Einstein letter fearing anti-Semitism sold at auction

'What is special in this letter that Einstein really forecast - he's seeing in advance what is going to be in Germany,' the auction house says of the letter.

Albert Einstein wrote in a letter to his sister his fears over the rise of Nazism.

Albert Einstein wrote in a letter to his sister his fears over the rise of Nazism. Source: AAP

A 1922 letter in which Albert Einstein confided his fears of the rise of anti-Semitism in Germany, more than a decade before the Nazis took power, has sold at an Israeli auction for $US32,000 ($A44,443).

"Here are brewing economically and politically dark times, so I'm happy to be able to get away from everything," wrote the 43-year-old physicist to his sister, Maria, after leaving Berlin for a location that goes unmentioned in the letter.

A letter written by Albert Einstein younger sister, Maja, details his fears of anti-Semitism long before the rise of Nazism.
A letter written by Albert Einstein younger sister, Maja, details his fears of anti-Semitism long before the rise of Nazism. Source: AAP


Einstein, who went on to win the Nobel Prize three months later, had departed the German capital after far-rightists assassinated Foreign Minister Walter Rathenu, a friend and fellow Jew, prompting police to warn him that he could be next.

"Nobody knows where I am, and I'm believed to be missing," Einstein wrote. "I am doing quite well, in spite of all the anti-Semites among my German colleagues."

The letter refers to a journey Einstein planned to Japan, suggesting that he penned it while waiting to sail out of the northern port of Kiel.

The 1922 letter written Albert Einstein.
The 1922 letter written Albert Einstein. Source: AAP


When the Nazis took over Germany in 1933, launching a campaign of anti-Jewish persecution that would culminate in the Holocaust, Einstein was on a lecture tour abroad. He renounced his citizenship and eventually settled in the United States.

"What is special in this letter that Einstein really forecast - he's seeing in advance, 10 years in advance - what is going to be in Germany," said Meron Eren, co-founder of the Kedem Auction House in Jerusalem, which sold the artefact to an unidentified bidder.

Renowned physicist Albert Einstein in Princeton, New Jersey.
Renowned physicist Albert Einstein in Princeton, New Jersey. Source: AAP



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Published 14 November 2018 9:30am
Updated 14 November 2018 10:39am

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