HABRICHA Jewish ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION Hebrew HOLOCAUST Israel PHOTO BOOK Haganah For Sale

HABRICHA Jewish ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION Hebrew HOLOCAUST Israel PHOTO BOOK Haganah
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HABRICHA Jewish ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION Hebrew HOLOCAUST Israel PHOTO BOOK Haganah:
$211.50

DESCRIPTION : Here for sale is a RARE and EXQUISITE Photo ALBUM - BOOK of remarkable SIZE and SCOPE which is dedicated to the BRICHA ( Also HABRICHA , HABRYCHA ) movement - The UNDERGROUND illegal actions of a courageous JEWISH MOVEMENT to CREATE , MANAGE and ESCOURT groups of HOLOCAUST REFUGEES , HOLOCAUST REMNANTS , Collecting them in DP CAMPS all over war beathen Europe,Smuggling post WW2 war European borders , Bringing them safely to harbors werte they can board on ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION SHIPS on their way to ERETZ ISRAEL ( Palestine ). The BRICHA was executed by members of the PALMACH and HAGANAH . The BRICHA took place in Russia, Poland , Czechoslovakia, Romania, Hungary, Germany, Italy , Yugoslavia. The PHOTO ALBUM - BOOK was arranged and published privately by HABRICHA activist and commanders to explain and document the BRICHA activities and participants. It was published in a very limited edition to be given to BRICHA activists and participants and NOT for commercial distribution publicaly and thus - VERY RARE , Sought after and impossible to find.Written in HEBREW and ENGLISH . The HABRICHA, BRICHA - ALBUM is indeed a TREASURE of ILLUSTRATED and PHOTOGRAPHED information . Originalillustrated chromo HC.Originalillustrated chromo DJ. size 9.5 x 12.5\" .Numerous PHOTOS and several DOCUMENTS and MAPS . 200 throughout photographed pp. Very good condition. Absolutely clean. Tightly bound .( Pls look at scan for accurate AS IS images ) .Will be sent inside a protective rigid packaging.

PAYMENTS : Payment method accepted : Paypal& All credit cards.
SHIPPMENT : Shipp worldwide via registered airmailcosts $ 35 ( A very heavy volume ) . will be sent inside a protective rigid packaging . Handling around 5-10 days after payment.
The \"Bricha\" movement operated in Europe from the end of World War II until the establishment of the State of Israel, and was responsible for the smuggling of some three hundred thousand Holocaust survivors from Eastern Europe to the southwest - to the ports of the Mediterranean, survivors who chose to abandon the killing valley of Europe in order to establish a home for themselves in the Land of Israel.The roots of the \"Bricha\" were a spontaneous organization of Holocaust survivors who came out of camps, forests, and hiding places and began organizing for mutual assistance. They were orphans, bereaved, last descendant of their families. The first to organize were Jewish partisans and graduates of the Zionist youth movements. They were organized in \"kibbutzim\" - where the refugees got a blanket, a pair of pants, food and shelter - a kind of family and first address. The survivors then met with the soldiers of the Jewish Brigade of the British Army, who exploited their status and the means at their disposal for the benefit of their fellow survivors. Many of the soldiers remained in Europe after being released from the \"Brigade\" in order to continue their activities.Later on, the \"Mosad for Aliyah Bet\" of the Haganah, which was established to help Jews immigrate to Palestine despite the ban imposed by the British Mandate authorities, undertook the management of the escape. The Palestine emissaries of the Mossad set up a network of lanes and transit camps across Europe. With their assistance and leadership, the Bricha movement became one of the most important elements in the immigration to Palestine and in the struggle for the establishment of the State of Israel.In Poland after the war there was political unrest and the Jews who remained there or returned to it suffered from alienation and anti-Semitism. In 1946, Polish rioters in the town of Kielce staged a pogrom against Jewish survivors. This massacre has become a turning point. There was no longer any need to urge the persecuted Jews to leave Poland. The ongoing anti-Semitism and the longing for a warm and secure home in their own homeland forced tens of thousands to join the Zionist organizations.A mass influx of Jews from Poland through Romania, Czechoslovakia, Ukraine and Hungary to the DP camps in Germany, Austria and Italy, controlled by the Allies began. From there they continued to the ports of Italy and southern France en route to Eretz Israel.The \"Irgun Ha - Bricha\" dealt with the logistics involved in this movement: transportation from city to city and from country to country, crossing border crossings with bribes and forged documents in the organization \'s labs, crossing borders on foot and snow, organizing transit camps and taking care of those on their way to seaports.Among the immigrants were thousands of orphaned Jewish children who were rounded up, rescued or rescued by the \"Irgun Ha - Bricha\" from convents, Christian families, caves and hideouts throughout Europe. These children needed care, care, education, and love that had been denied them during the war years.On their way to Eretz Israel, some of the survivors lived in DP camps in the territories held by the Allies in Germany, Austria, and Italy. In these camps the Bericha conducted extensive support and rehabilitation activities with the assistance of American Jewish organizations, especially the Joint, whose contribution was invaluable.Members of the Yishuv in Palestine who served in the \"Jewish Brigade\" and in the Transport Battalion, and were active in the struggle against the Nazis within the framework of the British army, contributed greatly to the Bricha. They provided military vehicles for the transportation of the refugees, assisted in the treatment of the camp residents, and carried out vocational training programs for their rehabilitation. At the end of the war, many of the soldiers chose to remain in Europe for a long time and continue their contribution to the national mission.As time went by it became clear that the Bericha had gone beyond its original form, and together with the Haapala movement played an important political role in the struggle of the Jewish people for its independence. The tens of thousands of Holocaust survivors who moved in Europe without a home and without a future created an international problem that, in practice and morally, undermined the British \"White Paper\" policy, which limited the entry of Jews to the Land of Israel. The Anglo-American Committee (1946) and the UNSCOP Committee (1947) were established in order to solve the problem, and members of the committees visited the displaced persons camps in Germany and recommended that survivors of the Holocaust immigrate to Eretz Israel. The decision of the UN General Assembly on November 29, 1947, to establish a Jewish state in Palestine.The Bericha movement on the roads of the European continent and the Haapala movement on the routes of the Mediterranean Sea, both under the umbrella of the Mossad Le\'Aliyah Bet, headed by Shaul Avigur, are the two parts that comprise the story of the rise of She\'erith Hapleitah to Israel and constitute a glorious chapter in the history of modern Jewish history . It is a chapter of heroism, courage, initiative and trickery that was characterized by sacrifice and love of the people and the homeland, a chapter that took place between two dramatic events of hysteria, namely, the Holocaust and the establishment of the State of Israel. ******* The AssociationThe Bricha Heritage Association was established with the aim of documenting, preserving, presenting and imparting the legacy of the Bricha movement that operated in Europe between 1945 and 1948, from the end of the war until the establishment of the State of Israel. The \"Bricha\" movement was responsible for organizing the migration of about three hundred thousand Jewish refugees, survivors of the Holocaust, from Eastern Europe to the ports of the Mediterranean in order to reach Eretz Ysrael. The Bricha movement on the Continent\' roads, continued by the Ha\'apala movement in the Mediterranean, both illegal movements, constitute together a glorious chapter in the modern history of the Jewish people. It is a chapter of heroism and courage, initiative and trickery, sacrifice and love of the people and the homeland.The story of the Bricha is unfamiliar to many, neither is it commemorated in a serious and meaningful manner. We, the Bricha Heritage Association, wish to give this chapter its proper place in the collective memory, and to raise awareness of the contribution of the \"Irgun Ha - Bricha\" to the rescue of Holocaust refugees, their immigration to Israel, and the establishment of the state:To establish a permanent museum exhibit of the \"Bricha\"To exhibit on various sites a traveling exhibition on the subject of the \"Bricha\"Collect and document personal stories of people who participated in the \"Bricha\" as Holocaust survivors or activistsCollect and preserve items related to the Bricha such as photographs, documents, forged documents, letters and objects from the periodTo develop and operate educational and training programs for Bericha students and for the general public ******** Habricha – Europe Exodus 1945-194824 DEC 2015 / HAIFAHOLOCAUSTSTUDIES GetFileAttachment (2)This December, Dr. Miri Nahari and Dr. Gal Talit spoke to our students during the Research Forum about the Bricha, or clandestine immigration of Holocaust survivors to Palestine from 1945 to 1948. Both Nahari and Talit are second generation to the Bricha, and Talit is also the daughter of a Holocaust survivor from Lithuania. Thus, the history they shared with us was intensely personal for both of them and their presentation included images of their parents and themselves.Dr. Nahari spoke first and through the use of images and a film she explained the history of the Bricha, or escape from Europe after the end of World War II. The Bricha is the largest organized illegal immigration movement in history. Approximately 300,000 people were involved, including first and foremost Holocaust survivors, the Jewish Brigade, Israeli emissaries including the Mossad l’Aliyah Bet who organized the covert operations involved in hiring boats etc., and the American Joint Distribution Committee, which financed the endeavor. Nahari spoke about the motivations that led many survivors to join the Bricha. Most had no home or family to return to after the war. She shared stories of survivors who returned to Poland only to be met with anti-Semitism by those who had taken over their homes. She mentioned the Kielce Pogrom in Poland in 1946, which resulted in the death of at least 42 Jews and injured 40 others. Events such as these convinced many survivors that they needed to leave to Palestine was a huge challenge, however. Survivors needed to cross, Europe usually on foot, to arrive at a port in Southern Europe. Many boats departed for Palestine from Italy and southern France. Throughout this harrowing journey the survivors needed to avoid the British who were attempting to close the boarders and apprehend ships to prevent Jewish refugees from arriving to Palestine illegally. Throughout the duration of the journey, survivors were aided by Jews from Palestine who were sent to Europe to organize the Bricha, which included gathering the survivors, forging papers for them, providing transportation, guiding them on the journey, and arranging for their passage by ship to Palestine. Both Nahari and Talit’s fathers were two such emissaries.Dr. Nahari also spoke about the role of women and children during the Bricha. There were many orphans after the war and the Bricha set up children’s homes where female representatives cared for the children. The Bricha and other political movements coordinated effort to retrieve Jewish children from hiding in monasteries and with Christian Talit’s parents met in a Displaced Persons camp in Austria. Her mother was a survivor from Lithuania who was employed by the camp because of her command of several languages. Her father was a Jew from Palestine who was sent to the camp after the war to teach children in the camp. After sharing her family story Talit mostly spoke about the Alpine Peace Project that was established by an Austrian named Ernst Laschner to commemorate the clandestine crossing of the Alps by survivors on their way from Austria to Italy to board a boat to Palestine. Since 2007 every year during the last week of June people travel to Austria to cross the Alps in memory of the journey of Jewish survivors following the war. In 2007 for the first crossing many survivors who made the crossing themselves were invited. Talit and her mother joined the group. Monuments and markers have been put up along the way to commemorate the history.Dr. Miri Nahari and Dr. Gal Talit used their personal family stories, photographs, and film to illuminate this less well known history of the Bricha that is an essential component of survivors returning to life following the horrors of the Holocaust and an essential element of the history of the state of Israel. Our students really got a lot out of hearing these speakers. ***** דלג לתפריט הראשי (מקש קיצור n)דלג לתוכן הדף (מקש קיצור s)דלג לתחתית הדף (מקש קיצור 2)Visit MuseumDonateEnter Search Word SearchingSearchפלוגות המחץ של ההגנהPalmach MuseumVirtual tourContact UsעבריתMuseumHistoryArchivePalmach MembersMemorializationSynopsis of Palmach historySubjectsHistoryContent MenuThe Beginning of the PalmachStruggle against the BritishIllegal Immigration - “Haapala”Palmach in the DiasporaPalmach and Illegal Immigration operationsHaapala – Palmach Military OperationsHaapala (Immigration) from Arab CountriesIllegal Immigration (\'Haapala\') - CyprusThe beginning of the struggleThe Jewish Resistance MovementThe War of IndependenceDismantling of the PalmachPalmach and the SettlementsThe Palmach\'s Military ThinkingUnits and Organizational StructureFemale Palmach MembersCulture and FolklorePalmach Contribution and LegacyPalmach in the DiasporaThe news about the holocaust of European Jewry during the Second World War, and the increasing harassment of Jews in Arab countries in the early 1940\'s, were a catalyst to the onset of Palmach operation beyond Eretz Israel\'s borders as well. The purpose was to secure the lives of Jews in the Diaspora and help to bring them to Eretz Israel.The Palmach was quintessentially Israeli in its character and education. In its early years, most Palmach members and commanders were native-born, educated in Eretz Israel and absorbed its atmosphere and culture. The principle values the unit was founded on were: Self-defense, an activist approach, focusing on the settlement effort for the Jewish nation in Israel and striving for Jewish independence in it.The feeling of shared fate with the Diaspora Jews and the willingness to help them were not a top priority for Palmach members. A sense of recoil and even aversion towards the Diaspora life style spread among them, expressing itself in their superiority and alienation towards its Jewry. Only a deliberate, continuous educational effort initiated by the Palmach HQ, was able to gradually instill in many of the Brigade members, the awareness to the necessity and importance of going on mission abroad.The news about the holocaust of European Jewry during the Second World War, and the increasing harassment of Jews in Arab countries in the early 1940\'s, were a catalyst to the onset of Palmach operation beyond Eretz Israel\'s borders as well. The purpose was to secure the lives of Jews in the Diaspora and help to bring them to Eretz Israel.Between 1943-1948, the Diaspora Palmach delegates worked in the following areas:1. Organizing the self-defense of Jews in Arab countries.2. Helping the immigration of Jews from Arab countries by land through the northern border.3. As part of the Hagana delegation that worked in Europe after the Second World War was over.4. Leading in refugee camps in Europe and escorting Haapala ships.5. Training the immigrants detained in the detention camps in Cyprus as part of the \"Defenders Line\".Hundreds of Palmach members participated in these missions during those five years. They mostly worked individually or in small groups. The Palmach members were sent on missions by order of the Palmach HQ, but were usually subordinated to the command of \'Hamossad for Aliyah Bet\' or other Hagana frameworks. However, they kept in touch with the \'Brigade\' from which they were sent on mission abroad. The missions of Palmach delegates to the Diaspora were military ones, but due to circumstances under which they worked, they devoted a considerable amount of time to various civil activities.Their encounters and daily deeds brought them closer to the world of Diaspora Jews and they became familiar with their culture, existence and hardships. In their missions, the Palmach delegates gained a sense of unity among the different parts of the nation spread in the Diaspora, and added it to their principle values. They carried the annunciation of Eretz Israel to the Diaspora Jews they met. In their confident demeanor and the responsibility they took for the destiny of other Jews in distress, they represented the Yishuv\'s willingness to help them and the belief in the possibility and achievement of independent statehood.. 1974 folder 47


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