Auction 96 Early Printed Books, Chassidut and Kabbalah, Books Printed in Jerusalem, Letters and Manuscripts
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Amud HaYirah, Nisan 1879 [issue], by R. Akiva Yosef Schlesinger. [Jerusalem: Eliyahu and Moshe Chai Sason, 1879].
Printed without tile page. Contains brief passages and notes on current events.
This issue is a continuation of another issue the author had printed earlier that year, Amud HaYirah VeAmud HaTorah. Evidently no further issues were printed.
The author's printed signature on margins of the last page: "Rabbiner A. J. Schelesinger".
At the bottom of the first page is a handwritten inscription (copying of a passage from Keter Shem Tov).
4 pages. 20 cm. Dry paper. Good condition. Stains. New binding.
Sh. Halevy, no. 327.
Kol Kore, to bolster Torah law and settlement of Eretz Israel, by R. Avraham HaKohen Friedman, son-in-law of R. Akiva Yosef Schlesinger, with an open letter by R. Akiva Yosef Schlesinger. [Jerusalem: Aharon Uziel Rokeach and Elchanan Tennenbaum, 1883?].
Printed without title page. At the beginning of the book is an open letter by R. Akiva Yosef Schlesinger, in support of his son-in-law, the author, followed by an introduction by the author.
The letter and introduction are in Hebrew, while the main text of the book is in Yiddish.
On last leaf, stamp of R. "Pinchas Tzvi Shenberger, born in Jerusalem".
12 pages. 20.5 cm. Somewhat dry and dark paper. Fair-good condition. Stains. Tears, including marginal open tears, repaired with paper filling. New binding.
Sh. Halevy, no. 434.
Tikun Midot HaNefesh, by R. Shlomo ibn Gabirol. Jerusalem: Aharon Uziel son of Gershon Sofer Rokeach and Elchanan son of Avraham Yitzchak Tennenbaum, [1883].
Missing final leaf, with Shabbat song by R. Yechizkiyahu HaKohen, Rabbi of Beled.
17 leaves. Missing last leaf. 18.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Small marginal tears to several leaves, and minute open tear to last leaf, slightly affecting text. New leather binding.
Sh. Halevy, no. 438.
Mevaseret Tzion, supplement to volume 14, issue 11 of HaChavatzelet, Tevet 1884. Jerusalem: Yisrael Dov Frumkin (publisher of HaChavatzelet), 1884.
Supplement to HaChavatzelet newspaper, published monthly, news on current events in Eretz Israel. Four booklets were published in total: the supplement to issue 11 (the present item) and issues 15, 34 and 40.
[1], 32 pages. With printed front wrapper, but without back wrapper containing contents and an advertisement. 20.5 cm. Fair condition. Especially dry and brittle paper. Some stains. Tears, including open tears to margins of wrapper and many other leaves. Detached leaves and gatherings. New leather binding.
Sh. Halevy, no. 458 (one of four).
Mishlei Sharh, in Judeo-Arabic, translated by Meir Sason Sofer in Syria. Jerusalem: Agan, 1884.
Arabic translation (in Hebrew script) to the book of Mishlei.
20 leaves. 18.5 cm. Dry, somewhat brittle paper. Overall good condition. Stains. Small tears to several leaves, partially repaired with paper filling. Faded ink on one leaf. New binding.
Sh. Halevy, no. 460.
Commentaries on Tehillim by Yaavetz, R. Meir Arama and R. Ovadiah Seforno. Edited by R. Tzvi Hirsch HaKohen. Jerusalem: Yitzchak son of Tzvi Gościnny, [1884]. Date on title page given as 1885.
Partial copy, containing only first two leaves.
2 leaves. 25 cm. Fair condition. Stains. Many tears, including open tears, affecting title frame and text, repaired with paper filling. New leather binding.
Printing of this book was interrupted before completion. The Bibliography of the Hebrew Book (entry 000305840) records 12 leaves, while Sh. Halevy records 6. The present copy contains only the first 2 leaves, containing the approbations and the (incomplete) preface by the publisher.
Sh. Halevy, no. 443.
Benei Yitzchak, homilies for various occasions by R. Yitzchak Akshoti, with Kol Shachal, additional homilies, selections and novellae on the Talmud by his younger brother R. Shabtai Akshoti. Jerusalem: Moshe Peretz and brothers Avraham and Yitzchak Gagin, with Shmuel HaLevi Zuckerman, [1884]. Divisional title page for Kol Shachal.
On the top of the page is a dedication handwritten and signed by the author of Kol Shachal and publisher, R. Shabtai Akshoti, gifting it to Moshe Sapir.
At the beginning of Kol Shachal is a lengthy and highly interesting introduction by the author of the book and publisher of both books, R. Shabtai Akshoti, telling of his life events before immigrating to Eretz Israel in 1870.
Both books in one volume. Benei Yischak: [3], 135, [2] leaves. Kol Shachal: [2], 69, [2] leaves. Approx. 36 cm. Dry paper. Most leaves in good condition. Stains. Small marginal tears to several leaves. Marginal worming to some leaves. Old binding, with leather spine. Wear, damage and worming to binding.
Sh. Halevy, no. 445, 446.
Zecher Olam, letter by Rivkah Lipa daughter of R. Moshe Meishel Luria, sent to her family. Jerusalem: Yitzchak Gościnny, 1884. Second edition, Hebrew and Yiddish.
The booklet contains a letter written by Rivkah Lipa to her sons and brother in Cracow (as she goes on to note, some of them had immigrated to the United States and other countries), stressing her illustrious parentage, her trials and tribulations in Eretz Israel and her visits to gravesites of Tzaddikim in Eretz Israel, with encouragement to keep the Torah and mitzvot.
On the last leaf the author thanks R. Chaim Berlin and his wife, R. Zalman Levin and his wife, and many of her family members.
On the front title page is a handwritten dedication by the author, in Yiddish, with her signature: "from me, Rivkah Lipa daughter of R. [---] [Mei]shel Luria…". The dedication is incomplete due to tears on the leaf.
[1], 14, [1] leaves. Leaves bound out of sequence. Leaves 13-14 bound after leaf 8, and leaves 9-10 bound after leaf 12. 19.5 cm. Dry, brittle paper. Fair condition. Stains. Many tears, and open tears around margins of all leaves, affecting text to several leaves, including title page and endpaper (containing dedication), restored with paper filling (the entire book has been professionally restored). New leather binding.
Sh. Halevy, no. 450.
Printed booklet, Kol MeHeichal, polemic against the people of the New Yishuv who opposed the Halukka system of charity distribution in Eretz Israel. [Jerusalem: Yoel Moshe Salomon, 1885]. Printed without title page.
The booklet contains the printed signatures of about eighty leaders of the Ashkenazi Perushim and Chassidic communities.
The author of the booklet is apparently the famous traveler R. Yaakov Sapir. The author describes the economic contributions of the Old Yishuv in contrast to the passivity of the new settlers, and goes on to describe the strain on the Halukka donations in Jerusalem as a result of refugees from the pogroms in Russia and Romania in 1881.
This booklet raised much interest in its time, and was the Old Yishuv's official response to the polemic against the Halukka institutions.
8 pages. 20.5 cm. Dry, brittle paper. Fair condition. Many stains. Wear. Many tears, including open tears, partially repaired with tape. Old binding.
Sh. Halevy, no. 529 (who calls this "an especially rare booklet").
Recorded in the Bibliography of the Hebrew Book project based on a photocopy.
El Cuento Maravioso [Marvelous Tale], anthology of stories in Ladino. Jerusalem: Shmuel HaLevi Zuckerman and partners, [1886]. Two parts in two volumes.
Anthology of wondrous and ancient tales in Ladino, in two parts.
Two volumes. Volume I: 320 pages. Volume II: 184 pages. Approx. 16 cm. Dry, brittle paper in first volume. Fair-good condition. Stains. Wear. Tears, including tears to title page, and a large open tear to one leaf in volume II, affecting text, partially repaired with paper filling. Worming, affecting text. New bindings (non-uniform).
Sh. Halevy, no. 562.
Shulchan Aruch Orach Chaim, with Shetilei Zeitim commentary, by R. David Mizrachi of Sanaa. Jerusalem: [Hirschenson – HaTzvi], 1886-1895.
Commentary on Shulchan Aruch Orach Chaim, with main text and some glosses of the Rama. The author writes that he omitted glosses of the Rama that contradict the Shulchan Aruch as well as those with customs not prevalent in Yemen, although the printers added the glosses omitted by the author. The book includes two works by R. Yaakov Mordechai Hirschenson, Mei Be'er (incorporated into Be'er HaGolah) and Einot Mayim, until section 392, when the printing was interrupted in 1886.
[6], 97; 198, [1]; 156, [1] leaves. 25 cm. Dry paper. Good-fair condition. Stains. Tears, including small marginal tears to title page and open tears to last leaf, affecting text, repaired with paper filling. Worming, affecting text. New binding.
Sh. Halevy, no. 565.
Letter to the American philanthropist R. Dov Manischewitz and his wife Nesha, regarding the donations collected from the United States for the poor of Jerusalem, with the signatures and stamps of the Jerusalem Torah scholars and heads of the Vaad HaKlali, appointees of the kollels. Jerusalem, Kislev 1904.
Ten signatories: R. "Yitzchak Blazer" [the Rabbi of St. Petersburg, disciple of R. Yisrael Salanter]; R. Menachem Mendel Rabin [head of the Chassidic settlement in Jerusalem, son of R. Shmuel Aharon, Rabbi of Korczyna, author of Masa Meiron]; R. Elimelech Perlman [an important activist and leader of the Chassidic community of Jerusalem, son of R. Yisrael Isser Perlman, Rabbi of Rozwadów and son-in-law of R. Baruch Binyamin Ze'ev Wolf Weinstock, the first Chassidic dayan in Jerusalem]; R. Eliyahu Ze'ev Wolfsohn; R. Gedaliah Nachman Broder; R. Asher Dov Sussman; R. Yitzchak Eliezer Charlap; R. Moshe Ze'ev Silberman; R. Meir Adler [son-in-law of Rebbe Elazar Mendel Bidermann of Lelov]; and R. "Dov Ber Abramowitz – secretary" [a rabbi of St. Louis, United States, and a head of the Vaad HaKlali in Eretz Israel and the United States].
In the margins of the signatures is a letter with the signatures of the rabbis of the city, R. Shmuel Salant and R. Eliyahu David Rabinowitz-Teomim (the Aderet): "We too greet you and bless you with success and sign with a blessing".
R. Yitzchak Blazer – known as R. Itzele Peterburger (1837-1907), prominent disciple of R. Yisrael Salanter, and disseminator of the Musar movement in the Lithuanian yeshivas. Leading Torah scholar of his times, a Musar personality known for his holiness. At the instruction of R. Salanter he began to serve as Rabbi of St. Petersburg in 1862; in 1878 he resigned and moved to Kovno, and headed the Kovno Kollel starting in 1880. Later he also resigned from this position in order to continue his service of God as a private individual. During all of these periods, he would deliver Musar sermons in the Knesset Yisrael yeshiva in Slabodka, near Kovno. In 1902 he began preparing to immigrate to Eretz Israel, to which end he sold his house and property in Kovno, finally arriving in Eretz Israel in 1904. At his arrival in Jaffa, he was received in a ceremony attended by many leading Jerusalem rabbis. During this period R. Itzele directed the Vilna Kollel in Jerusalem and headed the Vaad HaKlali of charitable institutions in Jerusalem. Author of Responsa Pri Yitzchak in two parts.
[1] leaf, official stationery. 28 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains, including dark dampstains. Wear and folds. Repaired with paper on verso.