"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.
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.
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 artifact to an unidentified
bidder.
(Writing by Dan Williams; Editing by Richard Balmforth)
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