dec 1, 1932 - Einstein Fled to The United States
Description:
During December 1932, prior to Hitler being named as the Chancellor of Germany, Einstein and a group of Jewish public administrators decided to flee from the Nazi Germany environment and make their transition to the United States of America.
During this period of time, a Nazi organisation published a magazine with Einstein's picture and captions it:
"Not Yet Hanged" on the cover page.
There was accordingly a price on his head, because his beliefs with Nazi aggression. To Einstein pacifism was not an absolute concept but one that had to be re-examined. Therefore these acts from the German public and Nazi community he was under tread and finally decided to leave Germany, to never re-enter the country again.
Einstein finally settled at an Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, New Jersey.
Additionally, on the eve of the outbreak of WWII, Einstein wrote to a Swiss-Italian engineer expressing his frustration over being unable to adapt and help further European Jews whilst immigrating to the United States.
Image: Albert Einstein (1879-1955), Michele Besso (1873-1955), Manuscript on General Relativity, 1913-1914. 54-page manuscript. Sold for €11,656,560 on 23 November at Christie’s in Paris
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