Auction 37 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
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Displaying 13 - 24 of 27
Auction 37 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
April 2, 2014
Opening: $250
Sold for: $750
Including buyer's premium
Letter from Yosef Sabag-Montefiore, Moses Montefiore's nephew and assistant, to Rabbi Shmuel Salant Rabbi of Jerusalem. London, Tevet 1885.
In the letter, the nephew relates that the woman who is responsible for the kashrut in Montefiore's home has died and left the amount of 50 pounds sterling. She asked to contribute the money to the Hurva Synagogue so that they pray and study for the elevation of her soul.
25 cm. Good condition. Folding marks. Tiny holes.
In the letter, the nephew relates that the woman who is responsible for the kashrut in Montefiore's home has died and left the amount of 50 pounds sterling. She asked to contribute the money to the Hurva Synagogue so that they pray and study for the elevation of her soul.
25 cm. Good condition. Folding marks. Tiny holes.
Category
Letters to Rabbi Shmuel Salant / The Old Yishuv in Jerusalem and Hebron
Catalogue
Auction 37 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
April 2, 2014
Opening: $800
Sold for: $1,000
Including buyer's premium
Letter in Hebrew to the charity gaba'im in Jerusalem, by Sir Moses Montefiore, scribal writing, signed by Montefiore in square letters. London, 1870.
The letter was sent to Rabbi David ben Rabbi Shimon [head of the Adat HaMa'aravim in Jerusalem] and Rabbi Meir ben Asher [Anikester]. Concerning the delivery of one lira sterling and three shillings, donation of "The philanthropist G. Narson of… England".
Bluish thin stationery, approximately 26.5 cm. Fair condition, stains wear and tear. Post stamps on reverse side of leaf (without postage stamps).
The letter was sent to Rabbi David ben Rabbi Shimon [head of the Adat HaMa'aravim in Jerusalem] and Rabbi Meir ben Asher [Anikester]. Concerning the delivery of one lira sterling and three shillings, donation of "The philanthropist G. Narson of… England".
Bluish thin stationery, approximately 26.5 cm. Fair condition, stains wear and tear. Post stamps on reverse side of leaf (without postage stamps).
Category
Letters to Rabbi Shmuel Salant / The Old Yishuv in Jerusalem and Hebron
Catalogue
Auction 37 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
April 2, 2014
Opening: $350
Sold for: $688
Including buyer's premium
Calculation of the distribution of the "Eretz Yisrael Association in North America", of the money received "By Sir Moses Montefiore". Details of the amounts distributed next to the signatures of those who received the money from the Kollelim of the Prushim and the Chassidim. The leaf was signed by some of the Torah scholars and leaders of those times: Rabbi Ya'akov Yehuda Levy (signed twice), Rabbi Shneur Zalman Rivlin, Rabbi Eliezer Dan Ralbag, Rabbi Mendel Monshtar, and others.
On the reverse side of the leaf are more inscriptions of income from donations.
Leaf, 35 cm. Fair condition. Wear and tear to margins. Stains.
On the reverse side of the leaf are more inscriptions of income from donations.
Leaf, 35 cm. Fair condition. Wear and tear to margins. Stains.
Category
Letters to Rabbi Shmuel Salant / The Old Yishuv in Jerusalem and Hebron
Catalogue
Auction 37 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
April 2, 2014
Opening: $600
Unsold
Interesting letter of appointment as gabai, for Rabbi David Tebeli Berlin, signed by Rabbi Chaim Nachman Parnass, Rabbi Yitzchak Yisrael, Rabbi Zalman [Chaim?] and Rabbi Abraham David Strashun. Vilna, Tishrei 1850.
The letter is written in a poetic and hidden language, "To be a faithful treasurer and oversee all the details of the matters…and anything spoken against your honor do not heed because your reward will be doubled from Heaven…".
Rabbi Chaim Nachman Parnass, Torah genius and tzaddik, before coming to Vilna was the son-in-law of Rabbi Efraim Zalman Margaliot of Brod. After the death of his first wife in 1809, he married the daughter of Rabbi Leib Pesels, one of the leading Vilna Torah scholars called "Shel Rabbi Leibli R' Beresh" and immediately upon arriving in Vilna, due to his incredible personality, became a "cornerstone" of the Vilna community. Served as head gabai of the great synagogue of Vilna and head of the gaba'im of Eretz Israel, a position held only by the greatest Torah scholars in Lithuania. Written about him in the book Ir Vilna: "Besides his Torah wisdom he was wise in the ways of the world and all the most honored figures of his generation would come to him to seek counsel. His answer was as if it came from a man of G-d and they would not swerve right or left from his words".
The second gabai Rabbi Yitzchak Yisrael, son of Rabbi Zalman ben Uri a leading Vilna rabbi. Tzaddik and very esteemed in his city as written in Ir Vilna, "He was one of the figures of the first tzaddikim that constantly felt Hashem's presence".
Rabbi Abraham David Strashun (1788-1855), outstanding Torah scholar who would write his words with Talmudic clues as evident in this letter and apparently in other letters concerning the matters of the Eretz Israel administrators. His father, Rabbi Yehuda ben Mattityahu Strashun ascended to Eretz Israel and died there in 1828. He was a relative of the well-known Torah genius Rabbi Shmuel Strashun of Vilna, author of Hagahot HaRashash.
The recipient of the letter is Rabbi David Tebele Berlin, son of Rabbi Shlomo Hirshel Berlin Av Beit Din of Prenzlau and London, and grandson of Rabbi Zvi Hirsch Av Beit Din of Berlin. Immigrated in his later years to Jerusalem in the late 1740s. [Rabbi Tebele's son-in-law is Rabbi Yochanan Zvi Schlank of Jerusalem, disciple of the Chatam Sofer, also a member of the Organization of Officials and Administrators of Amsterdam in Jerusalem].
26 cm. Good-fair condition, few creases, wear and minor stains.
The letter is written in a poetic and hidden language, "To be a faithful treasurer and oversee all the details of the matters…and anything spoken against your honor do not heed because your reward will be doubled from Heaven…".
Rabbi Chaim Nachman Parnass, Torah genius and tzaddik, before coming to Vilna was the son-in-law of Rabbi Efraim Zalman Margaliot of Brod. After the death of his first wife in 1809, he married the daughter of Rabbi Leib Pesels, one of the leading Vilna Torah scholars called "Shel Rabbi Leibli R' Beresh" and immediately upon arriving in Vilna, due to his incredible personality, became a "cornerstone" of the Vilna community. Served as head gabai of the great synagogue of Vilna and head of the gaba'im of Eretz Israel, a position held only by the greatest Torah scholars in Lithuania. Written about him in the book Ir Vilna: "Besides his Torah wisdom he was wise in the ways of the world and all the most honored figures of his generation would come to him to seek counsel. His answer was as if it came from a man of G-d and they would not swerve right or left from his words".
The second gabai Rabbi Yitzchak Yisrael, son of Rabbi Zalman ben Uri a leading Vilna rabbi. Tzaddik and very esteemed in his city as written in Ir Vilna, "He was one of the figures of the first tzaddikim that constantly felt Hashem's presence".
Rabbi Abraham David Strashun (1788-1855), outstanding Torah scholar who would write his words with Talmudic clues as evident in this letter and apparently in other letters concerning the matters of the Eretz Israel administrators. His father, Rabbi Yehuda ben Mattityahu Strashun ascended to Eretz Israel and died there in 1828. He was a relative of the well-known Torah genius Rabbi Shmuel Strashun of Vilna, author of Hagahot HaRashash.
The recipient of the letter is Rabbi David Tebele Berlin, son of Rabbi Shlomo Hirshel Berlin Av Beit Din of Prenzlau and London, and grandson of Rabbi Zvi Hirsch Av Beit Din of Berlin. Immigrated in his later years to Jerusalem in the late 1740s. [Rabbi Tebele's son-in-law is Rabbi Yochanan Zvi Schlank of Jerusalem, disciple of the Chatam Sofer, also a member of the Organization of Officials and Administrators of Amsterdam in Jerusalem].
26 cm. Good-fair condition, few creases, wear and minor stains.
Category
Letters to Rabbi Shmuel Salant / The Old Yishuv in Jerusalem and Hebron
Catalogue
Auction 37 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
April 2, 2014
Opening: $200
Unsold
Letter signed by five Shohatim (slaughterers) from the Ashkenazi congregation of Jerusalem, Av 1875.
Obligatory writ stating that upon appeasement of the Kashrut supervisors of the slaughterhouse, their weekly salary will be raised to 72 Grush, and at the same time they take upon themselves “as strictly forbidden by their Creator”: “that we will no longer take any pieces which are referred to as gifts…not to take for ourselves even a single piece and not to accept any gift from the gentile slaughterers”.
The first signatory notes a reservation to the agreement; only in the case that “the Chassidim do not separate and open a slaughterhouse of their own, however if they do I will be forced to join them, in which case the abovementioned will not apply to me”.
Approx. 20 cm. leaf. Cut on margins.
Obligatory writ stating that upon appeasement of the Kashrut supervisors of the slaughterhouse, their weekly salary will be raised to 72 Grush, and at the same time they take upon themselves “as strictly forbidden by their Creator”: “that we will no longer take any pieces which are referred to as gifts…not to take for ourselves even a single piece and not to accept any gift from the gentile slaughterers”.
The first signatory notes a reservation to the agreement; only in the case that “the Chassidim do not separate and open a slaughterhouse of their own, however if they do I will be forced to join them, in which case the abovementioned will not apply to me”.
Approx. 20 cm. leaf. Cut on margins.
Category
Letters to Rabbi Shmuel Salant / The Old Yishuv in Jerusalem and Hebron
Catalogue
Auction 37 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
April 2, 2014
Opening: $400
Sold for: $688
Including buyer's premium
Bill admitting to the ownership of a courtyard in Jerusalem "opposite the Churva of Rabbi Yehuda HaChassid, registered in his name and in the name of Rabbi Benzion Lion, half of which belongs to Rabbi Shmuel Salant, signed by Rabbi "Uri Shabtai ben Chaim", and with the signatures of two witnesses, Rabbi "Yosef Zvi –" and Rabbi "Eli' Yud'".
Rabbi Uri Shabtai Salant, son-in-law of Rabbi Yosef Zundel of Salant, member of the first Beit Din established by his brother-in-law Rabbi Shmuel of Salant In 1841, and one of the founders of the Talmud Torah in the Churva of Rabbi Yehuda HaChassid. Signed the emissary bill for building the Churva in 1837 and the jewelry regulation in 1852.
Rabbi Eliyahu Yehuda ben Rabbi Yitzchak Isaac Sarason (1800-1978), served as Maggid and Av Beit Din in various communities abroad and delivered sermons every Shabbat and on festivals in the great synagogue Beit Ya'akov in the Churva of Rabbi Yehuda HaChassid. Some of the books he wrote: Ugat Eliyahu on Pirkei Avot, Chibat Yerushalayim, the Aggadat Eliyahu Haggadah, etc.
Approximately 20X20 cm. Good condition.
A copy of this bill was printed by Grayevsky in Zichron L'Chovevim HaRishonim, Booklet 10, pages 27-28.
Rabbi Uri Shabtai Salant, son-in-law of Rabbi Yosef Zundel of Salant, member of the first Beit Din established by his brother-in-law Rabbi Shmuel of Salant In 1841, and one of the founders of the Talmud Torah in the Churva of Rabbi Yehuda HaChassid. Signed the emissary bill for building the Churva in 1837 and the jewelry regulation in 1852.
Rabbi Eliyahu Yehuda ben Rabbi Yitzchak Isaac Sarason (1800-1978), served as Maggid and Av Beit Din in various communities abroad and delivered sermons every Shabbat and on festivals in the great synagogue Beit Ya'akov in the Churva of Rabbi Yehuda HaChassid. Some of the books he wrote: Ugat Eliyahu on Pirkei Avot, Chibat Yerushalayim, the Aggadat Eliyahu Haggadah, etc.
Approximately 20X20 cm. Good condition.
A copy of this bill was printed by Grayevsky in Zichron L'Chovevim HaRishonim, Booklet 10, pages 27-28.
Category
Letters to Rabbi Shmuel Salant / The Old Yishuv in Jerusalem and Hebron
Catalogue
Auction 37 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
April 2, 2014
Opening: $200
Sold for: $325
Including buyer's premium
Agreement permitting use of an alleyway, for homes and yards facing the alleyway which is smaller than 4 Amot [less than 2 meters], between Even Yisrael neighborhood and the estate of Rabbi Mordechai Yaffe. Includes five signatures: Rabbi “Mordechai son of Rabbi Yisrael Yaffe”; Rabbi “Binyamin Beinush Salant” [son of Rabbi Shmuel Salant]; Rabbi Meir Meisel” [of Chaslovich]; Rabbi “Yosef Rivlin” and Rabbi “Avraham Elkana Zaks”. Jerusalem, Tamuz 1877.
38 cm. leaf. Dry paper, fair condition, wear and ink damage.
38 cm. leaf. Dry paper, fair condition, wear and ink damage.
Category
Letters to Rabbi Shmuel Salant / The Old Yishuv in Jerusalem and Hebron
Catalogue
Auction 37 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
April 2, 2014
Opening: $500
Unsold
Letter of hechsher for Eretz Israeli etrogim, picked by Rabbi Shmuel Moni, Rabbi Shlomo Zalman Baharan Levi and Rabbi Yo'el Moshe Salomon from the Badatz of the Ashkenazi Pharisees community in Jerusalem. Jerusalem, Iyar 1878.
In the letter are details of the origins of the etrogim which are known not to be mixed with other species (which would make them unfit to use for arba minim): Umm al-Fahm, Alma el Shaab, Kfar Chittim and the orchard adjacent to Tiberias. "All these orchards are known to be very kosher, generation after generation according to the tradition of the rabbis from early generations". Further in the letter, is the testimony of the rabbis who explain the reason the etrogim have no pitomim (prominent tips) - from the time they were grown and created, even the small etrogim, do not have pitomim, only a mark, as brought in Magen Avraham Siman 648.
Signed by dayanim of the Beit Din: Rabbi "Binyamin ben Shmuel who used to by Av Beit Din of Stowbtsy " [1810-1893, author of She'erit Binyamin, Av Beit Din of Rajgród and Stowbtsy, ascended to Jerusalem in 1872], Rabbi "Yehoshua Bezalel ben the Maharik, Av Beit Din of Malech" [Rabbi Yehoshua Bezalel Kanterowitz (1825-1885), the Vilna Gaon's grandson, Av Beit Din of Malech and Bialistok, ascended to Jerusalem in 1871 and was immediately appointed Ra'avad and head of the Etz Chaim Yeshiva. Author of Ohel Yehoshua and Mishkan Bezalel], and Rabbi "Ya'akov ben Moshe" [of Izabelin, Av Beit Din of Motol, served as Ra'avad abroad from 38 years and 12 years in Jerusalem. Died in 1887].
27 cm. Good condition, minor tears to margins.
In the letter are details of the origins of the etrogim which are known not to be mixed with other species (which would make them unfit to use for arba minim): Umm al-Fahm, Alma el Shaab, Kfar Chittim and the orchard adjacent to Tiberias. "All these orchards are known to be very kosher, generation after generation according to the tradition of the rabbis from early generations". Further in the letter, is the testimony of the rabbis who explain the reason the etrogim have no pitomim (prominent tips) - from the time they were grown and created, even the small etrogim, do not have pitomim, only a mark, as brought in Magen Avraham Siman 648.
Signed by dayanim of the Beit Din: Rabbi "Binyamin ben Shmuel who used to by Av Beit Din of Stowbtsy " [1810-1893, author of She'erit Binyamin, Av Beit Din of Rajgród and Stowbtsy, ascended to Jerusalem in 1872], Rabbi "Yehoshua Bezalel ben the Maharik, Av Beit Din of Malech" [Rabbi Yehoshua Bezalel Kanterowitz (1825-1885), the Vilna Gaon's grandson, Av Beit Din of Malech and Bialistok, ascended to Jerusalem in 1871 and was immediately appointed Ra'avad and head of the Etz Chaim Yeshiva. Author of Ohel Yehoshua and Mishkan Bezalel], and Rabbi "Ya'akov ben Moshe" [of Izabelin, Av Beit Din of Motol, served as Ra'avad abroad from 38 years and 12 years in Jerusalem. Died in 1887].
27 cm. Good condition, minor tears to margins.
Category
Letters to Rabbi Shmuel Salant / The Old Yishuv in Jerusalem and Hebron
Catalogue
Auction 37 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
April 2, 2014
Opening: $200
Sold for: $300
Including buyer's premium
Letter of appeal in request of assistance, handwritten and signed by Rabbi “Yoel Ashkenazi grandson of Rabbi Yabetz”, with the signature of Rabbi “Yosef Mendel son of grandson of author of the Turei Zahav” who writes “on behalf of all members…”, with a stamp of Rabbi Avraham HaLevi chief Av Beit Din of Tiberias as well as stamp of “seven most esteemed members of city”. Tiberias, 1886.
Rabbi Yoel Ashkenazi of Tiberias, relative of Rabbi Yoel Ashkenazi Av Beit Din of Zolochiv (grandson of Rebbe Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum of Satmar).
26 cm. Good condition, slight tear on fold.
Rabbi Yoel Ashkenazi of Tiberias, relative of Rabbi Yoel Ashkenazi Av Beit Din of Zolochiv (grandson of Rebbe Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum of Satmar).
26 cm. Good condition, slight tear on fold.
Category
Letters to Rabbi Shmuel Salant / The Old Yishuv in Jerusalem and Hebron
Catalogue
Auction 37 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
April 2, 2014
Opening: $800
Sold for: $1,375
Including buyer's premium
Letter of receipt from the Sephardic and Ashkenazi Hebron Rabbis concerning money sent from the Organization of Officials and Administrators in Amsterdam written by Rabbi Shmuel Salant of Jerusalem. Signatures of nine of the city's rabbis and gaba'im. Hebron, Nissan 1888.
Signatures: Rabbi Eliyahu Saliman Mani; Rabbi Shimon Menashe Chaikin; Rabbi Baruch Mordechai ben Rabbi G. HaLevi; Rabbi Binyamin Rivlin; Rabbi Meir Zvi Hershler; Rabbi Yitzchak Ze'evi; Rabbi Nissim Chaim Kariyo; Rabbi Yom Tov Parchi and Rabbi Rachamim Yosef Franco.
• The Mekubal Rabbi Eliyahu Saliman Mani from Hebron (1818-1899) was born in Baghdad, disciple and brother-in-law of Rabbi Abdallah Somekh, companion of Rabbi Eliyahu Chaim and teacher of his son Rabbi Yosef Chaim, author of Ben Ish Chai whom he taught kabbalah. Ascended to Eretz Israel in 1857 and in 1858 moved to Hebron. In 1865, Rabbi Eliyahu was appointed Rabbi of Hebron. He reinforced the community in Hebron and its dependency on the Jerusalem community. In 1878, Rabbi Franco was appointed rabbi and together the two rabbis led all community matters.
• The Charif – Rabbi Rachamim Yosef Franco (1835-1901), immigrated from Rhodes to Jerusalem in 1868 and was a member of the Beit Din of Rabbi Ya’akov Shaul Elyashar. In 1878, he was appointed Chief Rabbi of Hebron succeeding Rabbi Eliyahu Mani. Died in 1901 and was succeeded by the Sde Chemed. Wrote Sha'arei Rachamim, Ot L'Rachamim, VaYitzbor Yosef and more.
• Rabbi Shimon Menashe Chaikin (1777-1893), among the most prominent disciples of the Mitteler Rebbe and Rebbe author of Tzemach Tzedek. Immigrated from Slutsk to Eretz Israel toward the end of the 1810s and served as rabbi and leader of the Chabad community of Hebron for over seventy years, lived until the ripe old age of 116.
23X14.5 cm. Fair condition, tears to leaf margins.
Signatures: Rabbi Eliyahu Saliman Mani; Rabbi Shimon Menashe Chaikin; Rabbi Baruch Mordechai ben Rabbi G. HaLevi; Rabbi Binyamin Rivlin; Rabbi Meir Zvi Hershler; Rabbi Yitzchak Ze'evi; Rabbi Nissim Chaim Kariyo; Rabbi Yom Tov Parchi and Rabbi Rachamim Yosef Franco.
• The Mekubal Rabbi Eliyahu Saliman Mani from Hebron (1818-1899) was born in Baghdad, disciple and brother-in-law of Rabbi Abdallah Somekh, companion of Rabbi Eliyahu Chaim and teacher of his son Rabbi Yosef Chaim, author of Ben Ish Chai whom he taught kabbalah. Ascended to Eretz Israel in 1857 and in 1858 moved to Hebron. In 1865, Rabbi Eliyahu was appointed Rabbi of Hebron. He reinforced the community in Hebron and its dependency on the Jerusalem community. In 1878, Rabbi Franco was appointed rabbi and together the two rabbis led all community matters.
• The Charif – Rabbi Rachamim Yosef Franco (1835-1901), immigrated from Rhodes to Jerusalem in 1868 and was a member of the Beit Din of Rabbi Ya’akov Shaul Elyashar. In 1878, he was appointed Chief Rabbi of Hebron succeeding Rabbi Eliyahu Mani. Died in 1901 and was succeeded by the Sde Chemed. Wrote Sha'arei Rachamim, Ot L'Rachamim, VaYitzbor Yosef and more.
• Rabbi Shimon Menashe Chaikin (1777-1893), among the most prominent disciples of the Mitteler Rebbe and Rebbe author of Tzemach Tzedek. Immigrated from Slutsk to Eretz Israel toward the end of the 1810s and served as rabbi and leader of the Chabad community of Hebron for over seventy years, lived until the ripe old age of 116.
23X14.5 cm. Fair condition, tears to leaf margins.
Category
Letters to Rabbi Shmuel Salant / The Old Yishuv in Jerusalem and Hebron
Catalogue
Auction 37 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
April 2, 2014
Opening: $350
Sold for: $688
Including buyer's premium
Letter signed by six of the rabbis and community heads of Hebron which they sent to the Vaad HaKlali in Jerusalem. In the letter they relate the troubles of the "Horrible hunger with all its terrible manifestations" and the yoke they bear of burying the many dead of Hebron, Be'er Sheva and the surrounding areas. This letter was written in the midst of World War I which caused many deaths in the Jewish settlements in Eretz Israel. More people died from hunger than were killed in battle.
Signed by Sephardic and Ashkenazi rabbis: “Saliman Menachem Mani”, “Rabbi Chanoch Chasson”, “Meir Shmuel Kashtil”, "Eliezer Klonsky", "Ya'akov Chaim Slonim" and Rabbi "Ya'akov Yosef Slonim". Stamps of the rabbis and Kollels.
Rabbi Saliman Menachem Mani (1850-1924) was born in Baghdad to Rabbi Eliyahu Mani. Son-in-law of Rabbi Moshe Firrera. Member of the Beit Din of the Sdeh Chemed and his successor as chief rabbi of Hebron.
Rabbi Meir Shmuel Kashtil was born in Hebron in 1860. Member of the Beit Din of the Sdeh Chemed, murdered in the 1929 Palestine riots. Rabbi Rabbino Chanoch Chasson was born in 1867 and murdered in the 1929 Palestine riots. Rabbi Eliezer Klonsky and Rabbi Ya'akov Chaim Slonim were important community leaders of the Hebron Chabad community and Rabbi Ya'akov Yosef Slonim (1880-Tishrei 1937), was the rabbi of the Ashkenazi community in Hebron and founder of the Torat Emet Yeshiva in Hebron. From 1916-1929, he served as rabbi of the city. In 1929, he moved to Jerusalem, after the pogroms that claimed the lives of his wife and most of his family.
Leaf 29 cm. Good condition, folding marks.
Signed by Sephardic and Ashkenazi rabbis: “Saliman Menachem Mani”, “Rabbi Chanoch Chasson”, “Meir Shmuel Kashtil”, "Eliezer Klonsky", "Ya'akov Chaim Slonim" and Rabbi "Ya'akov Yosef Slonim". Stamps of the rabbis and Kollels.
Rabbi Saliman Menachem Mani (1850-1924) was born in Baghdad to Rabbi Eliyahu Mani. Son-in-law of Rabbi Moshe Firrera. Member of the Beit Din of the Sdeh Chemed and his successor as chief rabbi of Hebron.
Rabbi Meir Shmuel Kashtil was born in Hebron in 1860. Member of the Beit Din of the Sdeh Chemed, murdered in the 1929 Palestine riots. Rabbi Rabbino Chanoch Chasson was born in 1867 and murdered in the 1929 Palestine riots. Rabbi Eliezer Klonsky and Rabbi Ya'akov Chaim Slonim were important community leaders of the Hebron Chabad community and Rabbi Ya'akov Yosef Slonim (1880-Tishrei 1937), was the rabbi of the Ashkenazi community in Hebron and founder of the Torat Emet Yeshiva in Hebron. From 1916-1929, he served as rabbi of the city. In 1929, he moved to Jerusalem, after the pogroms that claimed the lives of his wife and most of his family.
Leaf 29 cm. Good condition, folding marks.
Category
Letters to Rabbi Shmuel Salant / The Old Yishuv in Jerusalem and Hebron
Catalogue
Auction 37 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
April 2, 2014
Opening: $300
Sold for: $413
Including buyer's premium
Letter by rabbis of Jerusalem, Rabbi Yaakov Shaul Elyashar “Yisa Beracha” and Rabbi Shalom Moshe Chai Gagin author of Sameach Nefesh, which they wrote while on mission for matters concerning Eretz Israel. Livorno, Tamuz 1873.
The letter was sent to “esteemed exalted rabbi…. Rabbi David Chai”. In the letter they request to inquire as to the wellbeing of the philanthropists “Yosef ---“. “Yaakov Ruso” and “Raphael Todisko”.
21 cm. Fair condition, thin dark paper, glued upon restoration paper.
The letter was sent to “esteemed exalted rabbi…. Rabbi David Chai”. In the letter they request to inquire as to the wellbeing of the philanthropists “Yosef ---“. “Yaakov Ruso” and “Raphael Todisko”.
21 cm. Fair condition, thin dark paper, glued upon restoration paper.
Category
Letters to Rabbi Shmuel Salant / The Old Yishuv in Jerusalem and Hebron
Catalogue