🔥 RARE World Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors Lithograph Poster, 1981 For Sale

🔥 RARE World Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors Lithograph Poster, 1981
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🔥 RARE World Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors Lithograph Poster, 1981:
$1350.00

This is an ImportantRARE Historic World Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors Lithograph Poster on paper, for the 1st World Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors, organized by Auschwitz survivor Ernest Michel, which took place in Israel from June 14 - 18, 1981, with 8,700 attendees. This event was a very significant gathering, as it had been the first worldwide reunion of survivors of both the Holocaust and the Jewish Diaspora. This poster bears the image of a Star of David comprised of barbed wire, with two Hebrew Words breaking free from the center. The poster reads, in Hebrew, English, French, and Spanish: "World Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors." Additionally, it also reads at the lower edge: "Israel, June 14 - 18, 1981" in English and Hebrew. This poster is exceedingly rare, and one of two known to still exist. The only other example of this poster (which is a different version, see photo 18,) was originally acquired by an attendee, and is now in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection. The artist who designed either of these posters is unknown, but perhaps you recognize their work? Approximately 19 1/4 x 27 1/4 inches (including frame.) Good condition for age, with some areas of light wrinkling from decades of hanging in its original frame. Priced to Sell. Acquired in Los Angeles County, California. If you like what you see, I encourage you to make an Offer. Please check out my other listings for more wonderful and unique artworks!
About this Artwork:
A Dream Fulfilled: World Gathering of Holocaust Survivors in Israel June 15-18, 1981

The six years he spent in Nazi concentration camps, including two at Auschwitz, between the ages of 16 and 22, left Ernest Michel with a major goal. “When I was in the camps I had a dream that someday we would. all be able to come together as one and say to Jews and non-Jews all over the world that what happened to us must never happen again in human history,” he said in an interview with the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

Michel, who is executive vice president of the United Jewish Appeal-Federation of Jewish Philanthropies of New York, said he believes this dream will be fulfilled with a gathering of Jewish Holocaust survivors and their children in Israel June 15-18, 1981.

“This event will say” that the Holocaust must never reoccur, Michel said. “As such I believe it will be a unique event in Jewish history. It is something we owe to the memory of those who didn’t survive and to ourselves.”

At a press conference today at 515 Park Avenue officially announcing the World Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors, Michel added that the four-day gathering is also something owed to “future generations.” The gathering was also announced at press conferences today in Paris and Melbourne, it was reported here.

Michel is chairman of the World Gathering, which will be held under the patronage of Israeli Premier Menachem Begin. Author Elie Wiesel, chairman of the U.S. President’s Commission on the Holocaust, and Simone Veil, president of the European Parliament, are honorary chairmen.

At the press conference today, Kalman Sultanik, vice president of the World Jewish Congress and a member of the World Gathering’s executive committee, said that the conference come at a “symbolic” moment when, “as in the time of Hitler,” not only Israel and the Jewish people are threatened “but all mankind.”

Sultanik, a member of the underground in Poland during World War II, said that after the Holocaust the survivors believed that “anti-Semitism would vanish and that the State of Israel would be secure within defensible borders and in turn provide security for the Jews of the diaspora.” But he said the United Nations General Assembly resolution equating Zionism with racism demonstrated that “the blatantly biased majority of Arab petrodollars and Soviet-dominated delegates seek to delegitimize the State of Israel.”

A statement was read from Wiesel, who was in Washington reporting on his recent visit, to Cambodia, in which the Holocaust survivor noted that “Only in remembering what has happened to our brothers and sisters under the Nazi oppression can we expect to be able to remind and advise the rest of the world how to prevent another catastrophe. Only in remembering what happened to us can the world assure that it will not happen to others.”

EVENT WILL NOT BE REPEATED

In his interview with the JTA, Michel said that the idea for the gathering originated in talks he had over the years with members of Kibbutz Netzer Sereni, a kibbutz made up of survivors of Buchenwala. The talks have been expanded in the last two years to include survivor groups in the United States and elsewhere.

Michel said the decision to hold the gathering in 1931 was made because this would be the 36th anniversary of the liberation of the concentration camps, which is twice Chai (18), the Jewish symbol of life. “It will be a celebration of life,” he said.

This will be an event that will not be repeated, Michel noted, since most of the survivors are in their 60s or 70s. He said the entire event is being run by survivors who make up the executive committee. There is also an international leadership committee made up of heads of Jewish communities and Jewish leaders.

Michel said the World Gathering will begin at Yad Vashem, the Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem. He said survivors will be asked to bring a tape recording telling of their experiences which will be deposited at Yad Vashem. In addition, they are asked to bring a rock or stone from their countries which will be made into a “monument of those who lived, dedicated to those who died.”

Other planned events include a march through Jerusalem of the survivors to the Western Wall; simultaneous meetings at three kibbutzim founded by Holocaust survivors, Netzer Sereni, Lochamei Haghettoot, and Yod Mordechai; the collection and exhibition of personal Holocaust keepsakes brought to the gathering; and a rally at Ramat Gan Stadium where a “Written Testament to Future Generations” will be signed by all survivors and presented to the second generation. There will also be special programs for children and grand-children of survivors.

Michel said that no one knows how many survivors are still alive, although the estimates are several hundred thousand. He said he believes 10,000-15,000 people may come to the 1981 gathering, which would make it the largest number of persons to come to Israel for a single event. He said one result of the conference, hopefully, is the putting together of a list of survivors.

Meanwhile, Michel is concerned with informing as many Holocaust survivors as possible about the event. Committees have been established in South Africa, France, Belgium, Venezuela and Australia, and in several U.S. cities, he said. Information can be obtained by writing to the World Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors, I Park Avenue, Suite 418, New York, N.Y. 10016 or at any World Jewish Congress office abroad.


"In 1981, there was the First World Gathering of Holocaust Survivors in Israel. It was organized by an Auschwitz survivor, Ernest Michel. I met Ernst Michel in New York in 1977. He said it was his dream from when he came out of Auschwitz to bring all of the Holocaust survivors to Israel for a world gathering. It became my dream also.

I came to the members of our club and said, "We are going to save money every month for a couple of years." We had 37 or 38 people on that trip to Israel, proportionately the biggest percentage of Holocaust survivors from any other city in the United States. Many people said, "Why didn’t we do this before?" The answer was that it took 30 years to heal the wounds before survivors would come. It was just the right time." - Shep Zitler


Holocaust Museum Houston marks 25 years
By AARON HOWARD
or decades, most Holocaust survivors kept their stories hidden. On the individual level, how do you work through such loss? How can one adequately reconstruct the fear and suffering, especially for those who weren’t there? On a larger social level, how do you explain such evil? How do you respond to it going forward?

Thirty-six years (double chai) after the liberation of the concentration camps, an international group of survivors organized and held the first World Gathering of Holocaust Survivors. Longtime Houston resident, Siegi Izakson, of blessed memory, was among the approximately 8,700 survivors who attended the event, held in Jerusalem June 15-18, 1981.

As Holocaust Museum Houston CEO Kelly Zúñiga related to the JHV: “Izakson realized his peers were getting older. As they passed away, their stories and memories of unchecked prejudice would pass away with them.

“He returned to Houston, convinced that the city needed a Holocaust education center and memorial that would preserve the memory of those who had perished and the stories of those who had survived for future generations.”Poster with a barbed wire Star of David for the World Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors received by an attendee
Object | Accession Number: 2012.313.8
Poster for the World Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors acquired by Herbert Lichtenstein at the first meeting, held in Jerusalem in June 1981. In January 1939, 22 year old Herbert was arrested in Oberwesel, Germany, and sent to a forced labor camp. In August 1941, he was transferred to Bielefeld forced labor camp. In January 1943, he was sent to Auschwitz concentration camp and marked with prisoner number 105483. In January 1945, as the Soviet Army approached, Herbert was transported to Buchenwald and given prisoner number 117482. In April 1945, he was transferred to Theresienstadt which was liberated by the Soviet Army on May 9, 1945. Herbert was hospitalized with typhus until July. While in Theresienstadt, Herbert had met and fallen in love with Ursula Cohn, another inmate. Ursula, age 21, had been deported to Terezin in July 1942 from Berlin, Germany. The couple losttouch after liberation, but met again later and married. They emigrated separately to the United States: Ursula in 1946 with her mother Ruth and sister Klara; Herbert in 1947 with his grandfather Karl, his only surviving family member.
Physical DescriptionOffset lithographic poster on glossy white paper with a graphic design on a blue background featuring a Star of David outline formed by 2 intersecting triangles formed of yellow barbed wire. There is a break in the right side for 4 lines of Hebrew and English text in white ink which extend into the center. At the top right, a strand of barbed wire extends upward to become a green branch ending in a flamelike green leaf, with 3 green leaves with yellow shaded tips on the side. The bottom quarter of the poster has 4 lines of text on a white field. There is a nearly half inch white border around the poster. The production information is printed vertically along the top left border.
Dimensionsoverall: Height: 18.125 inches (46.038 cm) | Width: 13.125 inches (33.338 cm)Materialsoverall : paper, inkMarkingsfront, top left, vertical, printed, blue ink : Production: Rogrow Ltd., Jerusalem; Design: Nathan Karp; Printed: Hamakor Press, Jerusalem. Produced through the generous cooperation of Bank of Hapoalim: [logo]
front, center, printed, white ink : [Hebrew text] / israel, june 14-18, 1981 - [Hebrew text]
front, bottom left, printed, blue ink : For further details: / WORLD JEWISH CONGRESS AMERICAN SECTION - / WORLD GATHERING / One Park Avenue, Suite 418, New York, N.Y. 10016, U.S.A.
front, bottom right, printed, blue ink : [Hebrew text] / ATZERET LTD. / 29B Rehov Keren Hayesod, P.O. Box 3888, / Jerusalem 91037, Israel.
ContributorSubject: Herbert Lichtenstein
Subject: Ursula LichtensteinArtwork TitleWorld Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors, Israel, June 14-18, 1981Datecommemoration: 1981 June 14-1981 June 18
received: 1981 June
Geographyreceived: Jerusalem
Credit LineUnited States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Eleanor Weinstein


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