It is not a stamp. It is a propaganda label. The date in the bottom right corner shows "1935". I wonder if it has anything to do in reaction by Great Britain and the United States Jewish citizens to the Nuremburg Laws of 1935 that denied Jews in Germany the right to citizenship and was the first of what was to be additional laws that eventually denied the Jews the right to live.
Here's a link for more information about the laws:
http://factsofisrael.com/blog/archives/000385.html
I was unable to find anything about the label. An interesting find.
Note the name "Roy Wemp" on the label. I googled "'Roy Lemp' Jewish" and came up with several hits. He was apparently a member of the British Israel Federation (Canada). Wikipedia has a short article on the federation, which was founded in 1919 and apparently still exists. Nice Judaica item.
Bob
I would suggest that this is a Zionist cinderella.
Bruce
The art very much evokes the teachings of the Worldwide Church of God, which based its' core beliefs on those of the British-Israel World Federation. At a very basic level they maintain the belief that the UK and the US are the descendants of the 10 lost tribes of Israel. They are a branch of Christianity, but are not Jewish.
Found this image online by the same organization:
They are interesting items for some conspiracy collectors.
lovely Cinderella Doe
I've recently been adding religious organizations to my Cinderella collections. And many hospitals and sanitaria are religious.
the WWCG is basically right: Christians and Muslims trace their roots to Judeasm. No way around it.
David, If I had either of those cinderellas, I'd keep them in my collection.
The reason I entered Youpiao's 2 giveaways, was for a similar reason. Knights Templar related stamps/seals would make another fun conspiracy theme collection.
The left hand image on the latest stamp illustration has Masonic overtones.
Malcolm
Sorry for the Newbie questions...
What is this? I cant seem to find any info on it.
It was in some old kiloware I was sorting.
Thanks in advance,
Garner
re: Judaica cinderella
It is not a stamp. It is a propaganda label. The date in the bottom right corner shows "1935". I wonder if it has anything to do in reaction by Great Britain and the United States Jewish citizens to the Nuremburg Laws of 1935 that denied Jews in Germany the right to citizenship and was the first of what was to be additional laws that eventually denied the Jews the right to live.
Here's a link for more information about the laws:
http://factsofisrael.com/blog/archives/000385.html
I was unable to find anything about the label. An interesting find.
re: Judaica cinderella
Note the name "Roy Wemp" on the label. I googled "'Roy Lemp' Jewish" and came up with several hits. He was apparently a member of the British Israel Federation (Canada). Wikipedia has a short article on the federation, which was founded in 1919 and apparently still exists. Nice Judaica item.
Bob
re: Judaica cinderella
I would suggest that this is a Zionist cinderella.
Bruce
re: Judaica cinderella
The art very much evokes the teachings of the Worldwide Church of God, which based its' core beliefs on those of the British-Israel World Federation. At a very basic level they maintain the belief that the UK and the US are the descendants of the 10 lost tribes of Israel. They are a branch of Christianity, but are not Jewish.
Found this image online by the same organization:
They are interesting items for some conspiracy collectors.
re: Judaica cinderella
lovely Cinderella Doe
I've recently been adding religious organizations to my Cinderella collections. And many hospitals and sanitaria are religious.
the WWCG is basically right: Christians and Muslims trace their roots to Judeasm. No way around it.
re: Judaica cinderella
David, If I had either of those cinderellas, I'd keep them in my collection.
The reason I entered Youpiao's 2 giveaways, was for a similar reason. Knights Templar related stamps/seals would make another fun conspiracy theme collection.
re: Judaica cinderella
The left hand image on the latest stamp illustration has Masonic overtones.
Malcolm