Asta 8 Banknotes, Coins, Documents, Judaica, The Holocaust, World War II, Toys & Car Models, Art and Ornaments, Records, signs, Western booklets and Israeli comics.
Da The Jewish Shtetl
28.5.23
Namir Road 120, Tel Aviv, Israele

Collectibles Store and Auction House!

Banknotes, Coins, Documents, Judaica, The Holocaust, World War II, Toys & Car Models, Art and Ornaments, Records, signs, Western booklets and Israeli comics.

Mail - michaelsh21@gmail.com

Phone - (+972) 0509272310


Overseas customers only!

Payment is only via PayPal!

Shipping is only in Eco Post by package size and weight.

Sent from us a request from PayPal including Eco Post shipping + 5% commission.


Up to 7 days must be paid from the end of the sale.


Self-collection: Pre-arranged by phone! Namir Road 120,

Tel Aviv.

Sunday through Thursday 9:30-16:00,

Friday 9:30-13:00

Prefer self collection! By appointment.


No responsibility for the shipments!

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LOTTO 18:

A badge of disgrace and identification (the yellow patch) that the Jews of Germany and Poland were required to ...

Venduto per: $1 000 (₪3 730)
₪3 730
Prezzo iniziale:
$ 900
Commissione per la casa d'aste: 22% Altri dettagli
28.5.23 in The Jewish Shtetl

A badge of disgrace and identification (the yellow patch) that the Jews of Germany and Poland were required to attach to their clothing by order of the German authorities. "Yad Vashem" sources.
 The order instructing Jews to carry an identification mark was given in Germany on September 1, 1941 by the Ministry of the Interior, at the initiative of Goebbels. The obligation to wear the sign, a yellow patch ("Judenstern"), began on September 19, 1941 and applied to all German Jews aged 6 and over. The patch, a yellow Star of David with the word "Jude" in the center, the Jews were ordered to sew on their clothes on the left side of the chest, at the level of the heart, so that it would stand out in a public place.
The order instructing Jews to wear an identification mark was established by the Germans in the occupied territories of Poland (General Governor) in September 1939. Every Jew over the age of 10 was ordered to wear the yellow patch on his clothes, so that he would stand out in a public place.