Auction 14 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
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Displaying 325 - 336 of 636
Auction 14 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
March 2, 2011
Opening: $120
Unsold
Der Sanz Tzadik, Rabbi Chaim Halberstam. Yehoshua Rocker. Vienna, 1917.
“[About] His life, his deeds, his righteousness and genius and the terrible polemic between Sanz and Sadigura”.
The book was written by the editor of the “Yiddishe Welt” journal in Cleveland, USA and was printed by a New York publishing house, at a printing press in Vienna.
[4] leaves, 225, [1] page. 20 cm. Fair condition, detached pages. Moth marks. Unbound.
“[About] His life, his deeds, his righteousness and genius and the terrible polemic between Sanz and Sadigura”.
The book was written by the editor of the “Yiddishe Welt” journal in Cleveland, USA and was printed by a New York publishing house, at a printing press in Vienna.
[4] leaves, 225, [1] page. 20 cm. Fair condition, detached pages. Moth marks. Unbound.
Category
Polemics
Catalogue
Auction 14 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
March 2, 2011
Opening: $150
Unsold
1-2. Kin'at Tzion, a composition of protest against the meeting of the reform movement in Braunschweig with letters of protest by the rabbis of Eretz Yisrael. Rabbi Yisrael Moshe Chazan. Amsterdam, 1846.
Bound with: "A letter to our brothers Beit Yisrael" [Torat Hakna'ut], 37 letters by rabbis from Germany, Holland, Poland and Hungary against the meeting of the reform movement in Braunschweig. [Amsterdam, 1845].
The first reform meeting took place in the month of Tamuz 1844 in Braunschweig, Germany, where it was announced that "corrections" to Jewish law and the siddur would be made. In response, the heads of the Amsterdam officers for the Holy Land, Rabbi Lehran and Rabbi Frintz, fought back by writing letters to all the great rabbis of the generation. They then publicized the responses they received in the book Torat Hakna'ot which they printed in two editions, one on its own with a title page and additional leaves and the other as an appendix to Kin'at Tzion, as in the copy before us.
[1], 17 leaves; 2-33 leaves. 25 cm. Good condition. Torn and detached binding.
3. Responsa Mecholat Hamachanayim. To reinforce Jewish customs and customs of synagogues. (Includes matters of astronomy, with illustrations). Rabbi Yisrael David Margaliot Yaffe (Rabbi David Sered). Pressburg, 1859. Stamps of Rabbi Shimon Menachem Mendel Varnik of KutNo. Two long (cut off) handwritten glosses.
[1], 80 leaves, [3 leaves missing?]. 19 cm. Fair-poor condition, moth damage and wear.
Bound with: "A letter to our brothers Beit Yisrael" [Torat Hakna'ut], 37 letters by rabbis from Germany, Holland, Poland and Hungary against the meeting of the reform movement in Braunschweig. [Amsterdam, 1845].
The first reform meeting took place in the month of Tamuz 1844 in Braunschweig, Germany, where it was announced that "corrections" to Jewish law and the siddur would be made. In response, the heads of the Amsterdam officers for the Holy Land, Rabbi Lehran and Rabbi Frintz, fought back by writing letters to all the great rabbis of the generation. They then publicized the responses they received in the book Torat Hakna'ot which they printed in two editions, one on its own with a title page and additional leaves and the other as an appendix to Kin'at Tzion, as in the copy before us.
[1], 17 leaves; 2-33 leaves. 25 cm. Good condition. Torn and detached binding.
3. Responsa Mecholat Hamachanayim. To reinforce Jewish customs and customs of synagogues. (Includes matters of astronomy, with illustrations). Rabbi Yisrael David Margaliot Yaffe (Rabbi David Sered). Pressburg, 1859. Stamps of Rabbi Shimon Menachem Mendel Varnik of KutNo. Two long (cut off) handwritten glosses.
[1], 80 leaves, [3 leaves missing?]. 19 cm. Fair-poor condition, moth damage and wear.
Category
Polemics
Catalogue
Auction 14 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
March 2, 2011
Opening: $180
Unsold
1. Michtav Patu'ach, with the book Milchemet Mitsva. “[A battle] fought by the Orthodox community against those who are attempting to destroy and remove the regulations established by the Geonim and the Righteous…”. Marmaros–Sighet, 1888.
[2], 2-61, [24], 86-89, [18], 108-109, [12], 122-129, [4], 136-147, [2] leaves. 25.2 cm. Good condition.
2. Ohev Shalom, published by the order of the Adat Yeshurun Sephard congregation of Marmaros–Sighet, [1889].
16 pages. 19 cm. Dry paper, fair condition, damages and glued paper.
Between the years 1883-1890 the city of Sighet witnessed a great polemic which opposed the Chareidim of the community who had joined the Orthodox Bureau of Pest against the “Sephard Community” [Chasidim who pray according to the Sephard ritual] who signed themselves up as a “Status-quo” community since they rejected the authority of the Budapest Orthodox Bureau, which was led by the “Ashkenazi” Beit Midrash of the Chatam Sofer. In 1888, a pamphlet was published in Lvov called “Ohev Mishpat” – “Matters of dispute in the city of Sighet…”, which was published by the “Sephard community of Sighet”.
The book “Milchemet Mitsva” was published as a reaction to that pamphlet, (it was published one pamphlet at a time, the pamphlets were spread separately and were later made into a book, hence the faulty pagination of the book). The pamphlets include letters from Rabbis and Admorim who sided with the Orthodox community.
The “Ohev Shalom” pamphlet was then published as a reaction and includes letters from Rabbis and Admorim who sided in favor of the “Adat Yeshurun Sephardim” congregation.
[2], 2-61, [24], 86-89, [18], 108-109, [12], 122-129, [4], 136-147, [2] leaves. 25.2 cm. Good condition.
2. Ohev Shalom, published by the order of the Adat Yeshurun Sephard congregation of Marmaros–Sighet, [1889].
16 pages. 19 cm. Dry paper, fair condition, damages and glued paper.
Between the years 1883-1890 the city of Sighet witnessed a great polemic which opposed the Chareidim of the community who had joined the Orthodox Bureau of Pest against the “Sephard Community” [Chasidim who pray according to the Sephard ritual] who signed themselves up as a “Status-quo” community since they rejected the authority of the Budapest Orthodox Bureau, which was led by the “Ashkenazi” Beit Midrash of the Chatam Sofer. In 1888, a pamphlet was published in Lvov called “Ohev Mishpat” – “Matters of dispute in the city of Sighet…”, which was published by the “Sephard community of Sighet”.
The book “Milchemet Mitsva” was published as a reaction to that pamphlet, (it was published one pamphlet at a time, the pamphlets were spread separately and were later made into a book, hence the faulty pagination of the book). The pamphlets include letters from Rabbis and Admorim who sided with the Orthodox community.
The “Ohev Shalom” pamphlet was then published as a reaction and includes letters from Rabbis and Admorim who sided in favor of the “Adat Yeshurun Sephardim” congregation.
Category
Polemics
Catalogue
Auction 14 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
March 2, 2011
Opening: $100
Sold for: $450
Including buyer's premium
Rabbinical protest of "Warsaw Va'ad HaRabbanim", against the splitting of the Orthodox community in Klausenburg. [Appendix to newspaper Folks Zeitung, Bratislava (Pressburg), Av 1922. Hebrew and German.
"A small booklet by the name of Mishpat Tzedek has reached our hands. It concerns the controversy between the Orthodox community Sefarad [Chassidim] who have recently split…". From that booklet it seems that the Chassidim split from the main community because their leaders joined the "Zionist cult" and this was protested by the Warsaw rabbis: "…we do not come to justify the Zionist party, to praise or disparage it… and even if in the General Zionist Organization there are many non-religious Jews, there are also many who do not lack fear of Heaven and meticulously fulfill all mitzvot like all charedi Jews. And here rabbis come and remove all Zionists from Klal Yisrael… Who has heard of such a terrible thing?!…". 2 pages, 31 cm. Good-fair condition, minor tears to margins.
"A small booklet by the name of Mishpat Tzedek has reached our hands. It concerns the controversy between the Orthodox community Sefarad [Chassidim] who have recently split…". From that booklet it seems that the Chassidim split from the main community because their leaders joined the "Zionist cult" and this was protested by the Warsaw rabbis: "…we do not come to justify the Zionist party, to praise or disparage it… and even if in the General Zionist Organization there are many non-religious Jews, there are also many who do not lack fear of Heaven and meticulously fulfill all mitzvot like all charedi Jews. And here rabbis come and remove all Zionists from Klal Yisrael… Who has heard of such a terrible thing?!…". 2 pages, 31 cm. Good-fair condition, minor tears to margins.
Category
Polemics
Catalogue
Auction 14 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
March 2, 2011
Opening: $120
Sold for: $400
Including buyer's premium
“Lecture Delivered by the Head of the Rabbinical Association – Fall 1924” pamphlet. [Tarnow? Slovakia? 1924]. With the ink stamp of the “Agudat Ha-Rabbanim Ha-Chaverim Slovakei”.
Polemic against the Pressburg Orthodox Council, which supports “Zionistic” and “more open” communities in Slovakia, and refuses to unite with the Toranic communities who follow the rules of the Shulchan Aruch. The lecture begins with a eulogy of the several rabbis, leaders of the association, who had passed away that month: Rabbi Yitzchak Deutsch and Rabbi Shalom Young. Was sent by mail. 16 pages. 24.5 cm. Good condition.
Rare, not recorded in the Bibliography Institute CD. See enclosed material.
Polemic against the Pressburg Orthodox Council, which supports “Zionistic” and “more open” communities in Slovakia, and refuses to unite with the Toranic communities who follow the rules of the Shulchan Aruch. The lecture begins with a eulogy of the several rabbis, leaders of the association, who had passed away that month: Rabbi Yitzchak Deutsch and Rabbi Shalom Young. Was sent by mail. 16 pages. 24.5 cm. Good condition.
Rare, not recorded in the Bibliography Institute CD. See enclosed material.
Category
Polemics
Catalogue
Auction 14 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
March 2, 2011
Opening: $120
Sold for: $250
Including buyer's premium
Two historic proclamations following the Purim "play" (1932), when it became public that in a Purim play for children in the Beit Knesset of "Batei Broide" in Jerusalem performed by the Chinuch LaNa'ar organization [Tzi'erei Agudat Yisrael – Torah and Yir'ah], the honor of the Chief Rabbi Yitzchak HaCohen Kook was defiled, in a play about a trial and execution of the rabbi.
1. A Proclamation by the rabbis of Tel Aviv-Yaffo, Rabbi Shlomo HaCohen Aharonson and Rabbi Benzion Chai Uziel. The 2nd of Nissan 1932. Eretz Yisrael printing [Jerusalem]. "…an abomination has been done in Yisrael and in Jerusalem by youngsters educated in Talmudei Torah…".
2. A Clarification of Matters, of the position of the Badatz of the Va'ad HaAshkenazi and Agudat Yisrael about the "Murder Trial". A letter by Rabbi Simcha Bunim Werner to Rabbi Kook, dated the first of Nissan 1932, about this affair. Eretz Yisrael [Jerusalem] printing.
2 proclamations, 35 cm. Very good condition.
1. A Proclamation by the rabbis of Tel Aviv-Yaffo, Rabbi Shlomo HaCohen Aharonson and Rabbi Benzion Chai Uziel. The 2nd of Nissan 1932. Eretz Yisrael printing [Jerusalem]. "…an abomination has been done in Yisrael and in Jerusalem by youngsters educated in Talmudei Torah…".
2. A Clarification of Matters, of the position of the Badatz of the Va'ad HaAshkenazi and Agudat Yisrael about the "Murder Trial". A letter by Rabbi Simcha Bunim Werner to Rabbi Kook, dated the first of Nissan 1932, about this affair. Eretz Yisrael [Jerusalem] printing.
2 proclamations, 35 cm. Very good condition.
Category
Polemics
Catalogue
Auction 14 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
March 2, 2011
Opening: $150
Sold for: $225
Including buyer's premium
Controversial proclamations of the opinion of the Brisker Rabbi (Rabbi Yitzchak Ze'ev Soloveitchik) on participation in the elections. [Jerusalem, c. 1960-1961].
From his arrival to Eretz Yisrael, the Brisker Rabbi refused to publicly express his opinion on voting in the elections. A short while before the elections for the fourth Knesset and for the municipalities in Israel which took place on the 2nd of Cheshvan 1959 [after the sudden demise of the Brisker Rabbi on the day before Yom Kippur 1960], a letter given by the Brisker Rabbi in Tamuz 1959 in support of Agudat Yisrael was publicized. The content of the letter was a Yiddish translation of a proclamation that Rabbi Soloveitchik publicized at the time of elections in the Jewish community in Brisk in 1928. He gave the letter on the condition that Agudat Yisrael would not join the Religious Front with the Mizrachi parties. After this letter was publicized, a great controversy arose with the Neturei Karta and the Eida HaChareidit who claimed that the proclamation is false and the Brisker Rabbi never supported voting for the Zionist Knesset. We have here three proclamations on this matter.
1. "For the honor of the Rabbi one is to be banned - …the attitude of Maran of Brisk to Zionism is well known to all… at the time that all of us, his disciples and close companions clearly knew that all this is deceit and complete falsehood…".
2. "Two that contradict one another?!" – A proclamation with quotes from the letters written by Rabbi Lorentz and Rabbi Aharon Kotler, in opposition to a letter by Rabbi Amram Blau, leader of Neturei Karta.
3. "The attitude of Maran Ga'avad of Brisk to the elections" – A stencil print proclamation of a conversation The Brisker Rabbi had with Avraham Roth a member of the management of the Eidah HaChareidit of Jerusalem.
3 proclamations, varied size, good condition, varied
From his arrival to Eretz Yisrael, the Brisker Rabbi refused to publicly express his opinion on voting in the elections. A short while before the elections for the fourth Knesset and for the municipalities in Israel which took place on the 2nd of Cheshvan 1959 [after the sudden demise of the Brisker Rabbi on the day before Yom Kippur 1960], a letter given by the Brisker Rabbi in Tamuz 1959 in support of Agudat Yisrael was publicized. The content of the letter was a Yiddish translation of a proclamation that Rabbi Soloveitchik publicized at the time of elections in the Jewish community in Brisk in 1928. He gave the letter on the condition that Agudat Yisrael would not join the Religious Front with the Mizrachi parties. After this letter was publicized, a great controversy arose with the Neturei Karta and the Eida HaChareidit who claimed that the proclamation is false and the Brisker Rabbi never supported voting for the Zionist Knesset. We have here three proclamations on this matter.
1. "For the honor of the Rabbi one is to be banned - …the attitude of Maran of Brisk to Zionism is well known to all… at the time that all of us, his disciples and close companions clearly knew that all this is deceit and complete falsehood…".
2. "Two that contradict one another?!" – A proclamation with quotes from the letters written by Rabbi Lorentz and Rabbi Aharon Kotler, in opposition to a letter by Rabbi Amram Blau, leader of Neturei Karta.
3. "The attitude of Maran Ga'avad of Brisk to the elections" – A stencil print proclamation of a conversation The Brisker Rabbi had with Avraham Roth a member of the management of the Eidah HaChareidit of Jerusalem.
3 proclamations, varied size, good condition, varied
Category
Polemics
Catalogue
Auction 14 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
March 2, 2011
Opening: $200
Sold for: $475
Including buyer's premium
Collection of publications and documents, notices and wall posters from the Neturei Karta and the Eida HaCharedit in Jerusalem. The majority of the proclamations are from the years 1950 to 1965.
Among them: various proclamations for the strengthening of Judaism, Shabbat and Kashrut observance; notices and posters from the war and from demonstrations in opposition to the construction of a mixed swimming pool in Jerusalem; the prohibition to participate in the elections and the obligation to refrain from accepting funds from the Ministry of Education; protest concerning the participation of the Zionist police in securing the reception of the Satmar Rebbe; 3 issues of “HaEida LeChavereha”; letter of the rabbis of the “Committee of Associates of the Eida HaCharedit – London”, to Rabbi Moshe Porush in opposition to the establishment of the Badatz Agudat Israel, signed by (typewritten): Rabbi A. Schlesinger, Rabbi Yitzcahk Tuvia Weiss, Rabbi Gedalya Schneider and others.
23 items. Various sizes and conditions. Some of the posters and letters were stenciled, for the purpose of limited internal distribution [the majority are rare and bibliographically unknown publications].
Among them: various proclamations for the strengthening of Judaism, Shabbat and Kashrut observance; notices and posters from the war and from demonstrations in opposition to the construction of a mixed swimming pool in Jerusalem; the prohibition to participate in the elections and the obligation to refrain from accepting funds from the Ministry of Education; protest concerning the participation of the Zionist police in securing the reception of the Satmar Rebbe; 3 issues of “HaEida LeChavereha”; letter of the rabbis of the “Committee of Associates of the Eida HaCharedit – London”, to Rabbi Moshe Porush in opposition to the establishment of the Badatz Agudat Israel, signed by (typewritten): Rabbi A. Schlesinger, Rabbi Yitzcahk Tuvia Weiss, Rabbi Gedalya Schneider and others.
23 items. Various sizes and conditions. Some of the posters and letters were stenciled, for the purpose of limited internal distribution [the majority are rare and bibliographically unknown publications].
Category
Polemics
Catalogue
Auction 14 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
March 2, 2011
Opening: $120
Sold for: $163
Including buyer's premium
Der Rebbe Un Der Satan, Satmar un de Neturei Karta in zer milchama oif Medinat Yisrael, by Chaim Liberman, New-York, 1959. Yiddish.
Polemic about Satmar-Neturei Karta ideology.
Very rare, only few copies of this booklet remain, since most were burned by Satmar Chassidim.
This booklet has 132 pages. One year before, a similar booklet was publicized, with sub-title "Vegen di Satmarer Neturei Karta un Medinat Yisrael that had only 52 pages. On title page margins: "Naye fargreserte Oiflage" – new corrected edition.
[2], 132 pages, 21.5 cm. Very good condition.
Polemic about Satmar-Neturei Karta ideology.
Very rare, only few copies of this booklet remain, since most were burned by Satmar Chassidim.
This booklet has 132 pages. One year before, a similar booklet was publicized, with sub-title "Vegen di Satmarer Neturei Karta un Medinat Yisrael that had only 52 pages. On title page margins: "Naye fargreserte Oiflage" – new corrected edition.
[2], 132 pages, 21.5 cm. Very good condition.
Category
Polemics
Catalogue
Auction 14 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
March 2, 2011
Opening: $100
Sold for: $275
Including buyer's premium
Two publications following Rabbi Goren’s Halachic verdict on the case of a brother and a sister who were declared Mamzerim by rabbinical courts since their mother remarried without divorcing her first husband. The rabbinical verdict allowed them to become part of the Jewish community based on several loopholes found in the father’s conversion’s status. This verdict brought Rabbi Goren (“the compromiser”) versus Orthodox circles tear to its climax.
1. “Kir’u Bigdeichem” – Huge placard on behalf of the members of the Jerusalem Badatz, Rabbi Yitzchak Ya’akov Weiss, Rabbi Moshe Aryeh Freund, Rabbi Israel Moshe Dushinsky and Rabbi Elyahu Zlotnik. Jerusalem, winter 1973. Against Rabbi Shlomo Goren’s Halachic verdict – “Because the man who was appointed as chief rabbi of the Zionistic Chief Rabbinical Order has set out to uproot the Torah prohibition which forbids illegitimates from becoming part of the Jewish community…”. 70 X 99 cm. Good condition. Folded.
2. Special edition of the “Digleinu” journal, Winter 1973. Titled: “Yahadut Ha-Torah shocked – Rabbi Shach Shlita: “this is the burning of the Torah – if illegitimate people are free to become part of the Jewish community, he [Rabbi Shlomo Goren] should be banned from the community”. 44.5 cm leaf. Good condition. Tears on the margins and wrinkles. Few stains.
1. “Kir’u Bigdeichem” – Huge placard on behalf of the members of the Jerusalem Badatz, Rabbi Yitzchak Ya’akov Weiss, Rabbi Moshe Aryeh Freund, Rabbi Israel Moshe Dushinsky and Rabbi Elyahu Zlotnik. Jerusalem, winter 1973. Against Rabbi Shlomo Goren’s Halachic verdict – “Because the man who was appointed as chief rabbi of the Zionistic Chief Rabbinical Order has set out to uproot the Torah prohibition which forbids illegitimates from becoming part of the Jewish community…”. 70 X 99 cm. Good condition. Folded.
2. Special edition of the “Digleinu” journal, Winter 1973. Titled: “Yahadut Ha-Torah shocked – Rabbi Shach Shlita: “this is the burning of the Torah – if illegitimate people are free to become part of the Jewish community, he [Rabbi Shlomo Goren] should be banned from the community”. 44.5 cm leaf. Good condition. Tears on the margins and wrinkles. Few stains.
Category
Polemics
Catalogue
Auction 14 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
March 2, 2011
Opening: $100
Sold for: $125
Including buyer's premium
Rabbi Chaim of Sanz, drawing by Lazar Krestin, based on the only known picture of the “Divrei Chaim”. Printed on a postcard.
Rabbi Chaim Alberstam of Sanz (1797-1876), author of the “Divrei Chaim” and founder of the Sanz Chasidut.
9X14 cm postcard. Fair condition. Wrinkles and folding around the edges, one corner is missing. Pen writing on verso.
Rabbi Chaim Alberstam of Sanz (1797-1876), author of the “Divrei Chaim” and founder of the Sanz Chasidut.
9X14 cm postcard. Fair condition. Wrinkles and folding around the edges, one corner is missing. Pen writing on verso.
Category
Photographs
Catalogue
Auction 14 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
March 2, 2011
Opening: $150
Unsold
Photographs of Admorim of Karlin-Stolin.
Photograph of Rabbi Yisrael Perlov of Karlin-Stolin (with photocopy of his signature); photographs of his sons the Admorim: Rabbi Avraham Elimelech [of Karlin], Rabbi Moshe [of Stolin], Rabbi Asher, Rabbi Ya’akov, and Rabbi Yochanan [the last of the six brothers who remained after the Holocaust].
6 photographs, postcard size. Good condition.
Photograph of Rabbi Yisrael Perlov of Karlin-Stolin (with photocopy of his signature); photographs of his sons the Admorim: Rabbi Avraham Elimelech [of Karlin], Rabbi Moshe [of Stolin], Rabbi Asher, Rabbi Ya’akov, and Rabbi Yochanan [the last of the six brothers who remained after the Holocaust].
6 photographs, postcard size. Good condition.
Category
Photographs
Catalogue