FYI2019-03-25T15:58:52-04:00

Found: Rare Collection of Decorated Ivories From First Temple Period

May 4th, 2023|

An extraordinary discovery was unearthed in Jerusalem, according to the excavation directors — Prof. Yuval Gadot of Tel Aviv University’s Department of Archaeology and Near Eastern Cultures and Dr. Yiftah Shalev of the Israel Antiquities Authority. The discovery includes an assemblage of ivory plaques from the First Temple period, among the few found anywhere in the world, and the first of their kind to be found in Jerusalem.

The ivories, considered one of the costliest raw materials in the ancient world, were found among the ruins of a palatial building in use when Jerusalem was at the height of its power, around the seventh century BCE. Scholars believe the decorated ivories were inlaid in wooden furnishings that were used by people of means, influence and power, possibly high government officials or priests.

Decorated ivories are the rarest finds in archaeological assemblages, their prestige stemming from the source of the ivory. Microscopic testing revealed the Jerusalem ivories were made from elephant tusk. Also contributing to prestige is the skill required to work with the material to create decorations.

A Nazi-Looted Courbet Painting Is To Be Returned To The Family Heirs

May 4th, 2023|

Shortly before the Nazi occupation of France in 1940, a prominent Jewish family, led by Robert Bing, fled their Paris home. Among the possessions they left behind was a l9th-century work by Gustave Courbet, the French realist painter. The Courbet was seized by the Nazis and, according to a handwritten note that accompanied the seized work, the painting was intended for the collection of Hermann Göring. After the war, a London art dealership acquired the painting, and turned it over to the Fitzwilliam Museum at Cambridge.

Now, a British government panel has determined that the painting should be returned to the heirs of Robert Bing, who died in 1993. The report did not fault the museum for accepting the looted Courbet, which it received through a donation in 1951, nor did the report place any value on the painting.

 

Ceremony In Poland Marks 80th Anniversary of Warsaw Ghetto Uprising

May 4th, 2023|

A ceremony on April 19 in Warsaw marked the 80th anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising. The presidents of Israel, Germany and Poland gathered to commemorate the event. “I stand before you today and ask for your forgiveness for the crimes committed here by Germans,” President Frank-Walter Steinmeier of Germany told a crowd of thousands.

Since 1912, when an artist made a floral papercut, the daffodil has become the symbol of the rebellion. This year, the papercuts were distributed to 150,000 people in 100 Jewish communities around the world.  

Conference In Jerusalem Strengthens Gulf-Africa-Israel Partnerships

May 4th, 2023|

On March 27, the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs hosted an international conference, bringing together think-tank and policy center representatives from 30 Middle East and African states. Panelists and participants discussed the prospects for enlarging and enhancing the Abraham Accords, and the potential areas for Gulf-Africa-Israel partnerships in the fields of counterterrorism and national security, food and water security, and the environment.

Photo courtesy Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs

April 24: Tree Of Life Synagogue Trial Begins With Jury Selection

May 4th, 2023|

Jury selection began on Monday, April 24 in USA v. Robert Bowers, the long-delayed trial of the gunman who is accused of killing 11 people at Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue On Oct. 27, 2018. It was the deadliest antisemitic attack in United States history. The trial is expected to last three months.

        Court watchers say the sole goal of the alleged shooter’s lead attorney, Judy Clarke, who has previously defended high-profile attackers like the Unabomber and the Boston Marathon bomber, is to avoid the death penalty for her client. Seven of the nine victim families (two families lost more than one relative) support the death penalty in this case.

According to Jewish Telegraphic Agency, some people fear renewed attention on the case could inspire other violent extremists; some hope the trial will help them move past the tragedy, even as they know it will be difficult to year the details of the shooting in court.

Antisemitic Incidents Highest Recorded, Says Anti-Defamation League

April 10th, 2023|

The number of antisemitic incidents in the United States in 2022 was the highest since the Anti-Defamation League began keeping track in 1979, the group announced.

The A.D.L. report documented 3,697 incidents last year, a 36% rise from 2021. A majority were characterized as harassment, including online, but the tally also included 111 assaults and more than 1,200 occasions of vandalism.

Kandinsky Painting, Returned To Heirs, Sells At Auction for $44.9 Million

April 10th, 2023|

A painting by Wassily Kandinsky that spent decades in a Dutch museum after its Jewish owner was murdered in the Holocaust has sold at auction for $44.9 million. “Murnau mit Kirche II” (Murnau with Church II) set a record price for the Russian artist in a sale at Sotheby’s in London. Completed in 1910, the brightly colored landscape of a Bavarian village foreshadows the bold abstract imagery of Kandinsky’s later work.

The Van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven returned the painting last year to the descendants of German-Jewish art collectors Johanna Margarete Stern and Siegbert Samuel Stern. Siegbert Stern died in 1935, and Johanna fled Nazi Germany for Amsterdam, where she was forced to sell much of her collection. She was arrested after the Nazis occupied the Netherlands, and died in the Auschwitz concentration camp in 1944.

Sotheby’s said proceeds from the sale will be shared among 13 surviving Stern heirs, and will also fund further research into the fate of the family’s collection.

In 2013, Dutch museums identified 139 artworks as Nazi loot, including paintings from masters such as Kandinsky, Henri Matisse and Paul Klee.

 

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