Here is my latest, there is an illustrated PDF version on my website 
the link is below

http://www.fishburnbooks.com/catalogs/February2011Feb24thFinal.pdf

I have also pasted the text without illustrations into the main email


Fishburn Books

43 Ridge Hill

Golders Green

London NW11 8PR

Tel: 0208 455 9139, Fax: 0208 922 5008

fishburnbo...@yahoo.co.uk

www.fishburnbooks.com



Judaica List February 2011



Posters and broadsides, some synagogue related items, a few haggadot, 
cookery books and some miscellaneous items,



Posters and Broadsides



1.       Israel's First Lottery Poster.  Tel Aviv, Louin Epstein. 
1949    [7949]                                    £1,100



Colours are yellow, red, green - a small boy excitedly waves his 
lottery ticket as his Father and Mother pick him up and laugh.Text in 
Hebrew. Very good condition. 72cm/28.5inches wide, 103cm/40.5inches 
high, professionally backed on archival linen.



2.       Poster Shekel.  Tel Aviv, Hapoel Hazair [printers]. 
1941    [7950]                                             £1,250



See front cover photograph. Artist's studio: Dr. Machner-Wallisch, 
Tel Aviv. Lineol: Bregman, Tel Aviv.

Good condition, some slight staining. Colours are orange, blue. The 
flag of Israel flies over the Bayit HaTonoah HaTsionit. 68cm/27inches 
wide, 100cm/39.5inches high. professionally backed on archival linen.

See illustration on cover.

The Shekel was the designation of membership dues in the World 
Zionist Organization (WZO). Introduced at the First Zionist Congress 
in 1897, it was in use in various forms and functions until 1968. 
Payment of the Shekel entitled the contribtor to vote in elections to 
the Zionist Congresses. Until 1960, when individual membership was 
abolished, it also entitled the contributor to a WZO membership card. 
The Shekel also served as a means of apportioning Zionist Congress 
delegates, the number of Shekalim required varying from 100-400 in 
the early years, 2 000 in the 1920s and later at 1 500 for the first 
five seats with several thousand for each seat after that. In 1960, 
representation was no longer by Shekel yield but instead by a special 
commission according to the size of the Jewish population and the 
extent of Zionist activity in the country in question. Until the 
formation of the Keren HaYesod in 1920, the Shekel was the main 
source of income for the WZO.

Before the Balfor Declaration, membership peaked at about 100 000. 
Following 1917, 778 000 Shekalim were sold in 1921. In 1939, 1 042 
000 Shekalim were sold. In 1964, 2 148 000 were sold, about half of 
which were in the United States . Prices were set initially at 1 
German mark, 1 French franc, 2 UK shillings, half a Russian ruble, 
half a US dollar or 1 Austrian crown. In the 1950s, the Shekel's 
popularity declined and it was abolished in 
1968. 




3.       [Broadside] - "60 years Religious Zionism" Celebration. To 
mark the 60th Anniversary of the Foundation of the World Mizrachi 
Movement - Monday, 25th June 1962, 7-45p.m. - St. John's Wood 
Synagogue Communal Hall. In the presence of the Very Rev. the Chief 
Rabbi, the Very Rev. the Haham, the Israel Minister and religious and 
lay leaders of the Community. Hasmonean Boys' Choir and Bnei Akivah 
Pageant. London, The Narod Press. 
1962    [8176] 
                                       £75



Poster, 38cm high x 25.5cm wide, good condition (the ink has leaked 
slightly).



Synagogue Related Items



4.       Seatholders of the United Synagogues for 1902. Preceeded by 
a List of Officers and Committees of the United Synagogue. Contains 
bound lists of seatholders, including their addresses, for the 
following synagogues: the Great Synagogue; Hambro; the New Synagogue; 
Bayswater; Central synagogue, Borough New Synagogue, St. John's Wood 
Synagogue, East London Synagogue, North London synagogue, New West 
End Synagogue, Dalston synagogue, Hammersmith and West Kensington, 
Hampstead, South Hackney. London, United Synagogue. 
1902  [5747] 
                                                     £125

Having the addresses make this a useful demographic tool. Cloth 
cover, 20.5cm. Very good condition. pp: the United Officers 11, the 
Great Synagogue 20, Hambro 14, the New Synagogue 20, Bayswater 20, 
Central Synagogue 20, Borough New Synagogue unpag., St. John's Wood 
Synagogue 16, East London Synagogue 16, North London Synagogue 16, 
New West End Synagogue 20, Dalston Synagogue 16, Hammersmith and West 
Kensington 11, Hampstead 20, South Hackney 
19.



Laws and Regulations of three of the most prominent 19th Century 
London Synagogues.



5.       Hambro Synagogue. Laws of the Congregation of the Hambro 
Synagogue, Church Row, Fenchurch Street, London. London, Hambro 
Synagogue. 5605-1845   [8126]        £350



Lacks covers but otherwise is complete, 22.5cm, xxvi + 85 pp. The 
Hambro Synagogue was "one three historic City of London Synagogues 
set up by the Ashkenazi community." Set up by Marcus Moses after a 
split with the Great Synagogue. It moved to the East End in the 1890s 
and was absorbed back into the Great Synagogue in 1936. The Laws of 
the Congregation were first published in Hebrew and Yiddish in 1795. 
This text is in English with some Hebrew phrases.

It includes times for Commencing Divine Service throughout the year. 
Rosh Hashana morning was to start at 6am, for example, and Shacharit, 
Minchah and Maariv times and the times of services are all set down 
clearly. It fixes the times for prayers. Including form of bequest, 
eligibility for office, laws of the burial society. List of the 
officers of the congregation.





6.       Great Synagogue. - Laws of the Congregation of the Great 
Synagogue, Duke's Place, London.  London, Great Synagogue. 
1827    [8127] 
       £375



Original printed paper covered boards, half leather, spine scuffed, 
rubbing to extremities. 21cm, 81 pp in Hebrew + 82 pp in English + 3 
pp index. Good condition. Spine and covers worn, otherwise a pretty good copy.

Roth Magna - B7:26. Preceeded by earlier editions 1771 and 1791 
(possibly 1796) Unlike the other two Synagogue regulations on this 
list it was printed in Hebrew and English. The Great Synagogue was 
the pre-eminent Ashkenazi Synagogue in London from its opening in 
1692 to certainly the middle of the 19th Century and very prominent 
till its destruction in 1941 during the Blitz when it was bombed and 
destroyed. It was replaced by a simple structure in 1943 but closed 
in 1958 due to steady migration of the Jewish population from 
London's East End.



7.       Laws of the Western Congregation, St. Alban's 
Place.   5593-1832    [8128]           £185



See adjacent picture. Rebound cloth, 22cm, 113 pp. Rebound, title 
page and errata page (the last page) are in facsimile. Some marginal 
repairs. Initially founded in 1761, it was an independent synagogue 
until it was amalgamated with the Marble Arch Synagogue in 1991.



8.       Hampstead Synagogue. History of the Hampstead Synagogue and 
Order of Service on the Fiftieth Anniversary of its Opening.  London, 
Hampstead Synagogue. 1942    [8166]   £35



Original wrappers. Stapled, 8vo, 47 pp, self wrapps. Text of the 
history in English, the order of service is in Hebrew and English.





9.       Order of Service At the celebration of the One-Hundred and 
Fiftieth Anniversary of the Dedication of the Synagogue founded by 
Sir Moses and Lady Montefiore, 5593-1833.  Ramsgate. 
1983    [8167] 
                                                                                
          £25&a 
mp;a mp;l t;/ span>



Original wrappers, 21cm, unpaginated. Very good condition. The 
synagogue itself was built on an adjacent plot of land to Sir Moses 
Montefiore's twenty-four acre estate by Ramsgate, where he had 
purchased a mansion in 1831. The mansion had been a country residence 
for Queen Caroline when still Princess of Wales, and had since been 
owned by the brother of the Duke of Wellington. Montefiore 
commissioned his cousin, David Mocatta, to design a synagogue to be 
opened in 1833  which Montefiore described as "like Paradise." 
Services were based on those of Bevis Marks but the mitzvot were 
announced in Hebrew, not Portuguese, and Friday night Kiddush was 
recited in the synagogue. Lady Judith and Sir Moses Montefiore are 
buried in a mausoleum just fifteen paces from the 
Synagogue.



10.     Photograph album: Synagogues at Kibbutzim and 
Moshavim.   [8175]                                       £295



A photograph album with photographs of synaqgogues  in Kibbutzim and 
Moshavim. Including a plan and a drawing of a Synagogue. The majority 
of photographs are either about 8.5cm wide x 6cm high or 13.5cm wide 
x 9cm high. All in black and white.  The Kibbutzim and Moshavim 
include Aitan, Uzah, Ayn Zurim, Shalvah, Nir Galim, Even Shamuel, 
Ruchah, Saad, Yavneh, Noam and Shafir. There are some external and 
some internal views, a plan of the Synagogue in Saad, an artists 
impression of the Synagogue in Mashuos Yitzchak. The album is from 
the 1950s – the picture of the synagogue in Kibbutz Yavneh is from 
the Chanukot Beit HaKennesset in 1955.







11.     Southport Synagogue. – Order of Service at the Consecration 
of the Southport Synagogue, Arnside Road, on Thursday, 2nd September, 
1926-5686 by the Very Rev. Dr. J. H. Hertz, Chief Rabbi of the 
British Empire.  Southport, Southport Synagogue. 
1926    [8183]                                                £65



Original wrappers, 26cm, unpag. Good condition inside, wear to 
covers. Some pencil marks. The Southport Hebrew Congregation, 
Orthodox, is still running. The Southport Jewish community began in 
in 1873 when Henschel Samuelson, from Breslau , settled there. By the 
early 1950s there were around 3000 Jews in 
Southport. 




12.     Temple Emanuel, Kingston. – Dedication - Temple Emanuel - 
Kingston, New York 1959.  Kingston, Temple Emanuel 
1959   [8163] 
                                             £75



Original wrappers, wire bound, 29.5cm, unpag. With dedications from 
sponsors. Dinner menu and programme (sewn) inserted.





13.     Union of American Hebrew Congregations. – Contemporary 
Synagogue Designs by Architects and Artists.  New York, Union of 
American Hebrew Congregations. 1951    [8164]                            £350



Original wrappers, 27.5cm, 22 designs, good condition with some 
foxing. Designs of unbuilt and built synagogues (such as at Omaha, 
Baltimore, Houston) as well as sculptures and other art for synagogues.











Haggadot



14.     [Salonika] Seder Haggadat liyal Pesach.  Salonika. 
1970    [7917]                                          £110



Original cloth, 28.5cm, 119 pp, very good condition. Altogether, 45 
pages with illustrations/drawings/photographs including a two-page 
map of Salonika, four pages of musical score. The Salonikan Jewish 
community was all but destroyed in the Holocaust. However, 
remarkably, in 1970, the community published one of the most 
luxurious editions of the Haggadah to appear within recent memory.

It contains no new illustrations. However, it is adorned throughout 
with a profusion of reproductions, in monochrome and colour, of old 
manuscript and printed Haggadahs, as well as ancient Jewish mosaics 
and Egyptian art. There are also contemporary photographs showing 
views of the synagogue of Salonika , the monument to its Jewish 
martyrs, and a group of Jews praying at the Western Wall in Jerusalem 
following its recovery in 1967. Several pages of music are provided 
for the songs and hymns. Toward the end there is a map of the city of 
Salonika in 1943, showing the points of Jewish interest that existed 
before the Nazi occupation.

Of singular interest are the langauges in which the Haggadah is 
printed: Hebrew, Ladino in Hebrew characters, modern Greek, and 
Ladino transcribed into Latin characters. The latter two, of course, 
are reflections of modern developments within Salonikan Jewry. The 
Greek appears for those Jews who no longer know Hebrew or Ladino; the 
transliterated Ladino, for those who know the language but cannot 
read it in the Hebrew alphabet.

See Yerushalmi - Plate 198.







15.     Young Poale Zion. – Hagadah Shel YPZ.  London. 1977    [8151]

                                                                                
                               £75



Original wrappers, stapled, 30cm, unpag. Contains illustrations, 
jokes, articles, information and comments on the situation for Soviet Jewry.





16.     Young Poale Zion. – Hagadah Shel YPZ.  London. 
1978    [8422]                                        £75



Original wrappers, stapled, 25.5cm, unpag. Contains illustrations, 
jokes, articles, information and comments on the situation for Jews 
in Arab lands.



17.     [Parody - Haggadah] Rapa, Yona (ed George Belasco). – Pilpul 
Al Zman Zmanim, Zmanahem. London, J Jacobs. 
1908  [8109] 
                                          £110



           A parody in the form of the Passover Haggadah on the 
rites, festivals and ceremonies of the Roman Catholic Church in 
Italy. Edited by George S. Belasco. 21cm, iv +83 pp. Text in Hebrew, 
with a 4 page introduction in English. Includes an illustration of 
the manuscript in the Montefiore collection in Ramsgate (manuscript 
484) upon which this edition is based. See page 775 in the Second 
Supplementary Catalogue of Hebrew Books in the British Library. See 
also Israel Davidson, 'Parody in Jewish Literature' pages 153-167 
(reprint 1966) for a description of the various manuscripts of this 
parody. 


18.     [Haggadah] Offenbacher Haggadah. Flushing, NY, Verlag des 
Herausgebers Dr. Guggenheim (printed by Otto Harrasowitz , 
Weisbaden). 
1960  [8490] 
                                 £95



Original cloth, 27cm, 134 pp. Finely printed in Paltino type, text in 
German translated from the Hebrew. Some Hebrew and music in the 
text.. Limited to 500 copies, with black and white illustrations by 
Fritz Kriedel. A very good copy. Yudlov 4670.





19.     [Haggadah] Saul, Felix. – Haggada Berattelse om Israels uttag 
ur Egypten for de bada forsta. Stockholm, Norstedt & 
Soner.1963  [7776] 
                                £45



Original paper covered boards with a cloth backstrip, 23cm, 71 pp. A 
very good copy. In Hebrew and Swedish, with musical scores by Felix 
Saul and illustrations by Stanislaus Bender. The Hebrew text is after 
Bamberger's edition from Frankfurt Am Main (1933). Overall very good 
condition, with a little wear on lower 
edge.





20.     [Haggadah] Geis, Robert Raphael. – Pessach-Haggadah. 
Dusseldorf, Wochenzeitung Der Juden in Deutschland. 1954 
[7764] 
£45



Original cloth, 23cm, 76 pp  A very good copy. In Hebrew and 
German.Yudlov 4365.





21.     [Haggadah] Sinai Haggadah. – The Pesach Haggadah – with 
coloured pictures and musical notes. Tel Aviv, Sinai. 1955 
[7793] 
£50



Original cloth, 19cm, 47 pp, 27cm. With musical scores and lyrics and 
with black and white illustrations. English and Hebrew.  Yudlov 4458.





22.     [Haggadah] Créhange, A. Ben Baruch. – La Haggada ou 
Cérémonies Religieuses des Israélites, Pendant les deux premières 
soirées de Paque. Paris, Durlacher. 1881 [7779]                        £75



8th edition. Original cloth, 17cm, xi+59+iv pp. In Hebrew and French. 
Black and white illustrations and musical scores. Yudlov 1584.







Miscellaneous



23.     The Anglo-Palestine Company, Limited. – Memorandum and 
Articles of Association. Incorporated the 27th day of February 
1902.   1902    [8165]                            £195



Original paper covered boards, 31cm, 19 pp, very good condition. The 
Anglo-Palestine Company was the precursor of Bank Leumi. A brief 
history of Bank Leumi ("National Bank" in Hebrew): Founded at the 
Second Zionist Congress and incorporated in London in 1899 as the 
financial instrument of the Zionist Organization, its initial capital 
raised came to a total of £395,000 - far short of the £8 million 
target. In 1919, Nahum Sokolow wrote: "The British East Africa 
Company, which administered 200,000 square miles, began with the same 
amount £250,000." The bank's activities in Palestine were carried out 
by the Anglo-Palestine Bank, a subsidiary formed in 1902. The bank 
opened its first branch in Jaffa in 1903 under the management of 
Zalman David Levontin. Early transactions included land purchase, 
imports and obtaining concessions. Branches were opened in Jerusalem 
, Beirut , Hebron , Safed, Haifa , Tiberias and Gaza .

The Anglo-Palestine Bank offered farmers long-term loans and provided 
loans to the Ahuzat Bayit association which built the first 
neighborhood in Tel Aviv. During World War I, the Ottoman government 
declared the bank, because it was registered in England , to be an 
enemy institution and moved to shut it down and confiscate its cash.

After World War I, the bank's operations expanded. In 1932, the main 
branch moved from Jaffa to Jerusalem .

During World War II, the Anglo-Palestine Bank helped to finance the 
establishment of industries that manufactured supplies for the 
British army. After the founding of the state of Israel , the bank 
won the concession to issue new banknotes. In 1950, the bank was 
renamed Bank Leumi Le-Israel (National Bank of Israel ). When the 
Bank of Israel was established in 1954, Bank Leumi became a 
commercial bank. The bank was nationalized in 1983, as a result of 
the Bank Stock Crisis.

Today, Bank Leumi is Israel's leading commercial bank, with $85 
billion in assets and a presence in the USA, Switzerland, the UK and 
many other countries. Bank Leumi is mainly in private hands, with the 
government as the largest single shareholder, with 14.8% of the stock 
(as of June 2006). The other major shareholders are Shlomo Eliyahu 
and Branea Invest, which each hold 10% of the stock, constituting the 
control core of the bank. 60% of the bank's stocks are held by the 
public and traded on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange.





24.     The Jewish Chronicle Special Supplement. – Tercentenary of 
the Resettlement of the Jews in the British Isles, 
1656-1956.  London, The Jewish Chronicle. 
1956    [8149]                         £35



Original wrappers, 37cm, 60 pp, good condition but fragile. Articles 
from Israel Brodie, Professor Norman Bentwich, and articles about 
Jewish education, Jews around Europe , Zionist history, Oliver 
Cromwell and the Jews...



25.     Sieff, Israel M. – Jewish Colonisation and Enterprise in 
Palestine (Zionist Pamphlets No. 9).  London, The Zionist. 
1916   [8172] 
                                                    £65



Original wrappers, 22cm, 16pp. Very good 
condition. 






26.     The English Zionist Federation. – The Development of 
Palestine - An Appeal to Jews.  London, The English Zionist 
Federation.1911    [8173] 
                                        £125



Original wrappers, 20.5cm, 9 pp, very good condition.

"There are two Zionist institutions for the purchase of land in 
Palestine, - the Jewish National Fund and the Palestine Land 
Development Company, and during the last few years they have both 
been actively pushing forward the work of colonisation... a special 
appeal shall be made this year to every Zionist Federation for the 
P.L.D.C. [Palestine Land Development Company] because it is 
recognised that the extension of colonisation depends on the increase 
of the capital of the Company, which has hitherto not received the 
support it deserves from many Zionists... At the Hamburg Congress in 
1909 it was proposed by an English delegate (Mr. P.M. Raskin of 
Leeds) that every Jew, Zionist or non-Zionist, should acquire one 
dunam of land in Palestine for the National Fund."



27.     [Holocaust] Photograph album from a British 
soldier.   1940s    [8181]                              £325



This soldier was one of those who liberated Bergen-Belsen . There are 
about 10 photographs of Bergen Belsen after its liberation. Bergen 
Belsen was the only concentration camp liberated by the British.  The 
album itself is 23cm w x 15cm h. The photographs of Bergen-Belsen are 
small snapshots around 5cm by 5cm. . The rest of the album contains 
personal photographs, some army photographs.



28.     [Samaritan] Isaac, Cohen Amram. – Mount Gerizim - The One 
True Sanctuary.  Jerusalem, Greek Convent Press. 
1950s?   [8198] 
                                               £40



Original wrappers, 24cm, 31 pp, overall very good condition some age 
tanning to wrappers. Cohen Amram Isaac was the High Priest of the 
Samaritans in Nablus, Israel .





29.     Juden-Deportationen aus Darmstadt 1942/43.  Darmstadt, H. 
Anthes. 1992    [8200]           £35



Original wrappers, 23cm, 63 pp, very good condition. Text in German. 
Illustrated black and white photographs and facsimiles of documents 
Jewish deportations from Darmstadt, 1942/43.  Emigration after 
Hitler's rise to power reduced the community to fewer than 700 by 
August 1938. On Nov. 10, 1938, both the main synagogue, with its 30 
Torah scrolls, and the Orthodox synagogue were burned down. The 
remaining Jews were deported starting in December 1940.



30.     [Holocaust] Salway, C. C. – Refugees and Industry.  London, 
Williams and Norgate Ltd. 1942    [8202]      £65



Original wrappers, 21cm, 23 pp, very good condition. Black and white 
photographs. Inserted, a press letter requesting mention of the 
booklet in an early edition. Addressee unknown?

Salway was from the Christian Council for Refugees from Germany and 
Central Europe . Forewords by The Archbisop of York 
(Archbishop-designate of Canterbury ) and Vice-Provost of King's 
College, Cambridge and President of the British Academy , Dr. J.H. 
Clapham.





31.     Jewish Agency for Palestine. – Palestine and the British 
Tax-payer.  London, Jewish Agency for Palestine. 
1929    [8207] 
                                                                       £65



Original wrappers, 22cm, 12 pp, very good condition. Includes brief 
discussion of the Palestine Gendarmerie, the precursor to the 
Palestine Police Force.

"A great deal of prejudice has been imported into the discussion of 
the matter by the allegation that the British Government are paying 
for the establishment of the Jewish National Home. During more than 
one General Election the assertion was made that whilst the 
Government couild not find money to build homes in England for 
wounded heroes, it was building homes for Jews in Palestine. The 
allegation that the British Government has ever financed even the 
smallest part of the extensive work of Jewish colonisation in 
Palestine, is a complete fabrication. The fact is that the entire 
cost of this colonisation, including the purchase of land and 
improvement of the soil, and even afforestation and irrigation, has 
been paid for out of funds voluntarily contributed by Jews in all 
parts of the world."





32.     [Manuscript] Jews' Infant School. – Minutes of Board 
Sub-Committee Meetings, 
1884-1899.[8426] 
£1,200



Bound manuscript, approx. 350 pp. 23cm. Good condition. Notable 
attendees - Claude Montefiore, Lionel Van Oven.

Deals with salaries of teachers and other staff, timetables, school 
facilities, appointment of medical officers etc. There seems to be 
two branches of the school: one in Commercial Street and one in 
Tenter Street. It contains considerable information such as names of 
teachers and detailed salary information.

There are several pieces of ephemera loosely inserted and some stuck 
in the book: Invitation to Ball, March 19th, 1888, receipts of J.V.W. 
Hackblock, 1841, list of teachers in 1885, advertisement for 
caretakers and cleaners, etc.







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