Auction 54 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
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Displaying 133 - 144 of 475
Auction 54 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
February 7, 2017
Opening: $1,500
Sold for: $2,500
Including buyer's premium
Noam Megadim and Kavod HaTorah, by R. Eliezer HaLevi Horowitz, Rabbi of Tarnogród, [disciple of R. Yechiel Michel of Złoczew and of R. Elimelech of Leżajsk (Lizhensk), disciple of the Chozeh of Lublin and of the Magid of Kozienice]. Mukacheve, 1905.
Before the title page is a dedication (8 lines) handwritten and signed by R. Moshe Greenwald Rabbi of Chust, who gave the book as a wedding gift to his disciple "Outstanding in Torah and fear of G-d R. Gedalya Goldstein".
The famous Torah scholar R. Moshe Ben-Amram Greenwald (1853-1910, HaChatam Sofer Ve'Talmidav p. 521), was a prominent Hungarian rabbi and head of yeshiva. Disciple of R. Menachem Katz Prostitz of Deutschkreutz (Zelem) and disciple of the Ktav Sofer in Pressburg. In his youth, he headed a yeshiva in his hometown Cherna, later serving in the rabbinate of several Hungarian communities and as Rabbi of Chust from 1893. Although he studied in the yeshiva of the Chatam Sofer, he was affiliated with Chassidism and would travel to the Belz and Siget rebbes. In Chust, he established his court and expanded his yeshiva which eventually became one of the largest yeshivas in Hungary. Disciples from all over the country and abroad flocked to his yeshiva and many Hungarian rabbis were his disciples. He was renowned for his compositions Arugat HaBosem on Halacha and Aggadah. His son was Rabbi Ya'akov Yechizkiya Greenwald Av Bet Din and Rebbe of Papa, and his grandson is Rebbe Yosef Greenwald of Papa, who established the Papa Chassidism in America after the Holocaust.
103 leaves. 23 cm. Fair condition. Wear and worming. Tears to first leaves. Fabric binding and library stamps.
Before the title page is a dedication (8 lines) handwritten and signed by R. Moshe Greenwald Rabbi of Chust, who gave the book as a wedding gift to his disciple "Outstanding in Torah and fear of G-d R. Gedalya Goldstein".
The famous Torah scholar R. Moshe Ben-Amram Greenwald (1853-1910, HaChatam Sofer Ve'Talmidav p. 521), was a prominent Hungarian rabbi and head of yeshiva. Disciple of R. Menachem Katz Prostitz of Deutschkreutz (Zelem) and disciple of the Ktav Sofer in Pressburg. In his youth, he headed a yeshiva in his hometown Cherna, later serving in the rabbinate of several Hungarian communities and as Rabbi of Chust from 1893. Although he studied in the yeshiva of the Chatam Sofer, he was affiliated with Chassidism and would travel to the Belz and Siget rebbes. In Chust, he established his court and expanded his yeshiva which eventually became one of the largest yeshivas in Hungary. Disciples from all over the country and abroad flocked to his yeshiva and many Hungarian rabbis were his disciples. He was renowned for his compositions Arugat HaBosem on Halacha and Aggadah. His son was Rabbi Ya'akov Yechizkiya Greenwald Av Bet Din and Rebbe of Papa, and his grandson is Rebbe Yosef Greenwald of Papa, who established the Papa Chassidism in America after the Holocaust.
103 leaves. 23 cm. Fair condition. Wear and worming. Tears to first leaves. Fabric binding and library stamps.
Category
Chassidism - Signatures and Books that Belonged to Rebbes
Catalogue
Auction 54 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
February 7, 2017
Opening: $5,000
Unsold
Tehillim with the Ben Beiti commentary, by the Komarno Rebbe Eliezer Zvi Safrin [reprint of the Jerusalem 1968 edition]. Special edition of the Union of Tosher Chassidim and Students in the US, printed in honor of the Shabbat-convention on Shabbat Shira.
The personal copy of Tosh-Canada Rebbe. Embossed on the binding: "Meshulem Feish Segal Lowy". On a page preceding the title page is a handwritten dedication: "Gift to my dear friend Mordechai son of Yimne - blessing and much success" [the last three words were written in a different handwritten, apparently the handwriting of the Rebbe himself]. Stamp of the Rebbe's assistant (Mashbak), R. "Elimelech Zusman Sofer - Mashbak of our holy Rebbe - Beit HaLevi Kiryat Tosh Canada". Chapters 40 and 102 have pencil highlights, alluding to the name of the Ramchal and highlighting Verse 8 of Chapter 40, referring to a basic tenet of the Tosh leadership - performing G-d's will with supreme devotion.
The Tosher Rebbe, R. Meshulam Feish Segal Lőwy (1922-2015), son of R. Mordechai of Demecser, grandson of R. Meshulam Feish Lőwy of Tosh (the first), arrived in Montreal, Canada in 1951 and in 1963, he established the Beit HaLevi enclave of Tosh Chassidism. He was celebrated for his long prayers and devout conduct serving G-d with incredible devotion. Many flocked to spend Shabbat in his presence, among them some of the leading Chassidic figures in the US and Canada. Some of his Torah thoughts were printed in the series of the Avodat Avodah books.
[4], 7-43 pages; [1], 131, [2] leaves. 17.5 cm. Good condition. Signs of heavy wear. Rubbed fabric binding. A picture of the rebbe is pasted on the last page: 12.5X17.5 cm.
The personal copy of Tosh-Canada Rebbe. Embossed on the binding: "Meshulem Feish Segal Lowy". On a page preceding the title page is a handwritten dedication: "Gift to my dear friend Mordechai son of Yimne - blessing and much success" [the last three words were written in a different handwritten, apparently the handwriting of the Rebbe himself]. Stamp of the Rebbe's assistant (Mashbak), R. "Elimelech Zusman Sofer - Mashbak of our holy Rebbe - Beit HaLevi Kiryat Tosh Canada". Chapters 40 and 102 have pencil highlights, alluding to the name of the Ramchal and highlighting Verse 8 of Chapter 40, referring to a basic tenet of the Tosh leadership - performing G-d's will with supreme devotion.
The Tosher Rebbe, R. Meshulam Feish Segal Lőwy (1922-2015), son of R. Mordechai of Demecser, grandson of R. Meshulam Feish Lőwy of Tosh (the first), arrived in Montreal, Canada in 1951 and in 1963, he established the Beit HaLevi enclave of Tosh Chassidism. He was celebrated for his long prayers and devout conduct serving G-d with incredible devotion. Many flocked to spend Shabbat in his presence, among them some of the leading Chassidic figures in the US and Canada. Some of his Torah thoughts were printed in the series of the Avodat Avodah books.
[4], 7-43 pages; [1], 131, [2] leaves. 17.5 cm. Good condition. Signs of heavy wear. Rubbed fabric binding. A picture of the rebbe is pasted on the last page: 12.5X17.5 cm.
Category
Chassidism - Signatures and Books that Belonged to Rebbes
Catalogue
Auction 54 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
February 7, 2017
Opening: $500
Unsold
Book of Tehillim, with the Tehillot Maharitz (Dushinsky) commentary. Jerusalem, Tishrei 1972. First edition. Ownership inscription of "R. Ya'akov Yosef Weiss of Spinka - 13 Donnolo St. Bnei Brak". Handwritten dedication "In honor of the Rebbe", signed (as in a Kvitel): "Ya'akov Eliezer son of Freida Malka".
Personal copy of the Bnei Brak Spinka Rebbe, R. Ya'akov Yosef Weiss (1916-1988), greatest of the Spinka rebbes in the post-Holocaust generation. Grandson of the author of Chakal Yitzchak. After the Holocaust, which claimed the lives of his first wife and three children, R. Weiss was appointed Rebbe and wed his cousin, daughter of R. Abish Horwitz of Krula. He re-established the Spinka Chassidism in the US, in Bnei Brak and in Jerusalem. In 1969, he founded the Spinka Yeshiva in Bnei Brak becoming one the leading rebbes there.
[4], 244, [8] leaves. 24 cm. Good condition. Stains and wear. Signs of much use. Original fabric binding, slightly worn.
Personal copy of the Bnei Brak Spinka Rebbe, R. Ya'akov Yosef Weiss (1916-1988), greatest of the Spinka rebbes in the post-Holocaust generation. Grandson of the author of Chakal Yitzchak. After the Holocaust, which claimed the lives of his first wife and three children, R. Weiss was appointed Rebbe and wed his cousin, daughter of R. Abish Horwitz of Krula. He re-established the Spinka Chassidism in the US, in Bnei Brak and in Jerusalem. In 1969, he founded the Spinka Yeshiva in Bnei Brak becoming one the leading rebbes there.
[4], 244, [8] leaves. 24 cm. Good condition. Stains and wear. Signs of much use. Original fabric binding, slightly worn.
Category
Chassidism - Signatures and Books that Belonged to Rebbes
Catalogue
Auction 54 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
February 7, 2017
Opening: $1,000
Sold for: $1,250
Including buyer's premium
Yitav Lev, on the Torah, Parts 1-5, by R. Yekutiel Yehuda Teitelbaum Rabbi of Siget. Maramureş -Siget, 1875. First edition printed in the lifetime of the author.
In Vol. 2 (Vayikra, Bamidbar, Devarim) are many stamps of R. "Chaim Freund - Satu-Mare" - R. Chaim Freund (c. 1865-1950), born in Siget to R. Moshe Aryeh Freund head of the Siget community and close to the author of Yitav Lev [father of the Năsăud Rabbi Avraham Yehoshua Freund, grandfather of R. Moshe Aryeh Freund Ga'avad of Jerusalem].
In his youth, R. Chaim was a regular guest in of the home of the author of Yitav Lev (who died in 1883). He studied in the Khust Yeshiva under the tutelage of the Maharam Shick. He became a wealthy individual active for Torah causes. Close faithful friend of Rebbe Yoel Teitelbaum, he was one of the initiators of appointing him Rabbi of Satmar. He served as head of the Satmar community and was elected as deputy-president of the Transylvanian Orthodox Agency. In his senior years, he moved to Jerusalem and assisted in founding the Satmar community in Jerusalem.
Two volumes, Vol. 1: [4], 2-141, [2] leaves: 91 leaves (lacking 1 leaf with a list of errata of the Book of Shemot). Vol. 2: [4], 2-55, [1] leaves; [2], 2-80, [1] leaves; [2], 2-52, 55-70, [1] leaves. Size: 23.5-25 cm. Good-fair condition. Heavy wear and stains. Paper pasted unto title pages of Vol 1. Worn bindings.
Stefansky Chassidut, no. 228.
In Vol. 2 (Vayikra, Bamidbar, Devarim) are many stamps of R. "Chaim Freund - Satu-Mare" - R. Chaim Freund (c. 1865-1950), born in Siget to R. Moshe Aryeh Freund head of the Siget community and close to the author of Yitav Lev [father of the Năsăud Rabbi Avraham Yehoshua Freund, grandfather of R. Moshe Aryeh Freund Ga'avad of Jerusalem].
In his youth, R. Chaim was a regular guest in of the home of the author of Yitav Lev (who died in 1883). He studied in the Khust Yeshiva under the tutelage of the Maharam Shick. He became a wealthy individual active for Torah causes. Close faithful friend of Rebbe Yoel Teitelbaum, he was one of the initiators of appointing him Rabbi of Satmar. He served as head of the Satmar community and was elected as deputy-president of the Transylvanian Orthodox Agency. In his senior years, he moved to Jerusalem and assisted in founding the Satmar community in Jerusalem.
Two volumes, Vol. 1: [4], 2-141, [2] leaves: 91 leaves (lacking 1 leaf with a list of errata of the Book of Shemot). Vol. 2: [4], 2-55, [1] leaves; [2], 2-80, [1] leaves; [2], 2-52, 55-70, [1] leaves. Size: 23.5-25 cm. Good-fair condition. Heavy wear and stains. Paper pasted unto title pages of Vol 1. Worn bindings.
Stefansky Chassidut, no. 228.
Category
Satmar Chassidism - Letters and Books
Catalogue
Auction 54 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
February 7, 2017
Opening: $300
Sold for: $625
Including buyer's premium
Avnei Tzedek responsa, Orach Chaim and Yoreh De'ah, by R. Yekutiel Yehuda Teitelbaum Rabbi of Siget (author of Yitav Lev). Lemberg, 1885. First edition.
Many signatures of R. "Moshe [Tuvia?] TB [Tenenbaum? Teitelbaum?] son of R. Shmuel Yehuda". Signatures of R. "Mendel Taub" who purchased the book from the aforementioned R. Moshe. On the endpapers and pages are many long glosses, written at the time of printing.
[4], 80 leaves. 36 cm. Brittle paper. Fair condition. Tears. Contemporary worn binding, with leather spine.
Many signatures of R. "Moshe [Tuvia?] TB [Tenenbaum? Teitelbaum?] son of R. Shmuel Yehuda". Signatures of R. "Mendel Taub" who purchased the book from the aforementioned R. Moshe. On the endpapers and pages are many long glosses, written at the time of printing.
[4], 80 leaves. 36 cm. Brittle paper. Fair condition. Tears. Contemporary worn binding, with leather spine.
Category
Satmar Chassidism - Letters and Books
Catalogue
Auction 54 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
February 7, 2017
Opening: $500
Sold for: $688
Including buyer's premium
Sefer Toldot Adam, novellae on Talmudic treatises, by Rabbi Moshe David Ashkenazi. Jerusalem, [1845]. Printed by Israel Bak. First edition printed by the author.
The author, R. Moshe David Ashkenazi - Rabbi of Tolcsva-Safed, (1774-1856, Ishim B'Teshuvot HeChatam Sofer, p. 300), author of Toldot Adam and Be'er Sheva, father-in-law of the Rebbe author of Yitav Lev of Siget and father of R. Yoel Ashkenazi, rabbi of Złoczew. Rebbes of Satmar and Kloizenburg were his descendants. At a young age he was appointed Rabbi of Tolcsva, a position he held for forty years. Moved to Safed in 1844 and was one of the founders of the Chassidic settlement in post-earthquake Safed. A short while after his immigration to Eretz Israel, he printed this book in the printing press of Rabbi Israel Bak in Jerusalem. He authored the book in his thirties and Rabbi Ya’akov of Lisa, author of Chavat Da’at writes in his approbation to the book: "The famous Torah scholar R. Moshe David…does not need me and my likes, but I honor his wish and cannot refuse a person greater than I". His home and Beit Midrash in Safed were restored by his grandson the Klausenberg Rebbe and at present, they house the Sanz institutes in Safed.
On the title page are inscriptions and signatures in Oriental handwriting: "…R. Moshe David Ashkenazi" and calligraphic signatures of R. "Avraham Gagin".
Many stamps of the author's descendant R. "Naftali Teitelbaum Rabbi of Nyirbator" (1867-1938), a leading Hungarian rabbi and one of the heads of the Orthodox Office (in Budapest). Son of R. Yisrael Ya'akov Yukel Teitelbaum Rabbi of Volovo, and son of the daughter of the Yitav Lev, son-in-law of R. Moshe Yosef Teitelbaum Rabbi of Ujhely. Beginning in 1898, he served as Rabbi of Nyirbator for 40 years and conducted the rabbinate with firmness, love and honesty. He was friendly with his cousin R. Yoel Teitelbaum Rabbi of Satmar and although he was older than him, he respected him as a disciple and accepted his counsel like any Satmar Chassid. R. Yisrael Ya'akov is praised in the letters of the Rebbe, the Minchat Elazar of Mukacheve who worked with him to strengthen Jewish issues and in the battle against the Zionist movement and the religious Agudat Yisrael and Mizrachi parties.
[2], 142 leaves. 28 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains and wear. Worming to the margins of the last leaves, slightly affecting text. Old non-contemporary binding.
Stefansky Chassidut, no. 603.
The author, R. Moshe David Ashkenazi - Rabbi of Tolcsva-Safed, (1774-1856, Ishim B'Teshuvot HeChatam Sofer, p. 300), author of Toldot Adam and Be'er Sheva, father-in-law of the Rebbe author of Yitav Lev of Siget and father of R. Yoel Ashkenazi, rabbi of Złoczew. Rebbes of Satmar and Kloizenburg were his descendants. At a young age he was appointed Rabbi of Tolcsva, a position he held for forty years. Moved to Safed in 1844 and was one of the founders of the Chassidic settlement in post-earthquake Safed. A short while after his immigration to Eretz Israel, he printed this book in the printing press of Rabbi Israel Bak in Jerusalem. He authored the book in his thirties and Rabbi Ya’akov of Lisa, author of Chavat Da’at writes in his approbation to the book: "The famous Torah scholar R. Moshe David…does not need me and my likes, but I honor his wish and cannot refuse a person greater than I". His home and Beit Midrash in Safed were restored by his grandson the Klausenberg Rebbe and at present, they house the Sanz institutes in Safed.
On the title page are inscriptions and signatures in Oriental handwriting: "…R. Moshe David Ashkenazi" and calligraphic signatures of R. "Avraham Gagin".
Many stamps of the author's descendant R. "Naftali Teitelbaum Rabbi of Nyirbator" (1867-1938), a leading Hungarian rabbi and one of the heads of the Orthodox Office (in Budapest). Son of R. Yisrael Ya'akov Yukel Teitelbaum Rabbi of Volovo, and son of the daughter of the Yitav Lev, son-in-law of R. Moshe Yosef Teitelbaum Rabbi of Ujhely. Beginning in 1898, he served as Rabbi of Nyirbator for 40 years and conducted the rabbinate with firmness, love and honesty. He was friendly with his cousin R. Yoel Teitelbaum Rabbi of Satmar and although he was older than him, he respected him as a disciple and accepted his counsel like any Satmar Chassid. R. Yisrael Ya'akov is praised in the letters of the Rebbe, the Minchat Elazar of Mukacheve who worked with him to strengthen Jewish issues and in the battle against the Zionist movement and the religious Agudat Yisrael and Mizrachi parties.
[2], 142 leaves. 28 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains and wear. Worming to the margins of the last leaves, slightly affecting text. Old non-contemporary binding.
Stefansky Chassidut, no. 603.
Category
Satmar Chassidism - Letters and Books
Catalogue
Auction 54 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
February 7, 2017
Opening: $400
Sold for: $500
Including buyer's premium
Midrash Pli'ah, with the Damesek Eliezer commentary, by Rebbe Eliezer Lipa Weisblum of Leżajsk (Lizhensk)-NY. Przemyśl, 1922. Two title pages.
On verso of first title page: Interesting handwritten dedication [from the 1930s], signed by a disciple of Rebbe Yoel Teitelbaum Rabbi of Satmar, who writes that during a visit of Rebbe Yoel in Baia Mare, he studied and taught with books that were loaned to him by the owner of this book, R. Moshe Aharon Shnitzer. The writer of the dedication blesses the owner of the book with plenty and success, and signes "Yechezkel Shraga Morgenstein of Kisvárda (Kleinwardein)".
R. Yoel Teitelbaum (1887-1979), grandson of the Yitav Lev and son of the Kedushat Yom Tov who both served as Rabbis of Siget. He was known from a young age for his sharpness and Torah proficiency and for his amazing holiness and purity. After he wed the daughter of R. A. C. Horwitz, the Rabbi of Połaniec, he settled in Satmar and taught Torah and Chassidism to a select group of disciples and Chassidim. He served in the rabbinate of Orşova, Carei (from 1925) and Satmar (from 1934). In each of these communities, he also managed a yeshiva gedola and a large Chassidic community. He stood at the helm of the extreme faithful Orthodox Jewry in the Maramureş region. He was saved during the Holocaust in Dr. Kastner's famous "rescue train" and arrived via Bergen Belsen and Eretz Israel to the US in which he established the largest Chassidic community in the world - the Satmar Chassidism which until today is the most dominant community of Orthodox Jews in the US. He headed the opposition to Zionism and the establishment of the State of Israel. He wrote many halachic responsa and his works have been published in dozens of books: VaYo'el Moshe, the Divrei Yoel responsa, Divrei Yo'el on the Torah, etc. Various owners' signatures, including the signature of "Moshe Aharon Shnitzer shochet and bodek" - In 1957, R. Moshe Aharon Shnitzer served as a shochet and bodek in Mendoza (Argentina) and was very active in reinforcing Torah practice, education and Shabbat observance, see enclosed material.
[6], 20, 51-53, 24-29, 40-42 leaves. Lacking last leaf: 43. Mispaginated. Approx. 23 cm. Brittle paper. Fair-poor condition. Worming, wear and tears. Unbound.
On verso of first title page: Interesting handwritten dedication [from the 1930s], signed by a disciple of Rebbe Yoel Teitelbaum Rabbi of Satmar, who writes that during a visit of Rebbe Yoel in Baia Mare, he studied and taught with books that were loaned to him by the owner of this book, R. Moshe Aharon Shnitzer. The writer of the dedication blesses the owner of the book with plenty and success, and signes "Yechezkel Shraga Morgenstein of Kisvárda (Kleinwardein)".
R. Yoel Teitelbaum (1887-1979), grandson of the Yitav Lev and son of the Kedushat Yom Tov who both served as Rabbis of Siget. He was known from a young age for his sharpness and Torah proficiency and for his amazing holiness and purity. After he wed the daughter of R. A. C. Horwitz, the Rabbi of Połaniec, he settled in Satmar and taught Torah and Chassidism to a select group of disciples and Chassidim. He served in the rabbinate of Orşova, Carei (from 1925) and Satmar (from 1934). In each of these communities, he also managed a yeshiva gedola and a large Chassidic community. He stood at the helm of the extreme faithful Orthodox Jewry in the Maramureş region. He was saved during the Holocaust in Dr. Kastner's famous "rescue train" and arrived via Bergen Belsen and Eretz Israel to the US in which he established the largest Chassidic community in the world - the Satmar Chassidism which until today is the most dominant community of Orthodox Jews in the US. He headed the opposition to Zionism and the establishment of the State of Israel. He wrote many halachic responsa and his works have been published in dozens of books: VaYo'el Moshe, the Divrei Yoel responsa, Divrei Yo'el on the Torah, etc. Various owners' signatures, including the signature of "Moshe Aharon Shnitzer shochet and bodek" - In 1957, R. Moshe Aharon Shnitzer served as a shochet and bodek in Mendoza (Argentina) and was very active in reinforcing Torah practice, education and Shabbat observance, see enclosed material.
[6], 20, 51-53, 24-29, 40-42 leaves. Lacking last leaf: 43. Mispaginated. Approx. 23 cm. Brittle paper. Fair-poor condition. Worming, wear and tears. Unbound.
Category
Satmar Chassidism - Letters and Books
Catalogue
Auction 54 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
February 7, 2017
Opening: $300
Unsold
Netzach Yisrael, about the Messiah and the Redemption, by R. Yehuda Loew - the Maharal of Prague. Lvov, 1869. Approbations by Levi Yitzchak of Berdychiv and R. Yisrael the Magid of Kozienice, from 1793, are printed on the last leaf.
Various ownership inscriptions, signatures and stamps. On the page preceding the title page is a dedication by R. "Yitzchak Shimon Berger son of Alte Esther Malka", who gave the book as a gift to "the Rebbe of Carei", the famous R. Yoel Teitelbaum Rabbi of Satmar who served previously as Rabbi of Carei (Nagy Károly).
R. Yoel Teitelbaum (1887-1979), grandson of the Yitav Lev and son of the Kedushat Yom Tov who both served as Rabbis of Siget. He was known from a young age for his sharpness and Torah proficiency and for his amazing holiness and purity. After he wed the daughter of R. A. C. Horwitz, the Rabbi of Połaniec, he settled in Satmar and taught Torah and Chassidism to a select group of disciples and Chassidim. He served in the rabbinate of Orşova, Carei (from 1925) and Satmar (from 1934). In each of these communities, he also managed a yeshiva gedola and a large Chassidic community. He stood at the helm of the extreme faithful Orthodox Jewry in the Maramureş region. He was saved during the Holocaust in Dr. Kastner's famous "rescue train" and arrived via Bergen Belsen and Eretz Israel to the US in which he established the largest Chassidic community in the world - the Satmar Chassidism which until today is the most dominant community of Orthodox Jews in the US. He headed the opposition to Zionism and the establishment of the State of Israel. He wrote many halachic responsa and his works have been published in dozens of books: VaYo'el Moshe, the Divrei Yoel responsa, Divrei Yo'el on the Torah, etc.
83 leaves. 21 cm. Fair-good condition. Wear and stains, tears to title page. Worn contemporary binding.
Various ownership inscriptions, signatures and stamps. On the page preceding the title page is a dedication by R. "Yitzchak Shimon Berger son of Alte Esther Malka", who gave the book as a gift to "the Rebbe of Carei", the famous R. Yoel Teitelbaum Rabbi of Satmar who served previously as Rabbi of Carei (Nagy Károly).
R. Yoel Teitelbaum (1887-1979), grandson of the Yitav Lev and son of the Kedushat Yom Tov who both served as Rabbis of Siget. He was known from a young age for his sharpness and Torah proficiency and for his amazing holiness and purity. After he wed the daughter of R. A. C. Horwitz, the Rabbi of Połaniec, he settled in Satmar and taught Torah and Chassidism to a select group of disciples and Chassidim. He served in the rabbinate of Orşova, Carei (from 1925) and Satmar (from 1934). In each of these communities, he also managed a yeshiva gedola and a large Chassidic community. He stood at the helm of the extreme faithful Orthodox Jewry in the Maramureş region. He was saved during the Holocaust in Dr. Kastner's famous "rescue train" and arrived via Bergen Belsen and Eretz Israel to the US in which he established the largest Chassidic community in the world - the Satmar Chassidism which until today is the most dominant community of Orthodox Jews in the US. He headed the opposition to Zionism and the establishment of the State of Israel. He wrote many halachic responsa and his works have been published in dozens of books: VaYo'el Moshe, the Divrei Yoel responsa, Divrei Yo'el on the Torah, etc.
83 leaves. 21 cm. Fair-good condition. Wear and stains, tears to title page. Worn contemporary binding.
Category
Satmar Chassidism - Letters and Books
Catalogue
Auction 54 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
February 7, 2017
Opening: $1,000
Unsold
Kvitel (note) with requests to pray for Rebbe Moshe Yitzchak Gvirtzman of Przeworsk. Antwerp, [c. 1970s].
Category
Satmar Chassidism - Letters and Books
Catalogue
Auction 54 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
February 7, 2017
Opening: $800
Unsold
A long letter sent to the US, to the Satmar Rebbe, with many signatures of leaders of the Petach Tikva Chassidic community, headed by that of the Zidichover Rebbe, R. Menashe Yitzchak Meir Eichenstein. With stamps of the Batei Midrash in Petach Tikva: "Divrei Chaim", Sanz Hasidism; "Chug Chatam Sofer Petach Tikva" and the Beit Midrash of the Zidichover Rebbe. Petach Tikva, Adar 1955.
The letter contains details about the difficulties encountered by the Chassidic population of Petach Tikva - a city whose yeshiva heads and community leaders were predominantly Mitnagdim. The writers describe themselves as "Charedim who dwell in Petach Tikva… a few hundred families… who from their youth were educated in Torah and Hasidism… in the ways of the disciples of the holy Ba'al Shem Tov… and we will not deviate even one notch from their path with absolute devotion until the coming of the Messiah, but unfortunately, both the kashrut and the education system are under the supervision of those who oppose Hasidism. All the shochatim and all the mohalim are beardless… Woe to such shame!...". Further in the letter, they request that the Rebbe agree to allow his disciple R. Lipa Shub who at that time managed the Satmar Talmud Torah in Jerusalem, to relocate to Petach Tikva and accept the position of schochet and mohel.
The Zidichover Rebbe, R. Menashe Yitzchak Meir Eichenstein (1894-1971), son of Rebbe Asher Yeshaya of Pruchnik was close to many tsaddikim and was especially beloved by Rebbe Yissachar Dov of Belz. He served as the Zidichover Rebbe in Petroşani (Romania). After the Holocaust, he established his
Beit Midrash in Klausenburg and later moved to Eretz Israel and established a Chassidic center in Petach Tikva. He died without children and in his testament wrote that his nephew Rebbe Yissachar Berish, son of R. Yehoshua Eichenstein should be his successor.
2 leaves, 28.5 cm. Thin paper. Good condition, creases and folds.
The letter contains details about the difficulties encountered by the Chassidic population of Petach Tikva - a city whose yeshiva heads and community leaders were predominantly Mitnagdim. The writers describe themselves as "Charedim who dwell in Petach Tikva… a few hundred families… who from their youth were educated in Torah and Hasidism… in the ways of the disciples of the holy Ba'al Shem Tov… and we will not deviate even one notch from their path with absolute devotion until the coming of the Messiah, but unfortunately, both the kashrut and the education system are under the supervision of those who oppose Hasidism. All the shochatim and all the mohalim are beardless… Woe to such shame!...". Further in the letter, they request that the Rebbe agree to allow his disciple R. Lipa Shub who at that time managed the Satmar Talmud Torah in Jerusalem, to relocate to Petach Tikva and accept the position of schochet and mohel.
The Zidichover Rebbe, R. Menashe Yitzchak Meir Eichenstein (1894-1971), son of Rebbe Asher Yeshaya of Pruchnik was close to many tsaddikim and was especially beloved by Rebbe Yissachar Dov of Belz. He served as the Zidichover Rebbe in Petroşani (Romania). After the Holocaust, he established his
Beit Midrash in Klausenburg and later moved to Eretz Israel and established a Chassidic center in Petach Tikva. He died without children and in his testament wrote that his nephew Rebbe Yissachar Berish, son of R. Yehoshua Eichenstein should be his successor.
2 leaves, 28.5 cm. Thin paper. Good condition, creases and folds.
Category
Satmar Chassidism - Letters and Books
Catalogue
Auction 54 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
February 7, 2017
Opening: $500
Unsold
Collection of autograph letters signed by R. Moshe Ya'ir Weinstock, with long inscriptions and notations handwritten and signed by the recipient of the letters, R. "Yuda Ze'ev" Leibowitz. Jerusalem, 1968-1977.
Letters and written leaves, kabbalistic ideas, commentaries on the Zohar and on kabbalistic matters, Chassidic essays and Torah thoughts. Two letters contain interesting memoirs about the Satmar Rebbe with stories and Torah teachings in his name, from the time he visited Jerusalem in "c. 1931", at the time he was still Rabbi of Carei (including details of the negotiations regarding his appointment as Ra'avad of the Eda HaCharedit in Jerusalem).
The Jerusalem kabbalist R. Moshe Ya'ir Weinstock (1899-1982), disciple of Jerusalem kabbalists and rebbes, disciple of the Moharil Ashlag, author of HaSulam, authored and published dozens of kabbalistic and halachic books on Chassidism and mussar.
His kabbalist disciple R. Yehuda Ze'ev Leibowitz (1922-2010), studied in his youth by R. Yoel Teitelbaum in Satmar. An amazing, holy pure man, disciple of the Shoemaker of Tel Aviv, he invested much time in the study of kabbalistic wisdom and wrote several important books. Known for his wondrous deeds and for his lofty piety.
7 paper items, including 5 complete letters on official stationery. Size and condition vary. Ink reinforcement of letters in the text (apparently, in the handwriting of R. Yehuda Ze'ev Leibowitz).
Letters and written leaves, kabbalistic ideas, commentaries on the Zohar and on kabbalistic matters, Chassidic essays and Torah thoughts. Two letters contain interesting memoirs about the Satmar Rebbe with stories and Torah teachings in his name, from the time he visited Jerusalem in "c. 1931", at the time he was still Rabbi of Carei (including details of the negotiations regarding his appointment as Ra'avad of the Eda HaCharedit in Jerusalem).
The Jerusalem kabbalist R. Moshe Ya'ir Weinstock (1899-1982), disciple of Jerusalem kabbalists and rebbes, disciple of the Moharil Ashlag, author of HaSulam, authored and published dozens of kabbalistic and halachic books on Chassidism and mussar.
His kabbalist disciple R. Yehuda Ze'ev Leibowitz (1922-2010), studied in his youth by R. Yoel Teitelbaum in Satmar. An amazing, holy pure man, disciple of the Shoemaker of Tel Aviv, he invested much time in the study of kabbalistic wisdom and wrote several important books. Known for his wondrous deeds and for his lofty piety.
7 paper items, including 5 complete letters on official stationery. Size and condition vary. Ink reinforcement of letters in the text (apparently, in the handwriting of R. Yehuda Ze'ev Leibowitz).
Category
Satmar Chassidism - Letters and Books
Catalogue
Auction 54 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
February 7, 2017
Opening: $300
Sold for: $475
Including buyer's premium
Authograph letter signed by R. "Yechezkel Grosfeld Rabbi here and of the region". Csap, (Ungvár district), 1894.
Sent to R. Ze'ev Singer Rabbi of Miklosh. Request and pleas to assist a childless widow whose brothers-in-law did not agree to release her by chalitza.
R. Yechezkel Grosfeld (died in 1911) was a disciple of R. Yekutiel Yehuda Teitelbaum Rabbi of Siget author of Yitav Lev, disciple of R. Yehuda Asad and of R. Menachem (the Maharam) Rabbi of Ungvár. In his youth, he served as orator in Kisvárda (Kleinwardein) and from 1880 he served as Rabbi of Csap. Authored Binyan Ohel Mo'ed (Mukacheve, 1887).
Leaf, 21 cm. 27 handwritten lines. Good condition. Folding creases.
Sent to R. Ze'ev Singer Rabbi of Miklosh. Request and pleas to assist a childless widow whose brothers-in-law did not agree to release her by chalitza.
R. Yechezkel Grosfeld (died in 1911) was a disciple of R. Yekutiel Yehuda Teitelbaum Rabbi of Siget author of Yitav Lev, disciple of R. Yehuda Asad and of R. Menachem (the Maharam) Rabbi of Ungvár. In his youth, he served as orator in Kisvárda (Kleinwardein) and from 1880 he served as Rabbi of Csap. Authored Binyan Ohel Mo'ed (Mukacheve, 1887).
Leaf, 21 cm. 27 handwritten lines. Good condition. Folding creases.
Category
Satmar Chassidism - Letters and Books
Catalogue