January 25th Rare Autograph & Book Auction
Category:
Search By:
This lot is closed for bidding. Bidding ended on 1/25/2024

Albert Einstein Seeks to Continue Important Aid Being Provided to Jewish Settlers in Palestine

In the wake of Hitler's assumption of power, with the German-Jewish world in flux, the Land of Israel would be more important than ever

His letter cites two men prominent in Jewish aid to Palestine

On January 30, 1933, Adolf Hitler took office as Chancellor of Germany, and in April, the Nazis proclaimed the Nuremberg laws that made Jews second-class citizens. Far-sighted Jews began to leave Germany right away, though many escaped with just the clothes on their backs. Einstein had been in the US for a visiting professorship at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena at the time of Hitler's assumption of power. He and his wife Elsa returned by ship to Europe in March 1933, landing in Belgium. He soon found that their cottage in Germany had been raided and learned that his name was on a list of assassination targets. Einstein turned in his passport to the German consulate and formally renounced his German citizenship. He resided in Belgium at the coastal village of Le Coq for some months and then moved to England for a short period. On October 17. 1933, he returned to the US and took up a position at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, New Jersey.

Karl Frankenstein was a psychologist in Berlin prior to the Nazi takeover and was actively involved in Jewish relief organizations. He was Director of Hilfswerk für Jüdische Künstler und Geistesarbeiter - Aid for Jewish Artists and Intellectuals - an organization to which Einstein had accepied honorary membership.

Erwin Loewenson was a pioneer of literary expressionism in Germany before World War I, and an author who contributed to a number of noted magazines at the time. Under the influence of Martin Buber, he became a Zionist. In 1922, he took over as Secretary of the German Palestinian Relief Society, which provided needed aid to settlers. In the Zionist movement, Loewenson engaged in organizational and journalistic activities and emigrated to Palestine in 1933. Thus the German-Jewish world was in flux, and on the road, and a prime concern was how to maintain and continue the important scientific, literary, charitable, and Zionist work that was being done.

"Typed letter signed, on his typed temporary letterhead. Le Coq, June 25, 1933, being a letter citing Frankenstein and encouraging a funding source to assist Loewenson...Rare to find full signature "Abert Einstein" on TLS.

"As an honorary member of the Aid for Jewish Artists and Intellectuals' (founded by Mr.Frankenstein whose efforts I have supported), I am confirming Mr. Frankenstein's factual, statements and concur with his petition to grant Mr. Erwin Loewenson a stipend to enable him to continue his valuable and very necessary work."

With One of a Kind Collectibles LOA

Albert Einstein Seeks to Continue Important Aid Being Provided to Jewish Settlers in Palestine with Rare Full Signature on TLSAlbert Einstein Seeks to Continue Important Aid Being Provided to Jewish Settlers in Palestine with Rare Full Signature on TLSAlbert Einstein Seeks to Continue Important Aid Being Provided to Jewish Settlers in Palestine with Rare Full Signature on TLS
Albert Einstein Seeks to Continue Important Aid Being Provided to Jewish Settlers in Palestine with Rare Full Signature on TLS
Click above for larger image.
Bidding
Current Bidding
Minimum Bid: $500.00
Final prices include buyers premium.: $4,827.75
Number Bids: 16
Auction closed on Thursday, January 25, 2024.

Auction Notepad

 

You may add/edit a note for this item or view the notepad:  

Submit    Delete     View all notepad items