46 74 (WORLD WAR I). “Teekent het Joodsche Volks Petitionement” [“Petition on Behalf of the Jewish People.”] Text in Dutch. Designed by Albert Hahn Jr. (Poussin). 20 x 25.5 inches (50.8 x 64.8 cm). (Netherlands), 1918. $4000-6000 ❧ “With the end of the First World War, the question of minority rights became one of the major topics of discussion at the Paris Peace Conference. Jews and sympathetic gentiles in many European nations signed petitions urging both the extension of minority rights to Jews and support for the creation of a British Mandate for Palestine, a move they hoped would lead to the repatriation of the Jewish people to their ancestral home. This poster captures that sentiment by depicting a Jewish refugee looking hopefully toward the horizon at a rising sun over Zion.” See Bernard Museum of Judaica, Temple Emanu-El online exhibition, Justify your Existence: Posters from the Moldovan Family Collection. 75 (SOVIET UNION). Icor Concert Poster for the Upbuilding of Biro-Bidjan as a Jewish Soviet Republic. Text in English and Yiddish. Poster by Woly. 32.5 x 22 inches (82.6 x 55.9 cm). Linen- backed. New York, 1933. $600-900 ❧ Organized by ICOR, the Association for Jewish Colonization in the Soviet Union, a fundraising concert featuring singer Isa Kremer, violinist Maximilian Rose and Dorsha, a modern dancer; to take place at City College Auditorium in New York City. 76 ( L I T H U A N I A ) . C o n c e r t . Organized by the Young Zionists of Rasayn. Text in Lithuanian, Hebrew and Yiddish. 23.5 x 31.5 inches (59.7 x 80 cm). Linen-backed. Rasayn (Raseiniai/Rossieny), Lithuania, 1920. $600-900 ❧ Trilingual poster promoting a concert of Jewish and Classical music, hosted by Histadrut Tze’irei Tzion, and featuring Gavriel Grad and Tzvi Mankovski. Lot 74 Lot 75 Lot 76