Auction 74 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
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Auction 74 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
September 15, 2020
Opening: $700
Sold for: $875
Including buyer's premium
HaDerech, Issue I, "Derech Tzaddikim – Farewell sermon of R. Mordechai Rokeach, Rabbi of Biłgoraj… which he delivered here at Tiferet Bachurim's celebration of the completion of a tractate"; "Derech Kedoshim – the words of R. Aharon Rokeach the Belzer Rebbe… said here in Budapest prior their departure to Eretz Israel". Edited by R. Menachem Aharon Lebovics, rabbi in Chop. Budapest, 23rd Shevat 1944. Second edition.
The HaDerech booklet was first published on 13th Shevat 1944, and contained the farewell sermon of R. Mordechai of Biłgoraj, delivered before leaving Budapest for Eretz Israel. R. Mordechai arrived in Budapest with his brother, the Rebbe of Belz, after they miraculously escaped the Bochnia ghetto, remaining there from Iyar 1943 until Tevet 1944. In the sermon, R. Mordechai of Biłgoraj describes the atrocities of the Holocaust in Poland and Galicia, and the pressing need to help refugees from those countries. He then apologizes for his imminent departure to Eretz Israel, together with his brother, explaining that their journey is not an escape from Hungary, which he confidently states will not be affected by the Holocaust, but rather stems from their yearning and love for Eretz Israel. Further in the booklet, the Rebbe is quoted saying that their trip to Eretz Israel is temporary, with the intention of returning, and his brother R. Mordechai of Biłgoraj explained that according to a tradition from their forefathers, settling in Eretz Israel before the coming of Mashiach is futile (p. 26).
Some ten days later, on 23rd Shevat 1944, a second, revised edition of this booklet was published, omitting some references to their immigration to Eretz Israel (a month later, a third edition, also revised, was printed in Budapest, with the imprint "Second impression, Adar 1944"). The present copy is from the second edition, bearing the date 23rd Shevat, however it is identical in contents to the first edition of 13th Shevat, with no omissions.
[1], 28, [1] pages. 20 cm. Good condition. Stains, including dampstains, to cover and margins of leaves. Marginal tear to one leaf, not affecting text. Creases and minor wear to cover.
The HaDerech booklet was first published on 13th Shevat 1944, and contained the farewell sermon of R. Mordechai of Biłgoraj, delivered before leaving Budapest for Eretz Israel. R. Mordechai arrived in Budapest with his brother, the Rebbe of Belz, after they miraculously escaped the Bochnia ghetto, remaining there from Iyar 1943 until Tevet 1944. In the sermon, R. Mordechai of Biłgoraj describes the atrocities of the Holocaust in Poland and Galicia, and the pressing need to help refugees from those countries. He then apologizes for his imminent departure to Eretz Israel, together with his brother, explaining that their journey is not an escape from Hungary, which he confidently states will not be affected by the Holocaust, but rather stems from their yearning and love for Eretz Israel. Further in the booklet, the Rebbe is quoted saying that their trip to Eretz Israel is temporary, with the intention of returning, and his brother R. Mordechai of Biłgoraj explained that according to a tradition from their forefathers, settling in Eretz Israel before the coming of Mashiach is futile (p. 26).
Some ten days later, on 23rd Shevat 1944, a second, revised edition of this booklet was published, omitting some references to their immigration to Eretz Israel (a month later, a third edition, also revised, was printed in Budapest, with the imprint "Second impression, Adar 1944"). The present copy is from the second edition, bearing the date 23rd Shevat, however it is identical in contents to the first edition of 13th Shevat, with no omissions.
[1], 28, [1] pages. 20 cm. Good condition. Stains, including dampstains, to cover and margins of leaves. Marginal tear to one leaf, not affecting text. Creases and minor wear to cover.
Category
The Holocaust and She'erit Hapletah
Catalogue
Auction 74 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
September 15, 2020
Opening: $400
Sold for: $875
Including buyer's premium
Varied collection of handwritten letters and printed documents. Hungary and Germany, after the Holocaust.
• Printed marriage permit for a man whose wife perished in the Holocaust. Completed by hand and signed by the rabbis of the "Central Beit Din for Agunot in Bratislava". 1946.
• Typewritten marriage permit for a man whose wife perished in the Holocaust. Completed by hand and signed by the rabbis of the "Central Beit Din for Agunot in Bratislava". 1948.
• Letter handwritten and signed by R. David Moshkovitz Rabbi of Bonyhád, who writes (to the Beit Din for Agunot), that he will not endorse a permit for an agunah, before his brother-in-law, the rabbi of Pupa (R. Yosef Grünwald, author of Vayechi Yosef) approves it, "since for reasons of properness, I must always follow his esteemed opinion…".
• Ordination for a shochet, handwritten and signed by R. Tzvi Hirsh Sofer Rabbi of Derecske. Debrecen, Elul 1945.
• Testimony regarding an agunah whose husband perished in the Holocaust, signed by the rabbis of the Beit Din. Téglás, Shevat 1946.
• Handwritten letter, halachic inquiry regarding a divorce, from the "Oberrabbinat der U.S. Zone – Rabbinical Representative of Orthodox Rabbis of Bavaria", in the DP camp in Munich, addressed to the Beit Din for Agunot in Budapest. Munich, Shevat (January) 1948.
• Handwritten letter, halachic question on the laws of testimony, from "Union of Rabbis by Jewish Central Committee of U.S. Zone Austria", addressed to the Beit Din for Agunot in Budapest. Linz. Elul 1948.
• Handwritten document, with rabbinic signatures. Testimony received by the Orthodox Beit Din in Budapest. 1952.
• Printed Kashrut certificate, "Kosher for Passover Slivovitz", by R. Mordechai Lebowitz. Bratislava (Pressburg), 1947.
• Printed card (sent by post). Birkat HaMazon, with good year blessings, "gift of Keren HaTorah in Hungary". Budapest, eve of Rosh Hashanah 1948.
10 leaves. Size and condition vary. Overall good condition.
• Printed marriage permit for a man whose wife perished in the Holocaust. Completed by hand and signed by the rabbis of the "Central Beit Din for Agunot in Bratislava". 1946.
• Typewritten marriage permit for a man whose wife perished in the Holocaust. Completed by hand and signed by the rabbis of the "Central Beit Din for Agunot in Bratislava". 1948.
• Letter handwritten and signed by R. David Moshkovitz Rabbi of Bonyhád, who writes (to the Beit Din for Agunot), that he will not endorse a permit for an agunah, before his brother-in-law, the rabbi of Pupa (R. Yosef Grünwald, author of Vayechi Yosef) approves it, "since for reasons of properness, I must always follow his esteemed opinion…".
• Ordination for a shochet, handwritten and signed by R. Tzvi Hirsh Sofer Rabbi of Derecske. Debrecen, Elul 1945.
• Testimony regarding an agunah whose husband perished in the Holocaust, signed by the rabbis of the Beit Din. Téglás, Shevat 1946.
• Handwritten letter, halachic inquiry regarding a divorce, from the "Oberrabbinat der U.S. Zone – Rabbinical Representative of Orthodox Rabbis of Bavaria", in the DP camp in Munich, addressed to the Beit Din for Agunot in Budapest. Munich, Shevat (January) 1948.
• Handwritten letter, halachic question on the laws of testimony, from "Union of Rabbis by Jewish Central Committee of U.S. Zone Austria", addressed to the Beit Din for Agunot in Budapest. Linz. Elul 1948.
• Handwritten document, with rabbinic signatures. Testimony received by the Orthodox Beit Din in Budapest. 1952.
• Printed Kashrut certificate, "Kosher for Passover Slivovitz", by R. Mordechai Lebowitz. Bratislava (Pressburg), 1947.
• Printed card (sent by post). Birkat HaMazon, with good year blessings, "gift of Keren HaTorah in Hungary". Budapest, eve of Rosh Hashanah 1948.
10 leaves. Size and condition vary. Overall good condition.
Category
The Holocaust and She'erit Hapletah
Catalogue
Auction 74 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
September 15, 2020
Opening: $300
Sold for: $625
Including buyer's premium
12 letters sent to R. David Sperber Rabbi of Braşov, from Hungarian and Romanian rabbis. [Ca. 1945-1950].
Letters from prominent rabbis, Chassidim and Torah scholars. Most letters are related to matters of the rabbinate and to halachic questions which arose in the renewed Jewish communities of Romania after the Holocaust.
Letters include: A long, interesting letter from R. Yochanan Sofer of Erloi (from the beginning of his tenure as rabbi after the Holocaust); letter from R. Yaakov Hager Rabbi of Pașcani, Iași 1948; letter from R. Avraham Yosef Kleinman Rabbi of Székelyhíd (Săcueni), 1948; the last leaf of a letter by R. Bezalel Stern (author of BeTzel HaChochmah); letter from R. Shalom Rosenzweig (Dermer) Rabbi in Storozhynets and Siret; letter from R. Mordechai Menachem Grün, Dej 1948; long letter from R. David Deutsch, Marghita 1950; letter from R. David Leib Freund; letter from R. Yosef Adler Rabbi of Turda, regarding a rabbinic committee established in Jerusalem at the time the rabbi of Braşov immigrated to Eretz Israel, Jerusalem, Iyar 1950; and more.
The recipient of the letters, R. David Sperber (1877-1962), leading Galician and Romanian rabbi. Born in Zablotov to a family of Kosov-Vizhnitz Chassidim, he was a close disciple of R. Meir Arik. He also studied under Rebbe Moshe Hager of Kosov, author of Ezor HaEmunah, and arranged the latter's writings for printing. He frequented the courts of the Chakal Yitzchak, rebbe of Spinka, and the Ahavat Yisrael of Vizhnitz. From 1908, he served as dayan and posek in Polien Riskeve (Poienile de sub Munte), and from 1922, as rabbi of Braşov (Kronstadt). He was renowned for the marriage permits he issued for agunot in the aftermath of the Holocaust. In the winter of 1950, he immigrated to Eretz Israel, where he became known as "the rabbi of Braşov", and served as a leader of the Moetzet Gedolei HaTorah and Chinuch HaAtzma'i. He authored Afarkasta D'Anya, Michtam LeDavid, Tehillah LeDavid, and other books.
12 letters (some several pages long). Size and condition vary.
Letters from prominent rabbis, Chassidim and Torah scholars. Most letters are related to matters of the rabbinate and to halachic questions which arose in the renewed Jewish communities of Romania after the Holocaust.
Letters include: A long, interesting letter from R. Yochanan Sofer of Erloi (from the beginning of his tenure as rabbi after the Holocaust); letter from R. Yaakov Hager Rabbi of Pașcani, Iași 1948; letter from R. Avraham Yosef Kleinman Rabbi of Székelyhíd (Săcueni), 1948; the last leaf of a letter by R. Bezalel Stern (author of BeTzel HaChochmah); letter from R. Shalom Rosenzweig (Dermer) Rabbi in Storozhynets and Siret; letter from R. Mordechai Menachem Grün, Dej 1948; long letter from R. David Deutsch, Marghita 1950; letter from R. David Leib Freund; letter from R. Yosef Adler Rabbi of Turda, regarding a rabbinic committee established in Jerusalem at the time the rabbi of Braşov immigrated to Eretz Israel, Jerusalem, Iyar 1950; and more.
The recipient of the letters, R. David Sperber (1877-1962), leading Galician and Romanian rabbi. Born in Zablotov to a family of Kosov-Vizhnitz Chassidim, he was a close disciple of R. Meir Arik. He also studied under Rebbe Moshe Hager of Kosov, author of Ezor HaEmunah, and arranged the latter's writings for printing. He frequented the courts of the Chakal Yitzchak, rebbe of Spinka, and the Ahavat Yisrael of Vizhnitz. From 1908, he served as dayan and posek in Polien Riskeve (Poienile de sub Munte), and from 1922, as rabbi of Braşov (Kronstadt). He was renowned for the marriage permits he issued for agunot in the aftermath of the Holocaust. In the winter of 1950, he immigrated to Eretz Israel, where he became known as "the rabbi of Braşov", and served as a leader of the Moetzet Gedolei HaTorah and Chinuch HaAtzma'i. He authored Afarkasta D'Anya, Michtam LeDavid, Tehillah LeDavid, and other books.
12 letters (some several pages long). Size and condition vary.
Category
The Holocaust and She'erit Hapletah
Catalogue
Auction 74 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
September 15, 2020
Opening: $400
Sold for: $688
Including buyer's premium
Book of Psalms, printed by Vaad Hatzala. Munich, 1948. Hebrew and English.
Book of Psalms, with English translation on facing pages. Colorful illustrations on thirteen pages. This book was printed in Munich after the Holocaust by Vaad Hatzala (The Rescue Committee), established by the Union of Orthodox Rabbis of the United States and Canada and directed by R. Nathan (Naftali) Baruch and R. Aviezer Borstein.
[172] leaves. 14 cm. Good condition. Original binding, captioned "Vaad Hatzala". Stains and minor damage to binding.
Book of Psalms, with English translation on facing pages. Colorful illustrations on thirteen pages. This book was printed in Munich after the Holocaust by Vaad Hatzala (The Rescue Committee), established by the Union of Orthodox Rabbis of the United States and Canada and directed by R. Nathan (Naftali) Baruch and R. Aviezer Borstein.
[172] leaves. 14 cm. Good condition. Original binding, captioned "Vaad Hatzala". Stains and minor damage to binding.
Category
The Holocaust and She'erit Hapletah
Catalogue
Auction 74 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
September 15, 2020
Opening: $500
Sold for: $875
Including buyer's premium
HaLevanon newspaper, published by Yechiel Brill – bound volumes of issues from the second through sixteenth years of publication. Paris and Mainz, December 1864 to June 1880.
Seven bound volumes of the newspaper HaLevanon – issues from the second through sixteenth years of publication; some printed in Paris (small format) and others in Mainz (large format). Some issues include the scholarly Torah-based supplement Kvod HaLevanon (the supplement appeared at times under its own separate title, and other times it was published as part of the main newspaper). Enclosed: an additional volume containing issues of the Kvod HaLevanon supplement alone – tenth year: first and third issues; eleventh year: first and second issues.
A list of issues is available upon request.
HaLevanon, under the editorship of Yechiel Brill, was the first Hebrew newspaper to be published in Eretz Israel. It was founded in Jerusalem in 1863, by Brill, Michel HaKohen and Yoel Moshe Salomon, and was considered to be the newspaper of the Perushim (non-Chassidic) sector of the Ashkenazi community in the city. Shortly after its establishment, a competing paper, Chavatzelet, was founded in Jerusalem under the stewardship of editor Yisrael Frumkin and publisher Yisrael Bak; it served as a mouthpiece for Jerusalem's Chassidic and Sephardi communities. The competition between the two newspapers was fierce, so much so that the editors informed on one another to the authorities, prompting the Turks to shut down both papers, just one year after their establishment. Brill restarted publication of HaLevanon in Paris; it lasted there from late 1864 to 1870, when the siege of Paris during the Franco-Prussian War forced the presses to close. Subsequently the paper moved to Mainz and London. Brill remained editor-in-chief throughout the migrations.
The Torah-based supplement Kvod HaLevanon was appended to the newspaper from its very first issue. It featured articles by rabbis, prominent Torah scholars and Jewish researchers, and over the years hosted major polemic debates, such as the one regarding the renewal of ritual sacrifice.
Eight volumes (one with issues of Kvod HaLevanon only). Multiple paginations. Size varies (approx. 19-30 cm). Overall good-fair condition. Dry and brittle paper in some volumes. Stains, including dark stains. Open tears. Wear. Old bindings.
Seven bound volumes of the newspaper HaLevanon – issues from the second through sixteenth years of publication; some printed in Paris (small format) and others in Mainz (large format). Some issues include the scholarly Torah-based supplement Kvod HaLevanon (the supplement appeared at times under its own separate title, and other times it was published as part of the main newspaper). Enclosed: an additional volume containing issues of the Kvod HaLevanon supplement alone – tenth year: first and third issues; eleventh year: first and second issues.
A list of issues is available upon request.
HaLevanon, under the editorship of Yechiel Brill, was the first Hebrew newspaper to be published in Eretz Israel. It was founded in Jerusalem in 1863, by Brill, Michel HaKohen and Yoel Moshe Salomon, and was considered to be the newspaper of the Perushim (non-Chassidic) sector of the Ashkenazi community in the city. Shortly after its establishment, a competing paper, Chavatzelet, was founded in Jerusalem under the stewardship of editor Yisrael Frumkin and publisher Yisrael Bak; it served as a mouthpiece for Jerusalem's Chassidic and Sephardi communities. The competition between the two newspapers was fierce, so much so that the editors informed on one another to the authorities, prompting the Turks to shut down both papers, just one year after their establishment. Brill restarted publication of HaLevanon in Paris; it lasted there from late 1864 to 1870, when the siege of Paris during the Franco-Prussian War forced the presses to close. Subsequently the paper moved to Mainz and London. Brill remained editor-in-chief throughout the migrations.
The Torah-based supplement Kvod HaLevanon was appended to the newspaper from its very first issue. It featured articles by rabbis, prominent Torah scholars and Jewish researchers, and over the years hosted major polemic debates, such as the one regarding the renewal of ritual sacrifice.
Eight volumes (one with issues of Kvod HaLevanon only). Multiple paginations. Size varies (approx. 19-30 cm). Overall good-fair condition. Dry and brittle paper in some volumes. Stains, including dark stains. Open tears. Wear. Old bindings.
Category
Periodicals and Miscellanea
Catalogue
Auction 74 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
September 15, 2020
Opening: $1,500
Sold for: $2,125
Including buyer's premium
HaMagid newspaper, published by Eliezer Lipman Silberman, David Gordon, Dov Gordon and Yaakov Shmuel Fuchs. 16 bound volumes of issues. Lyck, Berlin, Krakow, 1858-1899.
16 volumes, with hundreds of issues of the weekly newspaper HaMagid. A list of issues is available upon request.
HaMagid was the first Hebrew language weekly newspaper. Its inaugural issue was published in June 1856, in time for the Shavuot holiday, in Lyck, East Prussia (today Ełk, northeastern Poland). The newspaper aimed to publicize news items from all over the globe as well as developments in the Jewish world, but it was also a vehicle for publishing poetry, scientific articles, and opinion pieces. It published works by many of the finest Jewish authors and scholars of the nineteenth century. Even at its height, the paper attained a circulation of no more than 1,800 copies, but these copies were passed from hand to hand, and it is therefore unclear how broad the readership actually was. In order to achieve maximal readership, the paper went out of its way to steer clear of the controversies that roiled the Jewish world at the time and adopted a decidedly moderate tone. Still, the newspaper voiced wholehearted support for Jewish immigration to Eretz Israel, for the "Hibbat Zion" movement and for the Zionist movement. Many of its news items dealt with the settlement of Eretz Israel.
From 1856 to 1880, HaMagid was edited by Eliezer Lipman Silberman and David Gordon, and in the years 1880-86 by Gordon and his son Dov. Following his father's passing, Dov Gordon edited the paper alone until 1890, whereupon Yaakov Shmuel Fuchs moved the operation from Berlin to Krakow and assumed control as editor. HaMagid ceased publication in 1903.
16 volumes, hundreds of issues. 33-35 cm. Overall good to good-fair condition. Some issues printed on dry, brittle paper. Stains and wear. Open tears, affecting text. Old bindings. Wear and damage to bindings.
16 volumes, with hundreds of issues of the weekly newspaper HaMagid. A list of issues is available upon request.
HaMagid was the first Hebrew language weekly newspaper. Its inaugural issue was published in June 1856, in time for the Shavuot holiday, in Lyck, East Prussia (today Ełk, northeastern Poland). The newspaper aimed to publicize news items from all over the globe as well as developments in the Jewish world, but it was also a vehicle for publishing poetry, scientific articles, and opinion pieces. It published works by many of the finest Jewish authors and scholars of the nineteenth century. Even at its height, the paper attained a circulation of no more than 1,800 copies, but these copies were passed from hand to hand, and it is therefore unclear how broad the readership actually was. In order to achieve maximal readership, the paper went out of its way to steer clear of the controversies that roiled the Jewish world at the time and adopted a decidedly moderate tone. Still, the newspaper voiced wholehearted support for Jewish immigration to Eretz Israel, for the "Hibbat Zion" movement and for the Zionist movement. Many of its news items dealt with the settlement of Eretz Israel.
From 1856 to 1880, HaMagid was edited by Eliezer Lipman Silberman and David Gordon, and in the years 1880-86 by Gordon and his son Dov. Following his father's passing, Dov Gordon edited the paper alone until 1890, whereupon Yaakov Shmuel Fuchs moved the operation from Berlin to Krakow and assumed control as editor. HaMagid ceased publication in 1903.
16 volumes, hundreds of issues. 33-35 cm. Overall good to good-fair condition. Some issues printed on dry, brittle paper. Stains and wear. Open tears, affecting text. Old bindings. Wear and damage to bindings.
Category
Periodicals and Miscellanea
Catalogue
Auction 74 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
September 15, 2020
Opening: $750
Unsold
Handwritten leaf, with messianic calculations from the Book of Daniel, written by a Jew who converted to the Bahá'í faith. The calculations present the Bahá'í revelation as the fulfillment of the Biblical prophecies of Redemption. [Eretz Israel, late 19th century or early 20th century]. Aramaic and some Hebrew.
The Bahá'í faith was founded in Persia as an offshoot of Bábism, by Mírzá Husayn-Alí Núrí – known as Bahá'u'lláh ("Glory of G-d", 1817-1892). Its adherents maintained that the redemption process described in the Koran had already began, and that the world was on the brink of a new era, in which traditional Islam and its laws would be annulled. The Persian authorities, who were wary of this new movement, exiled Bahá'u'lláh to the Ottoman Empire, where he was imprisoned in the citadel near Acre. When he arrived there with his family, they were presented to the townspeople as enemies of the state, of G-d and of His religion.
Despite the difficult conditions, the years spent in the Acre fortress were the most fruitful and intensive for Bahá'u'lláh, and in this time he completed the central book of the Bahá'í faith – Kitáb-i-Aqdas (the Most Holy Book), which defines the principles of this new faith: all religions derive from a common, G-dly source, striving for universal peace, destruction of weapons, scientific advance and ethical conduct.
This leaf, handwritten in square and semi-cursive script (Rashi script), mostly in Aramaic, offers a Bahá'í interpretation to the messianic calculations outlined in the Book of Daniel. The writer wishes to present the advent of the Bahá'í faith and its prophet – Bahá'u'lláh, as the fulfillment of the Biblical prophecy of Redemption. This interpretation is based on the verse: "And from the time the daily sacrifice was removed and the silent abomination placed, is one thousand, two hundred, and ninety" (Daniel 12:11), which designates the year 1290 as the onset of the Redemption. According to the solution suggested by the writer, this number refers to the Islamic year 1290, which corresponds with the year 1873 – year of the revelation of the Kitáb-i-Aqdas in the Acre fortress. Accordingly, the writer interprets the second date mentioned in the prophecy, the year of the realization of the Redemption – "Fortunate is he who waits and reaches days of one thousand, three hundred, and thirty-five" (Daniel 12:12), as the year 1915.
The text opens and ends with the numerical value of the Tetragrammaton corresponding with that of Bahá'u'lláh, and acronyms alluding to him. The writer ends with: "A man who received tidings of peace from Yekutiel", with the word "Yekutiel" enlarged. This may allude to the name of the writer.
In view of the language employed in this leaf, the Rashi script, the verses quoted and the usage of Hebrew numerical values, one can conjecture that the writer was a Jew who presumably converted to the Bahá'í faith, and wished to draw other Jews to this faith through his calculations.
The number of Bahá'ís in Eretz Israel until the early 20th century did not exceed a few hundred, with almost no contact with the Jewish settlement. In 1903, the Jewish Colonization Association acquired some of the land of the Bahá'í village Umm Junieh, which later became the first moshava of the Degania group. Close friendship ties developed between the Jewish and Bahá'í settlers, as documented in the memoirs of some of the members of the group.
The Bahá'í World Centre is located today in several locations in Haifa and Acre, and they are renowned for their unique landscapes and structures. In 2008, 26 of them were inscribed on the World Heritage List.
[1] leaf. Approx. 26.5 cm. Good condition. Stains, folding marks and minor damage.
The Bahá'í faith was founded in Persia as an offshoot of Bábism, by Mírzá Husayn-Alí Núrí – known as Bahá'u'lláh ("Glory of G-d", 1817-1892). Its adherents maintained that the redemption process described in the Koran had already began, and that the world was on the brink of a new era, in which traditional Islam and its laws would be annulled. The Persian authorities, who were wary of this new movement, exiled Bahá'u'lláh to the Ottoman Empire, where he was imprisoned in the citadel near Acre. When he arrived there with his family, they were presented to the townspeople as enemies of the state, of G-d and of His religion.
Despite the difficult conditions, the years spent in the Acre fortress were the most fruitful and intensive for Bahá'u'lláh, and in this time he completed the central book of the Bahá'í faith – Kitáb-i-Aqdas (the Most Holy Book), which defines the principles of this new faith: all religions derive from a common, G-dly source, striving for universal peace, destruction of weapons, scientific advance and ethical conduct.
This leaf, handwritten in square and semi-cursive script (Rashi script), mostly in Aramaic, offers a Bahá'í interpretation to the messianic calculations outlined in the Book of Daniel. The writer wishes to present the advent of the Bahá'í faith and its prophet – Bahá'u'lláh, as the fulfillment of the Biblical prophecy of Redemption. This interpretation is based on the verse: "And from the time the daily sacrifice was removed and the silent abomination placed, is one thousand, two hundred, and ninety" (Daniel 12:11), which designates the year 1290 as the onset of the Redemption. According to the solution suggested by the writer, this number refers to the Islamic year 1290, which corresponds with the year 1873 – year of the revelation of the Kitáb-i-Aqdas in the Acre fortress. Accordingly, the writer interprets the second date mentioned in the prophecy, the year of the realization of the Redemption – "Fortunate is he who waits and reaches days of one thousand, three hundred, and thirty-five" (Daniel 12:12), as the year 1915.
The text opens and ends with the numerical value of the Tetragrammaton corresponding with that of Bahá'u'lláh, and acronyms alluding to him. The writer ends with: "A man who received tidings of peace from Yekutiel", with the word "Yekutiel" enlarged. This may allude to the name of the writer.
In view of the language employed in this leaf, the Rashi script, the verses quoted and the usage of Hebrew numerical values, one can conjecture that the writer was a Jew who presumably converted to the Bahá'í faith, and wished to draw other Jews to this faith through his calculations.
The number of Bahá'ís in Eretz Israel until the early 20th century did not exceed a few hundred, with almost no contact with the Jewish settlement. In 1903, the Jewish Colonization Association acquired some of the land of the Bahá'í village Umm Junieh, which later became the first moshava of the Degania group. Close friendship ties developed between the Jewish and Bahá'í settlers, as documented in the memoirs of some of the members of the group.
The Bahá'í World Centre is located today in several locations in Haifa and Acre, and they are renowned for their unique landscapes and structures. In 2008, 26 of them were inscribed on the World Heritage List.
[1] leaf. Approx. 26.5 cm. Good condition. Stains, folding marks and minor damage.
Category
Periodicals and Miscellanea
Catalogue
Auction 74 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
September 15, 2020
Opening: $10,000
Sold for: $12,500
Including buyer's premium
Collection of thousands of books, on widely varying topics, from Jewish religious texts to scholarly and reference works, from the library of the renowned bibliographer and book collector Israel Mehlman, printed ca. 1640-1985.
A large collection of books from the estate of Israel Mehlman, reflecting the wide range of his fields of interest. The collection includes: • Books printed in the 17th and 18th centuries. • Books printed in the 19th century (prayer books, Kabbalah, Musar and Chassidut). • Early Haskalah movement and Judaic studies works. • Hebrew bibliography works. • Books of Jewish thought, philosophy, art and poetry. • Books in bibliophile and limited editions. • Folk literature in Yiddish and Ladino. • Periodicals, polemic books and various publications. • And more.
A comprehensive list of the books will be sent upon request. The list was drawn up by the family, and the books were not examined by Kedem specialists. There may be slight differences between the list and the actual library, as well as in the state of the books. The buyer is responsible for verifying the accuracy of the information.
The viewing of the collection will take place at the family's home. Appointments can be scheduled through the Kedem office.
----------------------
Dr. Israel Mehlman (1900-1989) is renowned as one of the greatest book collectors, and for the bibliographic wealth of his library, which he laboriously and meticulously compiled. He began building up his library as a young refugee in Vienna, continually adding books and works after immigrating to Eretz Israel in 1935, and as head of educational and academic institutions. Until his final days, Dr. Mehlman continued collecting and methodically cataloging his books.
Dr. Israel Mehlman was born in Eastern Galicia; at the age of fourteen, as WWI broke out, his family fled to Vienna, where he continued his studies, eventually graduating from the Vienna University. A teacher and educator, he continued his work in Eretz Israel after immigrating there in 1935. He was appointed principal of the David Yellin Teachers College in Jerusalem, and head of the Jewish Agency Department of Education. Dr. Mehlman was also one of the founders of the Tel-Aviv University, and served as head of the department of literature and dramatic studies.
A large part of his library, which comprised at its zenith approximately 35,000 books, was donated to the National Library in Jerusalem, and to Beit Hatfutsot. After the donation, Dr. Mehlman enthusiastically resumed the development of his library. The National Library, upon receiving the collection, published a catalog, Ginzei Yisrael – The Israel Mehlman Collection in the Jewish National and University Library, An Annotated Catalogue of the Hebrew Books, Booklets and Pamphlets, with a bibliographic record of 1893 books from the collection, with 47 plates.
A large collection of books from the estate of Israel Mehlman, reflecting the wide range of his fields of interest. The collection includes: • Books printed in the 17th and 18th centuries. • Books printed in the 19th century (prayer books, Kabbalah, Musar and Chassidut). • Early Haskalah movement and Judaic studies works. • Hebrew bibliography works. • Books of Jewish thought, philosophy, art and poetry. • Books in bibliophile and limited editions. • Folk literature in Yiddish and Ladino. • Periodicals, polemic books and various publications. • And more.
A comprehensive list of the books will be sent upon request. The list was drawn up by the family, and the books were not examined by Kedem specialists. There may be slight differences between the list and the actual library, as well as in the state of the books. The buyer is responsible for verifying the accuracy of the information.
The viewing of the collection will take place at the family's home. Appointments can be scheduled through the Kedem office.
----------------------
Dr. Israel Mehlman (1900-1989) is renowned as one of the greatest book collectors, and for the bibliographic wealth of his library, which he laboriously and meticulously compiled. He began building up his library as a young refugee in Vienna, continually adding books and works after immigrating to Eretz Israel in 1935, and as head of educational and academic institutions. Until his final days, Dr. Mehlman continued collecting and methodically cataloging his books.
Dr. Israel Mehlman was born in Eastern Galicia; at the age of fourteen, as WWI broke out, his family fled to Vienna, where he continued his studies, eventually graduating from the Vienna University. A teacher and educator, he continued his work in Eretz Israel after immigrating there in 1935. He was appointed principal of the David Yellin Teachers College in Jerusalem, and head of the Jewish Agency Department of Education. Dr. Mehlman was also one of the founders of the Tel-Aviv University, and served as head of the department of literature and dramatic studies.
A large part of his library, which comprised at its zenith approximately 35,000 books, was donated to the National Library in Jerusalem, and to Beit Hatfutsot. After the donation, Dr. Mehlman enthusiastically resumed the development of his library. The National Library, upon receiving the collection, published a catalog, Ginzei Yisrael – The Israel Mehlman Collection in the Jewish National and University Library, An Annotated Catalogue of the Hebrew Books, Booklets and Pamphlets, with a bibliographic record of 1893 books from the collection, with 47 plates.
Category
Periodicals and Miscellanea
Catalogue
Auction 74 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
September 15, 2020
Opening: $1,000
Sold for: $2,375
Including buyer's premium
Parchment Haftarot scroll. [United States, first half of 20th century].
Neat Ashkenazic Stam script (titles in Vellish script), on two rollers. Comprising the haftarot for the entire year, including the haftarot for the second festival day in the Diaspora. Instructions in Rashi script. Several columns headed with crown-like decorative elements.
Wooden rollers, turned, carved and engraved. Set with celluloid.
Scroll height: approx. 50 cm. Rollers height: 78 cm. Overall good condition. Many stains. One upper handle missing. Velvet embroidered mantle, reading "Sefer Haftarot".
Neat Ashkenazic Stam script (titles in Vellish script), on two rollers. Comprising the haftarot for the entire year, including the haftarot for the second festival day in the Diaspora. Instructions in Rashi script. Several columns headed with crown-like decorative elements.
Wooden rollers, turned, carved and engraved. Set with celluloid.
Scroll height: approx. 50 cm. Rollers height: 78 cm. Overall good condition. Many stains. One upper handle missing. Velvet embroidered mantle, reading "Sefer Haftarot".
Category
Esther and Haftarot Scrolls
Catalogue
Auction 74 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
September 15, 2020
Opening: $300
Sold for: $1,500
Including buyer's premium
Esther scroll. [Germany, ca. 17th century].
Script typical of 17th century Germany. 25 lines per column. Further characteristics consistent with the period, including several medieval Ashkenazi traditions which were not customary in later centuries (see enclosed expert's report). In two places, letters highlighted with serifs spell out the four-lettered Names of G-d.
Turned wood case, with engraved text: "Yonah son of Aryeh Nesher 1652". The preliminary margin inscribed "Yonah" in Ashkenazi hand.
Scroll height: 18 cm. Good-fair condition. Many stains. Creases and wear. Several holes. Case height: approx. 24.5 cm. Case in good condition, with minor damage. Loss to shaft, with handle completely missing.
Expert's report enclosed.
Script typical of 17th century Germany. 25 lines per column. Further characteristics consistent with the period, including several medieval Ashkenazi traditions which were not customary in later centuries (see enclosed expert's report). In two places, letters highlighted with serifs spell out the four-lettered Names of G-d.
Turned wood case, with engraved text: "Yonah son of Aryeh Nesher 1652". The preliminary margin inscribed "Yonah" in Ashkenazi hand.
Scroll height: 18 cm. Good-fair condition. Many stains. Creases and wear. Several holes. Case height: approx. 24.5 cm. Case in good condition, with minor damage. Loss to shaft, with handle completely missing.
Expert's report enclosed.
Category
Esther and Haftarot Scrolls
Catalogue
Auction 74 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
September 15, 2020
Opening: $500
Sold for: $625
Including buyer's premium
Esther scroll. [Italy, ca. first half of 17th century].
Sephardic script, typical of Italy (see paleographic analysis in the enclosed expert's report). 22 lines per column. Italian spelling tradition. Membranes sewn as customary in 17th century Italy. In six places, enlarged letters spell out the four-lettered Names of G-d. Wooden roller.
Separate parchment benediction leaf, written in the same hand, with the blessings recited when reading the Esther scroll and with the liturgical poem "Kor'ei Megillah". The text follows the Italian rite, and includes the closing line of prayer that G-d will take revenge on contemporary persecutors of the Jewish people just as He did in earlier times, frequently censored in prayer books. Signed: "So says the writer… residing in a foreign land, Mordechai son of Shemariah… scribe from Metz, France… residing in Fossano, Piedmont".
Scroll height: 33.5 cm. Roller height: 45 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains. Tears and damage. Fading and damage to some words.
Leaf height: 18.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains, creases and wear. Several holes. Open tear to upper margin, not affecting text.
Expert's report enclosed.
Sephardic script, typical of Italy (see paleographic analysis in the enclosed expert's report). 22 lines per column. Italian spelling tradition. Membranes sewn as customary in 17th century Italy. In six places, enlarged letters spell out the four-lettered Names of G-d. Wooden roller.
Separate parchment benediction leaf, written in the same hand, with the blessings recited when reading the Esther scroll and with the liturgical poem "Kor'ei Megillah". The text follows the Italian rite, and includes the closing line of prayer that G-d will take revenge on contemporary persecutors of the Jewish people just as He did in earlier times, frequently censored in prayer books. Signed: "So says the writer… residing in a foreign land, Mordechai son of Shemariah… scribe from Metz, France… residing in Fossano, Piedmont".
Scroll height: 33.5 cm. Roller height: 45 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains. Tears and damage. Fading and damage to some words.
Leaf height: 18.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains, creases and wear. Several holes. Open tear to upper margin, not affecting text.
Expert's report enclosed.
Category
Esther and Haftarot Scrolls
Catalogue
Auction 74 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
September 15, 2020
Opening: $300
Sold for: $550
Including buyer's premium
Esther scroll. [Poland, ca. 18th century].
Script typical of 18th century Western Poland. 20 lines per column. Many decorative serifs. The letter chet decorated with scrolling feet (typical of 18th and 19th century Germany). Wooden roller.
The heads of letters shin, ayin, tet, nun, zayin, gimmel and tzadi written in accordance with the opinion of the Arizal, including the reversed tzadi.
Scroll height: 16.5 cm. Roller height: 44 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains. Wear and creases. Several holes. Many letters retraced.
Script typical of 18th century Western Poland. 20 lines per column. Many decorative serifs. The letter chet decorated with scrolling feet (typical of 18th and 19th century Germany). Wooden roller.
The heads of letters shin, ayin, tet, nun, zayin, gimmel and tzadi written in accordance with the opinion of the Arizal, including the reversed tzadi.
Scroll height: 16.5 cm. Roller height: 44 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains. Wear and creases. Several holes. Many letters retraced.
Category
Esther and Haftarot Scrolls
Catalogue