Auction 66 - Rare and Important Items
Written by a scribe, and signed by the Chatam Sofer (in German): "Moses Schreiber Oberrabinner Allda" (Moshe Schreiber, chief rabbi there).
The document certifies that there is no opposition to the marriage of Lazar Singer of Eibenschütz (Ivančice), Moravia, with Regina Singer, native of Pressburg, daughter of the community leader R. Moshe Tzvi Hirsch Singer (M. H. Singer), and that any local rabbi in Moravia is authorized to perform the wedding ceremony.
Beside his signature, the wax-seal of the Chatam Sofer is affixed, with the inscription: "Moyses Schreiber, Oberrabiner in Presburg". At the center of the seal, an illustration of an open book resting on a lectern, inscribed: "Talmud".
R. Moshe Tzvi Hirsch Singer, mentioned in this document, served as head of the Pressburg community near the end of the Chatam Sofer's life (see enclosed material).
[1] leaf. 29 cm. Fair condition. Stains. Folding marks. Tears to folds and margins, slightly affecting text. Cracks to wax-seal.
Withdrawn.
Manuscript, ledger recording babies born and circumcised in the Pressburg community between 1829-1851. [Pressburg, ca. 1851]. German.
The ledger contains records of over one thousand five hundred babies, including many grandsons of the Chatam Sofer, some of whom he circumcised himself. Amongst the descendants featured are the sons of the Ketav Sofer, the sons of R. Shimon Sofer author of Michtav Sofer, and the sons of R. David Tzvi Ehrenfeld (see below for more details).
The title page states: "Register, Geburts Protokol – Lit. B" (Register, Birth Protocol – B).
A paper label is affixed on the front cover, stating: "Register zum Verzeichen. Beschneid. Bücher-Auszuges" (Register of Circumcised, Summary of the Books).
The title page and other leaves bear stamps of the Orthodox Jewish community of Pressburg (in Hebrew, Hungarian and German).
The ledger contains a detailed list of approximately 1700 boys, born and circumcised in 1829-1851. The register is organized alphabetically according to surnames, and lists the name of the child, name of the father, serial number and year of birth.
Many descendants of the Chatam Sofer appear in the lists, including the following grandsons (some of whom he circumcised himself):
• Four sons of R. Avraham Shmuel Binyamin Sofer ("Sam. Wolf Schreiber"), son of the Chatam Sofer, rabbi of Pressburg and author of Ketav Sofer: "Jacob" in 1839 (p.30a) – R. Yaakov Akiva Sofer of Myjava; "Moses" in 1841 (p. 30b) – R. Moshe Sofer, expert mohel, founder and president of Machzikei HaDat in southern Transylvania; "Bernhard" in 1842 (p. 31a) – R. Simcha Bunem Sofer, rabbi of Pressburg and author of Shevet Sofer; "Simon" in 1850 (p. 32b) – R. Shimon Sofer, rabbi of Erloi (Eger) and author of Hitorerut Teshuva.
• Two sons of R. Shimon Sofer ("Simon Schreiber"), son of the Chatam Sofer, rabbi of Kraków and author of Michtav Sofer: "Jacob" in 1839 (p. 30a) – R. Akiva Sofer of Pápa, last child to be circumcised by the Chatam Sofer; "Moses" in 1840 (p. 30b) – this grandson is unknown and probably died as a child. He was presumably the first grandson to be named after the Chatam Sofer (see below).
• Five sons of R. David Tzvi Ehrenfeld ("Dav. Hirsch Ehrenfeld"), son-in-law of the Chatam Sofer: "Samuel" in 1834 (p. 7b) – R. Shmuel Ehrenfeld, rabbi of Mattersdorf and author of Chatan Sofer; "Samuel" [sic] in 1839 (p. 7b) – R. Shaul Ehrenfeld, rabbi of Szikszó; "Jacob" in 1842 (p. 8a) – presumably R. Akiva Ehrenfeld of Budapest; "Abraham" in 1844 (p. 8a) – no details are known about him and he presumably passed away as a child; "Josua" in 1850 (p. 8a) – R. Yeshaya Ehrenfeld, rabbi of Šurany and author of Shevet Sofer on the Torah.
• Other grandsons of the Chatam Sofer (such as the Kornitzer and Geiger families).
One of the interesting facts which emerge from this ledger is that R. Shimon Sofer, author of Michtav Sofer, had a son named Moshe, who apparently passed away at a young age and therefore is undocumented in later years. The register records that this Moshe was circumcised in 1840, soon after the passing of the Chatam Sofer (who passed away in October 1839), and is therefore the first grandson named after the Chatam Sofer, and not R. Moshe son of the Ketav Sofer (as is recorded in Chachmei Transylvania, p. 161), who was born on Passover 1841.
A baby's portrait is sketched (in pencil) on the verso of the title page.
[1], 38 leaves. Approx. 34 cm. Good condition. Stains and wear. Marginal creases and tears. Title page and several other leaves repaired with tape. Original binding, with minor damage and wear.
American passport issued in Washington, on 21st May 1952 (renewed on 2nd June 1954, expired on 20th May 1956). Identifying details of the Rebbe, bearer of the passport, are recorded on p. 3 (in print) – Place of birth: Rumania; Date of birth: 13th January 1887; Occupation: Rabbi; together with other details such as height, hair and eye color. The Rebbe's signature (in English) appears at the bottom of the page. On p. 4, the Rebbe's photograph is affixed, stamped "Department of State, Washington", with another signature of the Rebbe.
The passport contains two entrance visas to the State of Israel, completed by hand, and many stamps. The stamps document the Rebbe's two trips to Eretz Israel, and the places he visited on the way.
His first journey to Eretz Israel: 6th July – 6th August 1952. On his journey towards Eretz Israel, he travelled through various European countries and cities: Cherbourg (France), Brussels (Belgium), Basel and Chiasso (Switzerland), Bari (Italy) and Piraeus (Greece). On his return trip to the United States, he passed through Napoli and Bardonecchia (Italy), Dover and Southampton (England). A handwritten inscription appears on one leaf (with the stamp of the Haifa customs), indicating that the Rebbe was carrying with him a small Torah scroll.
His second journey to Eretz Israel: 28th June – 3rd August 1955. While heading for Eretz Israel, he passed through European countries and cities: Southampton and Dover (England), Paris (France), Switzerland, Venice (Italy), Piraeus (Greece). On his return trip to the United States: Piraeus (Greece), Napoli, Genoa and Brenner (Italy), Salzburg (Austria) and France.
Rebbe Yoel Teitelbaum of Satmar (1887-1979) was the youngest son of Rebbe Chananya Yom Tov Lipa, the Kedushat Yom Tov (1836-1904), and grandson of Rebbe Yekutiel Yehuda, the Yitav Lev (1808-1883), who both served as rabbis of Sighet (Sighetu Marmației) and were leaders of Chassidic Jewry in the Maramureș region.
He was renowned from his youth as a leading Torah scholar of his generation, for his perspicacity and intellectual capacities, as well as for his holiness and outstanding purity. At a young age, he was appointed rabbi of Irshava. In 1925, he was appointed rabbi of Karaly (Carei; in place of R. Shaul Brach who went to serve as rabbi of Kashoi), and in 1934, of Satmar (Satu Mare). In all the places he served as rabbi, he also maintained a large yeshiva and Chassidic court. He stood at the helm of the faithful, uncompromising Orthodox Jewry in the Maramureș region. He was one of the founding pillars of the Torah world in the generation following the Holocaust. After his escape from the Holocaust, he reached America and established the Satmar Chassidic community – the largest Chassidic community in the world. He served as president of the Eda HaCharedit in Jerusalem, and as leader of Orthodox Jewry in the United States and throughout the world. His writings were published in dozens of books: VaYoel Moshe, Responsa Divrei Yoel, Divrei Yoel on the Torah and more.
Passport, 48 pages. Approx. 15.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Some leaves within plastic sheet protectors. Fabric cover.
Polish passport. The identifying details of Rebbetzin Karelitz were filled in by hand on p. 2 – Year of Birth: 1860; Place of Birth: Kosava; Civil status: Widow; and other details. Her photograph is affixed to p. 3, accompanied by her handwritten signature.
The passport contains several ink-stamps, which document her immigration to Eretz Israel: On 8th May 1935, she received an entry visa to Palestine from the British Passport Office in Warsaw. On the 21st May 1935, she was accorded an immigration certificate from the Polish authorities. On 28th May 1935, she left Poland for the port-city of Constanța, Romania, where she boarded a ship, reaching Eretz Israel on 2nd June 1935.
Rebbetzin Rasha Leah Karelitz (ca. 1854-1940), daughter of R. Shaul Katzenellenbogen Rabbi of Kosava and Kobryn. In 1874, she married R. Shemaryahu Yosef Karelitz (1852-1916), who was appointed rabbi of Kosava (close to Hrodna), in place of his father-in-law who went to serve as rabbi of Kobryn. She was renowned for her righteousness and modesty, and not for naught did she merit that all her nine sons and sons-in-law were outstanding Torah scholars and renowned rabbis, amongst the leaders of their generation. Her sons: R. Avraham Yeshayahu Karelitz author of Chazon Ish, R. Meir Karelitz Rabbi of Lechavitch (Lyakhavichy) and head of the Moetzet Gedolei HaTorah, R. Yitzchak Zundel Karelitz successor of his father as rabbi of Kosava, R. Moshe Karelitz of Vilna author of Or Chadash. Her sons-in-law: R. Shmuel Greineman, R. Abba Swiatycki Rabbi of Kosava and Tiktin, R. Shmuel Eliyahu Kahn Rabbi of Orsha, R. Nachum Meir Tzibolnik-Karelitz, R. Yaakov Yisrael Kanievsky author of Kehilot Yaakov (the Steipler).
The Chafetz Chaim once asked her how she merited to bear such illustrious offspring, and she responded that the merit may be ascribed to her exceptional modesty, as she was particular that the walls of her home never see her hair. Reputedly, she fell ill soon after her wedding, and the doctors warned her that bearing children may risk her life. Her father R. Shaul reluctantly suggested that his son-in-law divorce her to enable him to have children, but she heroically decided to disregard the doctors' cautions, asserting that since that was her purpose in life, G-d would surely have mercy on her (HaChazon Ish BeDorotav, p. 17).
She was widowed of her husband during WWI, and near the end of her life she immigrated to Eretz Israel, where she resided for a few years in Bnei Brak, close to her son the Chazon Ish and her daughter, wife of the Steipler. She merited to witness the preeminence of her son the Chazon Ish, in fulfillment of the dictum "fortunate is the one who bore him".
Passport, 40 pages. 14.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Marginal creases and tears to first leaf. Minor damage to cover.
Large format leaf, written in Arabic. At the foot of the letter, on the left, signature in Arabic (presumably written by the scribe) "Avraham Dov – representative of Russian subjects in Safed" (translated from Arabic), together with his stamp (in Hebrew): "Avraham Dov of Zhitomir". On the right, signature in Arabic (presumably written by the scribe): "Gershon – representative of German subjects" (translated from Arabic), with his stamp (in Hebrew – difficult to decipher).
The letter describes the difficult state of Safed Jewry in the wake of the earthquake, which claimed the lives of some two thousand Jewish residents. This calamity closely followed the pogroms and widespread looting which local Arab mobs perpetrated on the Jews of the city, during the course of the Peasants' Revolt. The letter portrays the horrors they endured during the pogroms, including murder and injury of men, women and children, the defilement of women, and other atrocities, and depicts how these troubles were compounded by the present earthquake which destroyed their homes and their few remaining possessions, killed thousands, and left countless of wounded without food nor a roof over their heads. The writers ask the consuls of the various countries to intercede on their behalf and obtain support and assistance for them.
At the start of the 19th century, Safed was one of the prominent communities in Eretz Israel. Safed was home to two famous communities: the Chassidic community, founded by the disciples of the Baal Shem Tov, alongside the community of the disciples of the Gaon of Vilna. In the 1830s, the Chassidic community was headed by R. Avraham Dov of Ovritsh. The Perushim community was led by R. Yisrael of Shklow, disciple of the Gaon of Vilna. In that period, two great calamities befell the city, and led to its destruction: the first was the Safed riots which evolved from the Peasants' Revolt in 1834, and the second – the deadly earthquake in 1837.
The Peasants' Revolt erupted following the decree of Muhammad Ali, ruler of Egypt (who also ruled over Eretz Israel) and his son Ibrahim Pasha, who imposed a general conscription order on the local population. The Muslim tribes rebelled against this enlistment duty and started a popular uprising, during which the rebels attacked the Jewish population, looting, murdering and cruelly torturing their victims. The Safed community was one of the main victims of these riots. Apart from the casualties, the rebels looted Jewish property. They robbed and destroyed private homes, broke into synagogues and Batei Midrash, ripped and desecrated Torah scrolls and holy books. They also raided R. Yisrael Bak's printing press, destroying the machinery and equipment, and damaging any books they found. Only the book Pe'at HaShulchan by R. Yisrael of Shklow, which was in the process of being printed, was miraculously spared. The book was printed after the reestablishment of the press, in 1836, and in its preface, R. Yisrael describes the riots.
While the community was still licking its wounds from the riots, the earthquake struck, completely devastating the city. The earthquake took place on 24th Tevet 1837, while the Mincha services were being held in the synagogues. It hit Tiberias, Shechem and other towns as well, yet the main victim was Safed. R. Yisrael of Shklow, who was staying at that time in Jerusalem, describes the calamity in a letter he sent to the Chatam Sofer.
Another description of the disaster is found in a different letter, which R. Yisrael of Shklow sent to R. Tzvi Hirsch Lehren, informing him that the Rebbe Avraham Dov of Ovritsh and R. Gershon Margolies (whose stamps appear on this leaf) both survived the earthquake.
R. Yisrael of Shklow regarded the earthquake as a sign of the approaching Redemption (in accordance with the saying of the sages: "With the approach of Mashiach, the Galilee will be destroyed"), yet the Chatam Sofer attributed it to a different cause. In a eulogy he delivered on "the death of Tzaddikim and the destruction of the Galilee" in the Pressburg synagogue, in Iyar that year, the Chatam Sofer asserted that the earthquake came as a retribution for the fact that the immigrants preferred Safed over the holy city of Jerusalem.
Rebbe Avraham Dov of Ovritsh, signatory of this appeal, suffered greatly during the Peasants' Revolt in 1834, and most his possessions were looted. He then miraculously survived the earthquake in 1837. The miracle of his rescue is well-known. As mentioned, the earthquake struck during Mincha. Rebbe Avraham Dov warned his Chassidim not to leave the synagogue, and he lay on the floor of his Beit Midrash, surrounded by the congregants, who were clutching his belt. The entire building collapsed, apart from the small area where he and his Chassidim lay (the Rebbe later related that he recognized that the earthquake was not a natural event since the stones were cast to the sides and did not fall directly to the ground, in defiance of the laws of gravity. He understood that great power had been granted to the Satan, and he therefore lay submissively on the ground in fulfillment of the verse "Hide for but a moment, until the wrath passes"). This letter was written approximately a month following the earthquake. R. Yisrael of Shklow and his colleagues left Safed in the wake of the earthquake, and established the Perushim community in Jerusalem. A year later, Safed was once again looted by Druze tribes, and during that time Rebbe Avraham Dov of Ovritsh was captured, and was only released once the community paid his ransom.
Rebbe Avraham Dov of Ovritsh (1765-1840), a renowned Chassidic leader. He was a disciple of Rebbe Nachum of Chernobyl and his son R. Mordechai, as well as of R. Zusha of Anipoli and R. Levi Yitzchak of Berditchev. He also associated with the Rebbe of Apta, R. Yisrael of Ruzhin, R. Aharon of Chernobyl and R. Aharon of Zhitomir. He served for a short while as rabbi of Chmelnik (Khmilnyk), yet most of his life (for some forty years), he was the rabbi of Ovritsh, by which name he was known for posterity. In 1825, he moved to Zhitomir where he was appointed head of the Beit Din.
In 1833, he immigrated to Eretz Israel, settling in Safed, where he established his Beit Midrash and served as rabbi and leader of the Chassidic communities in Safed. Through his illustrious personality, he brought together all sections of the Chassidic community, and created bonds with the Sephardi and Perushim communities. R. Yisrael of Shklow, disciple of the Gaon of Vilna and head of the Perushim community, held him in high esteem, and they together managed all communal matters. His study companion was R. Leib Baal HaYisurim. He drew many to repentance, and would advise them to engage in the study of Mishnayot.
Following the earthquake, he helped rebuild the Safed community, and did not allow the holy city to be abandoned. He perished in a plague in 1840, and with his passing, the plague ceased. He was buried in the Safed cemetery, close to the gravesites of R. Aryeh Leib of Volochysk and R. David Shlomo author of Levushei Serad. Many miraculous stories are told of his exceptional holiness and ability to bring salvations for the Jewish people. (Until this day, the Bat Ayin Beit Midrash in the Old city of Safed holds his chair, his Torah scroll with the original Torah ark and Bimah, and other holy items belonging to him, and the gabbaim report of miraculous salvations which occurred to people after sitting on his chair). His book Bat Ayin was printed in Jerusalem, 1847 and in Zhitomir in 1850, in different editions, and is considered a basic book of Chassidic teachings.
Large leaf, 68 cm. Good condition. Thick paper. Stains. Folding marks. Several tears to folds.
Provenance: the collection of Jean-Jacques-Pierre Desmaisons (1807-1873), Russian Orientalist and diplomat, professor of Oriental languages.
Warder Cresson, one of the most fascinating figures in the history of Jerusalem in the 19th century, was born to a Quaker family in the USA. He was appointed the first USA consul to Jerusalem (an appointment that was cancelled even before his arrival to Eretz Israel) and eventually moved to the city permanently, converted to Judaism and consequently stood trial in the USA, the claim being he had lost his mind.
The letter before us was written when he was sick, shortly before his death, to his friend Ann Paschal Jackson, a Quaker minister in the USA. The letter indicates Cresson's sense of belonging to the Jewish community of Jerusalem. He writes about the sanctity of the city and his desire to be buried there, about his way of life combining prayer and the study of the Torah, about the severing of his ties with his family in the USA, and about many additional issues, all this while quoting many biblical verses. Cresson begins his letter with the verse "And the redeemed of the Lord shall return & come to Zion" (Isaiah, 35, 10). The first part of the letter deals mainly with this verse and the idea of the Jews' return to Zion. In this context, Cresson writes about the Muslim inhabitants of Eretz Israel: "Hagar, the mother of Ishmael & the present Turks, was a very bad Woman, & her Son was very bad; & so are very many of their descendants, therefore G-d said to Sarah, 'Cast out the Bond-Woman, & her Son; for the Son of this Bondwoman, shall not be heir with my son, even with Isaac'. Gen. 21c-10v. & Why? Because neither Hagar, nor Ishmael, was either of them, the 'Redeemed of Lord'… & very soon, they will be 'cast-out' from this land, as the
52nd Chapter of Isaiah declares, & not return to Zion with the Redeemed of the Lord…".
Later in the letter, Cresson addresses his visit to the USA in 1848 (a visit he made after his conversion and during which he was prosecuted by his family members): "In the year 1848, I returned, at the particular request of my family, to America, & I very soon found, that I had got out of the 'field of Boaz'… for I found, that all their Conversations; their Places of Diversion; – their Pleasures – Their Love of mammon, would eventually land me, in the field of Weakness & Sin & I therefore determined, to return to Jerusalem, at every Sacrifise, as soon as possibly could; wh. I did… I am here; where I hope to lay my Bones".
In the course of his writing, Cresson describes Jerusalem, while citing from the Book of Psalms, Isaiah and Jeremiah, and also describes his Jewish way of life: three prayers a day ("as our Blessed David says in Psalms 55c-17"), study of Torah, visiting the poor and the sick, writing, and more. In addition, Cresson relates that several people chose to convert to Judaism in Jerusalem, among them a Catholic woman ("The Rabbis questioned her very closely & found, that the Truth & Light of G-d had been doing their work, & therefore they could not reject her").
Warder Cresson (1798-1860, also known by his Hebrew name Michael Boaz Yisrael Ben Avraham), was born to a wealthy Quaker family in Philadelphia. In 1830, Cresson published the composition "Babylon the Great is Falling!" which decisively denunciated the degeneration that had, in his opinion, spread in American Christianity. In the following years, he changed his religion five times, eventually adopting a Messianic faith according to which redemption is dependent on the Jews returning to Eretz Israel.
When in 1844, he was offered the office of American consul to Jerusalem, he immediately accepted, even without pay, and in May of that same year, President John Tyler signed his decree of appointment. However, when the White House heard rumors of his Messianic beliefs, it was decided to cancel the appointment. Cresson was already on his way to Eretz Israel and therefore never received the announcement about the cancelling of his appointment. With his arrival to Jerusalem, he declared himself the USA consul to Jerusalem and started to advocate the return of Jews to Eretz Israel. He even sold capitulations on behalf of the USA government. He stopped his activity only after being notified that if he continues presenting himself as consul, he will be banished from the country.
Despite the cancellation, Cresson decided to remain in Eretz Israel and in 1848, converted to Judaism. When he traveled to the USA to liquidate his business once and for all, his family issued a court order ordering his hospitalization, the claim being he had lost his mind. The trial garnered unprecedented public interest, was held with the participation of dozens of witnesses (some of them well-known figures such as Moses Montefiore and Mordechai Emanuel Noah), and at its end – Cresson was acquitted and was permitted to return to Eretz Israel.
In his final years he settled in Jerusalem, devoted himself to the study of the Torah and became an honorable member of the Sephardic community of Jerusalem. At the same time, he conducted important agricultural experiments, opened several small schools for agriculture in the vicinity of Jaffa and even attempted to open an agricultural farm in the area of Emek Refa'im in Jerusalem. He married a Jewish woman named Rachel Moledano and the couple had two children. In 1860 he died of a prolonged illness. He was buried in the Mount of Olives cemetery.
Enclosed is the original envelope in which the letter was sent, with postmarks of the various stations it had gone through on its way from Jerusalem to Pennsylvania. The letter was sent using the French post in Jerusalem (with a "Jerusalem Cross" postmark), via the French post in Jaffa (postmark from September 15 1860), then through Alexandria, Lyon, Paris and Boston.
Letter: [1] folded leaf (four pages handwritten by him), 26.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines. A few stains. A few tiny tears along edges and fold lines. Envelope: 8X13.5 cm. Good condition. Minor creases and stains. Was opened with a letter opener at the edge.
Addressed to the magnate David Yosef Ezra, a prominent philanthropist in Calcutta, India, in preparation for the arrival of R. Yaakov Eliezer, emissary of Kollel Warsaw, who would be travelling to Indian cities, raising funds for the building of a synagogue and study hall for the Torah scholars of Kollel Warsaw. Kollel Warsaw was at that time one of the new Kollelim in Jerusalem, established following the large wave of immigration from Poland in the 1840s-1850s. The founders and administrators of the Kollel were the leading Torah scholars originating from Poland, signatories of this letter. Due to the difficult conditions which prevailed in those days, establishing the Kollel necessitated overcoming numerous hurdles, as the rabbis relate in this letter. They describe the absence of a permanent location for their outstanding Torah scholars to study and pray in, unlike other Kollelim who each have their own institutions. They explain that a suitable location was found and secured, but large sums of money are needed to finalize the acquisition.
The rabbis write that they sent a special emissary to India, and that this letter is an introduction to the letters the emissary would be carrying with him.
At the beginning of the letter, the rabbis mention that they pray regularly on behalf of their donors, especially at holy sites in Eretz Israel, such as the Kotel and Kever Rachel.
This letter constitutes an interesting historic document recording the development of the Old Yishuv in Jerusalem. The establishment of the Ashkenazi settlement was the product of a complex and protracted process of setting up institutions for prayer, Torah study and charity, alongside the construction of new apartment buildings and neighborhoods. These enterprises were coordinated by the Kollelim, which were comprised of natives of their respective communities in Europe, with each community providing for the needs of their senior and newly arrived immigrants. The Kollel administered donations received from its country of origin, and these served as the basis for the existence and development of the Kollelim and their institutions. Kollel Warsaw (later renamed Kupat Rabbi Meir Baal HaNess – Kollel Polin) was founded slightly later, while several both major and smaller Kollelim were already functioning in Jerusalem. In the 1840-1850s, immigration from Poland increased, creating the need for an independent framework, which resulted in the founding of Kollel Warsaw – eventually one of the most prominent Kollelim in the city.
The four signatories on the letter:
The Gaon of Kutno, R. Moshe Yehuda Leib Zylberberg (1798-1865) author of Zayit Raanan and Tiferet Yerushalayim. A prominent Torah leader of the generation in Poland, he served as rabbi of various Polish cities, notably of Kutno, by which he was known for posterity. He immigrated to Eretz Israel in 1857, and was one of the leading rabbis in Jerusalem. While still in Poland he edified many disciples, and many Polish rabbis and rebbes were his students. In Jerusalem, he devoted his entire day to Torah study, bedecked in Tallit and Tefillin. The exceptional Talmudic lectures he delivered in his home were attended by many of Jerusalem's students. The Gaon of Kutno would deliver two lectures daily: one in the morning, on the Talmud with the Rashi and Tosafot commentaries, and one in the evening on halachic literature. He was recognized as one of the foremost Torah scholars in the city, and earned the title of Mara D'Ara DeYisrael (Rabbi of Eretz Israel), as he led the city together with R. Shmuel Salant and R. Meir Auerbach the Imrei Bina, who had immigrated from Kalisch three years after him.
R. Yitzchak David Biederman (1815-1886, Encyclopedia L'Chassidut, II, p. 402), son of Rebbe Moshe of Lelov. He immigrated to Jerusalem in 1851, and stood for many years at the helm of the Chassidic settlement in the city, together with his brother Rebbe Elazar Menachem Mendel. He was one of the founders of Kollel Polin, and of the Chayei Olam yeshiva, together with his sons-in-law R. Binyamin Leib Bernstein and R. Avraham Eliezer Münzberg Rabbi of Józefów.
R. Nachum Rabbi of Shadek (1813-1868) was the son of R. Moshe Avraham Levi-Weissfish and a disciple of the Chemdat Shlomo – a leading Torah scholar in Poland, who granted him rabbinical ordination at the age of 18. He served as rabbi of Shadek (Szadek), Poland for a few years, and immigrated to Eretz Israel in 1843 together with his two brothers, R. Asher Lemel Rabbi of Gołyń and R. Yaakov Yehuda Leib, following a dream all three of them dreamt separately, instructing them to immigrate to Eretz Israel. In Jerusalem, he would sit for the main part of the day bedecked with Tallit and Tefillin, learning with great diligence. He founded Yeshivat HaRan, where he delivered scholarly lectures to the leading young Torah scholars of Jerusalem. He studied Kabbalah together with R. Yosef Zundel of Salant under the kabbalist R. Yehuda HaKohen. He passed away in a Cholera epidemic in 1868 and the epitaph on his grave in the Mount of Olives reads: "A holy and pure man, at the age of eight he began searching for G-d and devoted his whole life to Torah, fasts and ascetism. He studied Torah without respite, day and night. He merited to learn and teach, and edified many disciples… A pious and modest man…".
His brother, R. Yaakov Yehuda Leib Levi (1813-1889), head of the Jerusalem Beit Din for over forty years. An outstanding scholar in revealed and esoteric realms of the Torah, a holy kabbalist. He served as rabbi of Sleshin (Ślesin), and later immigrated to Jerusalem in 1843 together with his two brothers, R. Asher Lemel Rabbi of Gołyń and R. Nachum Rabbi of Shadek. He authored Beit L'Avot on Pirkei Avot.
[1] leaf, thin, blueish stationery. 27.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Folding marks and creases. Small holes from ink corrosion. On verso – address, French postage stamp, and postmarks.
This letter was published in Moriah (issue 351-352, Kislev 2010, pp. 52-55).
Handwritten on a large parchment leaf in square scribal script with enlarged, emphasized words. At the foot of the text, the signatures of the rabbis with their official stamps.
Written for the emissary R. Abba Yair, setting out on a mission on behalf of Hebron to the region of Iran, Iraq and Kurdistan, and to Syria and Lebanon. The emissary letter lists all the places he would be visiting.
[1] large parchment leaf. Height: 34 cm. Width: 50 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains, folding marks, several tears to folds.
• Letter signed by the dayanim of the Beit Din "for all Ashkenazi communities": R. Yitzchak Frankel, R. Simcha Bunem Werner and R. Pinchas Epstein (the first panel of Eda HaCharedit dayanim), warning that the prohibition and ban on the schools has not been lifted, and it includes "all the schools of the Zionists and of the Mizrachi, and the aforementioned Orthodox school for girls (presumably referring to the Spitzer school), and their status is like that of all the secular schools, without any permission whatsoever". At the foot of the letter, confirmation (approx. 4 lines) handwritten and signed by R. Yosef Chaim Sonnenfeld, rabbi of the Eda HaCharedit in Jerusalem. Jerusalem, Adar 1931.
• Letter signed by six members of the "Committee of Supervisors for the Shomrei HaChomot Kollel": "With the approval of the rabbi (R. Yosef Chaim Sonnenfeld) – it has been decided to impose a fine on whoever sends their children to schools, including Shpitzer's or Miss Landau's". One of the signatories is R. "Amram son of R. Sh.Y. Blau" (later head of Neturei Karta). Jerusalem, Sivan 1929.
• Letter addressed to Rebbe Elimelech Paneth of Deyzh, with a request to fire a clerk working in the Kollel Siebenbürgen office, whose daughters attend the forbidden Shpitzer school, and dress immodestly in the summer. The second leaf, with the signature and name of the writer of the letter, is lacking. Jerusalem, 1941.
3 letters. Size and condition vary. Creases, wear and tears.