Auction 93 K2 Judaica Sale: Rare Printed Books, Manuscripts, Autograph Letters, Graphic & Ceremonial Arts
May 6, 2021
USA
 The Brooklyn Navy Yard Building 77, Suite 1108 141 Flushing Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11205

Bidding via Bidspirit ONLY.


Welcome to our Spring K2 Judaica Auction (Kestenbaum Sale number 93) consisting of 226 lots. The subject matter of the auction is divided as follows:


Manuscripts: Lots 1-21 

Including ten lots of Pinkas community records (all American), Lots 12-21


Autograph Letters by Rabbinic & Chassidic leaders: Lots 22-77


Americana - Printed Books, Manuscripts & Autograph Letters: Lots 78-96.


Cook-Books (Lots 107-123)


Holocaust-era (Lots 132-151)


Land (and State) of Israel: Lots 152-169


Graphic Art: Lots 188-209. 

Including artwork by Yohanan Simon, Chagall, Pilichowski, Abel Pann and Reuven Rubin. Also a magnificent livre-d'artiste by Joseph Budko, issued entirely on vellum, one of just five copies (lot 188)


Ceremonial and Folk Objects: Lots 210-226


Included in the auction are items that relate to Jewish history in: Argentina, Belgium, England, France, Germany, Hungary, Norway, Poland, Russia and Spain.


Utilize the "find" mode button to locate areas of particular interest.


Limited viewing is available by APPOINTMENT ONLY.


The auction has ended

LOT 6:

(GERMANY).
World War One-era Diary of a German-Jew, Siegfried Mai.
German text. c. 115 closely ...

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Sold for: $4,600
Estimated price:
$ 3,000 - $5,000
Auction house commission: 25%
tags:

(GERMANY).
World War One-era Diary of a German-Jew, Siegfried Mai.



German text. c. 115 closely written pages. Tipped in: 17 original photographs, two military certificates (Iron Cross 2nd Class and Bavaria’s Military Merit Cross, 3rd Class with Crown and Sword); various other inserts, postcards and clippings.
Original boards, worn. 4to.
Germany: 1917-19 and 1938


This fascinating war journal and memoir of the young German Jew Siegfried Mai (1898-1980) who stemmed from Hagenbach, Rhineland-Palatinate (close to Karlsruhe), details the trials and tribulations of the war and its after-effects in a personal account. The young student's narrative of patriotic enthusiasm who feared that the war would be over before he was finally drafted on January 17th 1917, changes into the staccato of an increasingly grueling trench warfare with growing number of casualties. The detailed diary culminates with a narrative of his disillusionment when returning home and faced: "A reception we had not imagined. But it was all the same to us, we were back in our home country. The war was over." After the war, Siegfried Mai reflects here on the betrayal of Jewish soldiers: "I fought with all my youthful strength, I fought with joy for freedom and equality in a beautiful Germany, which I believed in, as did so many of my co-religionists. A Germany that would fulfill what was promised by the German Emperor at the beginning of the war: ‘The gratitude of the Fatherland is assured you.’ For us German Jews it turned out differently. The blood of 12,000 Jewish soldiers was shed in vain. In 1919, a great anti-Semitic agitation began, which has increased from year to year…" The diary ends shortly after Kristallnacht, 1938. Siegfried (soon to be known as Fred) was able to flee to America where he built a new life with his wife and children in the German-Jewish émigré haven of Washington Heights, New York.

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