Auction 100 – Important Hebrew Manuscripts and Books from the Victor (Avigdor) Klagsbald Collection
R. Yitzchak Itzik Grishaber-Freund (1741-1822), a disciple of the Noda BiYehudah, and served as rabbi of Paks (Hungary) from 1782. He corresponded on halachic matters with the Chatam Sofer, who highly praised him in his writings. In 1797, he strongly opposed the Reform rabbi Aharon Chorin who permitted eating the non-kosher sturgeon fish. His correspondence on the subject with his contemporary rabbis was printed in his book Makal Noam (Vienna, 1799).
Lot 151 Tolaat Yaakov by Rabbi Meir ibn Gabbai – Kraków, 1581 – Asarah Maamarot V-VI – Hamburg, 1662
R. Avraham Saba (1440-1509), a rabbi, preacher and kabbalist at the time of the Spanish expulsion. Born in Castile, he was a disciple of R. Yitzchak de Leon. After the expulsion, he fled with his community to Guimarães (near Porto, Portugal). During the Portuguese persecutions of Jews in 1497, his two children were kidnapped and forcibly baptized. After he was jailed and tortured in Lisbon, he managed to escape to Fez, leaving his manuscripts behind in Portugal. He eventually reached Adrianople (Edirne), where he settled and rewrote his works. He passed away on a ship on his way to Italy in 1509, and was buried in Verona (his passing on the ship is recounted by the Chida in Shem HaGedolim, citing Divrei Yosef, according to whom R. Avraham Saba promised the captain that if he would be buried in a Jewish cemetery the storm would subside). His other works (most of which remained in manuscript and were lost) include: Eshkol HaKofer on the Books of Esther and Ruth; Tzror HaKesef on the laws of Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur and idolatry; Tzror HaChaim on Tractate Avot.
the Chassid Yaavetz, was a leading rabbi at the time of the Spanish expulsion. His book Or HaChaim was reprinted in many editions, and was renowned for its censure of philosophical inquiry and its call to return to unquestioning faith – see below.
The Chassid Yaavetz, the Spanish Expulsion and the War Against Philosophy
R. Yosef Yaavetz, known as the Chassid Yaavetz (ca. 1440-1508), was a leading rabbi at the time of the Spanish expulsion. Born in Lisbon, Portugal, he studied under Don Yitzchak Abarbanel and others. After the expulsion, he reached Italy and wandered the country together with his son R. Yitzchak. He came to the aid of his fellow Spanish exiles, preaching to them, encouraging them and strengthening their faith. The principles of faith and Divine Providence are topics stressed repeatedly in his works.
Or HaChaim, his most celebrated work, was reprinted in many editions. The book contains fierce censure of the rationalistic philosophy of the Middle Ages, which was widespread in Spain before the expulsion. The Chassid Yaavetz blames the preoccupation with philosophy over Torah study for the eventual demise of Spanish Jewry. His famously wrote about the importance of simple faith in face of coerced conversions, in that while scholars and philosophers succumbed to the pressure to convert, the simple people remained steadfast in their faith: "It was the women of Spain who had themselves and their husbands die to sanctify G-d's name, while the men who boasted of these sciences apostatized on the bitter day. And this is an enormous proof that if they had not learned those sciences that they studied but remained ignoramuses, their ignorance would have saved them, as 'G-d protects the ignorant'. But since they were not persuaded to believe in tradition… they denied or doubted all the principles of faith that could not be proven, such as reward and punishment and the resurrection of the dead. Therefore they did not exchange their portion in this world for something doubtful, and they joined the incorrigible apostate sect" (chapter 5). These sharp words echoed for hundreds of years, up to this very day, as a proof to the importance of simple faith.