Postcard with a black-and-white photographic portrait of author Yesha'yahu Bershadsky (originally surnamed Domashevitski), including a biographical note.
Postcard with a black-and-white photographic portrait of author Yesha'yahu Bershadsky (originally surnamed Domashevitski), including a biographical note.
Rosh Hashanah postcard depicting the priestly blessing : "May the Lord bless you and guard you; May the Lord make His face shed light upon you and be gracious unto you; May the Lord lift up His face unto you and give you peace."
Color postcard depicting a boy learning to lay tefillin before his bar mitzvah, including the blessing for putting on tefillin : "Blessed are You, Lord our God, King of the universe, Who has sanctified us with His commandments and has commanded us regarding the commandment of tefillin."
Black-and-white postcard depicting a scene from Perets Smolenskin's novel A Wanderer on the Path of Life (Ha-to‘eh be-darkhe ha-ḥayim), an autobiographical novel whose orphaned protagonist, Joseph, copes with a cruel and difficult childhood.
Postcard with a black-and-white photographic portrait of Ruth Alexandrovich. The postcard is pre-addressed to "Procurator-General R. A. Rudenko" and includes a printed message: "24-year-old Ruth Alexandrovich was taken by the KGB on October 7, 1970--a week before her wedding date. Sensing impending arrest, she wrote, '...I shall never betray my much suffering people. I shall never betray my most cherished dream--to live, work and die in Israel.' Her fiance, Isay Averbuch, wrote, 'I am ready to testify that she has not committed a single violation of the laws.' Almost 40 other Jews, equally innocent of any violation of laws, are being kept in prison. Release the Jewish political prisoners."
Postcard with black-and-white photographic portraits of Alfred Dreyfus and his defenders: Bernard Lazare, Fernand Labori, Georges Picquart, and Auguste Scheurer-Kestner.
Postcard with a black-and-white illustrated portrait of Berl Clay, born in a colony near Meilitopol in Russia, fell on 26 Adar 5675 (March 12, 1915) in the defense of Milchamja (Menahemia). From the book Jiskor : ein Buch des Gedenkens an gefallene Wächter und Arbeiter im Lande Israel, published Berlin: Jüdischer Verlag, 1918.
Color postcard with portraits of Max Nordau, Theodor Herzl, David Wolffsohn, Menaḥem Mendel Ussishkin, Chaim Weizmann, Nahum Sokolow, Herbert Samuel, and Arthur Balfour.
Postcard with a black-and-white photographic portrait of David Ben-Gurion, Zionist and first Prime Minister of Israel, in uniform as a soldier in the Jewish Legion.
Black-and-white photographic postcard of the May 28, 1937, inauguration of the Exposition internationale, held in Paris. From left to right: Louis Asscher, president of the committee for the Pavillon d'Israel en Palestine, and French govenrment ministers Justin Godart and Paul Bastid.
Color photographic postcard of the interior of the Jewish Chapel and Protestant Chapel within the United States Air Force Academy Cadet Chapel, as well as the exterior of the Cadet Chapel.
Black-and-white postcard with a reproduction of a sketch by Hans Bulow of the exterior of St. Thomas Synagogue in Charlotte Amalie on the island of Saint Thomas in the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Postcard with a black-and-white reproduction of the first panel of a tapestry at L'église Saint-Jean-Saint-François depicting the miracle of the Rue de Billetts, in which a Jew living in Paris was accused of stabbing a communion wafer, causing blood to flow from it.
Black-and-white photographic postcard of the exterior of the original building of the Congregación Israelita de la República Argentina in Buenos Aires.
Postcard with a black-and-white reproduction of the third panel of a tapestry at L'église Saint-Jean-Saint-François depicting the miracle of the Rue de Billetts, in which a Jew living in Paris was accused of stabbing a communion wafer, causing blood to flow from it.
Postcard with a black-and-white reproduction of the fourth panel of a tapestry at L'église Saint-Jean-Saint-François depicting the miracle of the Rue de Billetts, in which a Jew living in Paris was accused of stabbing a communion wafer, causing blood to flow from it.