Аукцион 4 Часть 1 Emancipation, anti-Semitism, Holocaust, Congress Herzl, Zionism, brigade, Jewish National Fund, autographs, Jewish art
24.11.15 (локальном времени Вашего часового пояса)
Израиля
 Harav Maimon 2, Jerusalem
Аукцион закончен

ЛОТ 30:

Books that Belonged to Rabbis Who Died in the Holocaust

Стартовая цена:
$ 50
Комиссия аукционного дома: 19%
НДС: Только на комиссию
теги:

A. Rosh Efrayim. Warsaw, 1884. With stamps of Rabbi Asher Anschil Weiss of Nadipoly.
The Book 'Rosh Efrayim' of Rabbi Efrayim Zalman Margaliyot of Brod. Four parts in one volume. On the Shulchan Aruch, Responsa and Ha'Re'ayot Pamphlet. With stamps of Rabbi Asher Anschil Weiss, rabbinical judge of Nadipoly, Hungary.
Rabbi Asher was born in 1882 to his father Rabbi Moshe Shlomo Weiss (see an answer to him in the Avnei Tzedek Responsa 10: 148). In his youth, after his Bar Mitzvah, he travelled to Huszt to study at the yeshiva of the author of 'Arugot Ha'Bosem'. Later, he travelled to Pressburg to study with the author of 'Shevet Sofer'. After that he studied in Morgorten with his brother-in-law, Rabbi Shmuel Zalman Weinberger, who due to his great memory called him "My Bookcase".
In 1928, he travelled to Israel to visit the Kabbalist Rabbi Shlomo Eliezer Alfendri.
He served as a rabbi and head of Yeshiva in Nadipoly and had many students. He was killed in Auschwitz in 1943. (His son-in-law, Rabbi shlomo Zalman Friedman, rabbinical judge of Tenka, survived the Holocaust and was an important rabbi in the USA).
126; 155; 135; 94 pp.
Condition: Excellent.
B. 'Ir Giborim'. Lublin, 1897. With a handwritten inscription and signature of Rabbi Segal of Lodz.
A book of homilies on the Torah by Rabbi Efrayim of Luntschitz, the author of 'Kli Yakar'. On the book there is a handwritten inscription and signature of Rabbi Moshe Menachem Yosef Segal, rabbinical judge of Lodz, the grandson and replacer of Rabbi Eliyahu Chaim Meizel of Lodz. He was born in 1876 and was raised by his grandfather. In 1905, he was appointed rabbinical judge and teacher in Lodz. When the Germans occupied the city, they abused him, demanding that he come to the synagogue in his prayer shawl and phylacteries and rip the Torah scrolls. He escaped to Warsaw and from there to Ostrowitz, there he was killed in 1942.
Rabbi Moshe Menachem had a large library in his house, which was used by many. This book is a remnant of this magnificent library.
96 pp.
Condition: Very Good.