NIS.
Overseas shipment - according to the shipping kind and the destination country.
Those who buy for more than 1500 NIS, before calculating VAt, the courier shipping will be for free.
Those who buy for more than 1500$, will get EMS overseas shipment for free.
No buyer commissions
No Credit Cards commissions
VAT on the entire amount.
Overseas customers are exempted from VAT payment, only if the shipment will be shipped abroad.
Payment by Paypal only by NIS and 6% commission.
Online auction without announcer!
Payment after 14 days from the auction's end, will be charged for 20% storage fee.
LOT 598:
I have been a stranger in a strange land : The Hungarian state and Jewish refugees in Hungary, 1933-1945. By Kinga ...
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Start price:
$
20
Buyer's Premium: 0%
More details
VAT: 18%
On the full lot's price and commission
Users from foreign countries may be exempted from tax payments, according to the relevant tax regulations
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I have been a stranger in a strange land : The Hungarian state and Jewish refugees in Hungary, 1933-1945. By Kinga Frojimovics. 2007. Photographs.
I have been a stranger in a strange land : The Hungarian state and Jewish refugees in Hungary, 1933-1945 - By Kinga Frojimovics. Jerusalem : Yad Vashem, 2007. 256 [7] pp. paperback. 23 cm.
Photographs.
From 1933-45 ca. 20-25,000 Jewish refugees lived, for various periods, in Hungary in addition, a number of Jews entered the country in the fall of 1939 as part of the wave of Polish military and civil refugees. The National Central Alien Control Office (Külföldieket Ellenőrző Országos Központi Hatóság, KEOKH) affiliated with the Interior Ministry, was established in order to supervise the foreigners (Jewish and non-Jewish) living in Hungary. Rapidly, the KEOKH turned into a "de-Jewification commando", predating the Eichmann commando, which came to Hungary after the country's German occupation in 1944. The KEOKH not only prevented attempts by alien Jews to obtain a citizenship certificate, but also re-classified many Jews born in Hungary as "alien". It participated in deportations of these Jews from Hungary, in full knowledge that such deportations meant death, as in the deportations to Kamenets-Podolskii in 1941 and to Slovakia in 1942 and later. These policies of the Hungarian state and society contrast with the policies concerning Polish non-Jewish refugees. The Hungarian political elite, that was prepared to break the law and confront its German allies in order to admit tens of thousands of Poles, deported the "undesirable" Jews in 1941-44. In 1944 thousands of Jews, both refugees and Hungarians, tried to flee the country only to be confronted with a tightening of border controls in Hungary and a reluctance to admit them by neighboring countries.
Excellent Condition.

