Венгерская медаль на имя главного равина Будапешта Chief Rabbi Ferenc Hevesi.
Я нашёл в интернете описание похожей медали, в которой эта медаль тоже упоминается
Hungary, "National Hungarian Jewish Relief Action" (OMZSA) appreciation medal, 1940; cast in bronze; by Jewish medalist Örkényi Stephen (István) Strasser (1911-1944); weight: 72.55g; size: 59.5mm.
Obverse depcits mother and daughter figures with exhortation in Hungarian "Testvéremet Ne Hagyd El!" ("Do not abandon your brother"), and artist's name behind the figures.
On reverse large device (probably organization emblem) with "OMZSA" and the name "Dukesz Ákos" inscribed above, with Hungarian legend around rim "Ezen Érem Tulajdonosa Teljesítette Kötelességét az OMZSA-val Szemben" (loosely translated, "The OMZSA is indebted to the person awarded this medal", the Hebrew date "5700" [1940] and a small Star of David engraved at base.
Although Hungarian Jewry was largely Hungarianized and patriotic, within the Jewish community there were two main groups which didn't cooperate well together: the Orthodox Jews, who were traditional, well established in financial circles and mostly anti-Zionist, and the "neologue" Jews of the middle class, with a Zionist orientation.
The "Országos Magyar Zsidó Segítő Akció" (OMZSA) was a pre-war fund-raising agency dealing with Jewish welfare and social work, and associated with the neologue community, and worked closely with the Hungarian Jewish Advocacy Office (Magyar Izraeliták Pártfogo Irodája) which distributed those funds (and in turn worked closely with the "Joint American-Jewish Distribution Committee").
During the Holocaust, in 1939 the Hungarian government forbade Jews from serving in the armed forces and instead conscripted military-aged Jews into forced labor battalions; by 1940 this obligation was extended to all able-bodied male Jews, and that same year Jews were expelled from holding certain professions.
Around the time the OMZSA undertook welfare activities for both the conscripted laborers and their families which they left behind, and this medal was part of the fund-raising effort; one source estimates about 3,000 Jews received assistance from the OMZSA in this period.
It appears the number of Stars etched on the reverse had something to do with the degree of assistance (or stature) of the recipient: an identical medal awarded to the Chief Rabbi Ferenc Hevesi bears three Stars. In UNC. The Jewish artist of this medal, Orkenyi Strasser, was killed in 1944, but the recipient may be the same person listed on Hungarian cemetary records, and survived the war (1892-1952).