Subasta 84 Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art - Including: Items from the Estate of Ruth Dayan, Old Master Works, Israeli Art and Numismatics
Por Kedem
21.12.21
8 Ramban St, Jerusalem., Israel

The preview and the auction will be held at our offices

8 Ramban St. Jerusalem


In the present catalogue, a distinct chapter is dedicated to the Dayan family, featuring personal letters, photographs, books and documents from the estate of Ruth Dayan; together, this miniature collection recounts the story of the Dayan-Schwartz family over three generation, from Moshe's father Shmuel Dayan to Ruth's and Moshe's children. Included in this collection are a number of letters written by the famous of all Dayans – Moshe Dayan, and a variety of letters and other items sent or presented to family members, such as pictures dedicated to Moshe Dayan by Nobel peace prize laureate Albert Schweitzer, a micrography by Abraham Haba and a letter of appreciation to Moshe Dayan by Yigael Yadin, who served as IDF chief of staff during the 1948 War.

The art chapter features a number of Old Master works – including a forest view by Allaert van Everdingen and "Ruins of the Brederode Castle" attributed to Jacob Isaackszoon van Ruisdael – as well as works of Israeli and Judaic art from the collection of art historian Uzi Agassi.

the catalogue also includes an extensive chapter dedicated to numismatics, with an abundance of scrips and coupons, some used by Jewish Palestinian communities in times of distress and need (World War I, the 1948 siege on Jerusalem), some issued by small businesses throughout Palestine – bakeries, groceries and various stores, many of which had gone out of business soon afterwards. The chapter also includes various coins and banknotes: Ottoman, mandatory, and Israeli banknotes and coins, and two silver amuletic medals struck in honor of the formation of the Mandatory government and the appointment of High Commissioner Herbert Samuel.

The catalogue further features a variety of choice items representing the history of Palestine and Zionism – rare books (such as Sh.Y. Agnon's first book published in Palestine and "Tsveyuntsvantsik" by Ka-Tsetnik), letters and manuscripts (by Leah Goldberg, Shaul Tchernichovsky, Uri Tzvi Grinberg and Agnon), publications and ephemera from central events in the history of Zionism (the Katowice conference protocol, autograph postcards by Leo Motzkin), travelogues and scholarly works, Bezalel art, rugs, photographs and more.


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LOTE 2:

Protocol of the Katowice Conference – Hebrew Edition, 1884 – "Printed as a Manuscript"

Vendido por: $1 200 (₪3 804)
₪3 804
Precio inicial:
$ 1 000
Comisión de la casa de subasta: 25%
IVA: 17% IVA sólo en comisión
21.12.21 en Kedem
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Protocol of the Katowice Conference – Hebrew Edition, 1884 – "Printed as a Manuscript"

"Protocol of the Negotiations, Proceedings, and Resolutions discussed and executed at the Assembly of Council Leaders of Hovevei Zion in the City of Katowice in the Days of the Conference from the 18th to the 23rd of Marheshvan." [Katowice?], the year "He saves those who are crushed in spirit" (In Hebrew, a numerological chronogram equivalent to Hebrew year 5645), [1884?]. First edition, for participants of the conference (bottom line of title page indicates: "Printed as a Manuscript"). Hebrew.


Booklet documenting the proceedings of the Katowice Conference of "Hovevei Zion" and detailing the five meetings held by its Zionist leaders, November 6-11, 1884. The conference was attended by 36 delegates, among them some of the most prominent figures in the Zionist movement (including Rabbi Shmuel Mohilever, Yehuda Leib Pinsker, Ahad Ha'am, David Gordon, and others), whose goal was to adopt a course of action to reestablish organized Jewish settlement in Palestine. Since Zionist activity was ruled illegal in Russia, the true mission of the conference was kept secret, and it was billed as a conference celebrating Moses Montefiore's 100th birthday; thus, in the Hebrew-language newspaper "HaMelitz" – whose chief editor, Aleksander Zederbaum, was among the conference participants – the gathering was referred to as "an Assembly of Those Honoring Moses."
The opening speech by conference chairman Yehuda Leib Pinsker – in which he stresses the necessity for Jews to return to cultivate their own soil – appears in full at the beginning of the booklet: let us today take up the plow and spade instead of the measuring tape and scales and let us become once more what we had been before we fell into the discredit of other nations […] Let us return to our old mother, our land, which we have awaited with great desire" (Julius H. Schoeps, Pioneers of Zionism: Hess, Pinsker, Berlin-Boston: de Gruyter, 2013, p. 44).
This edition was presumably printed in a few dozen copies only and distributed to the participants of the conference (an additional German edition was published, in which the nationalistic and Zionist parts of Pinsker's speech were omitted). In 1920, a second edition of the booklet was published by the writer Leibl Toybsh (Vienna: Adria Press); there, in the preface, it was pointed out that "this protocol was printed at the time ‘as a Manuscript' in a limited number of copies, [specifically] a number matching the number of participants at the assembly and the [number of] members of the council elected then in Katowice. This protocol is therefore rare, and it cannot be obtained in the libraries, nor do the Zionist bibliographers know of it nor do they mention it."
In the present copy, an ownership stamp appears on the front flyleaf: "A. Б. РЕЙНЕСЪ, ЛИДА" ("A.B. Reines, Lida") – most probably the stamp of Avraham Ber Reines, son of Rabbi Yitzchak Yaacov Reines. Rabbi Reines, founder of the "HaMizrachi" religious Zionist movement, was personally invited to attend the conference, but was not permitted to cross the border to get to Katowice because he was not in possession of a passport. In all likelihood, the present booklet was delivered to him.


[1] printed front cover, 40 pp., approx. 15.5 cm. Back cover missing. Good-fair condition. Stains. Tears, incuding open tears, to edges (not affecting text). Brittle paper. Front cover partly detached. Bound with card binding, with endpapers (old). Binding somewhat loose, with minor tears and blemishes.


Two copies only in OCLC.