Auction 85 - Judaica: Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
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Record book of the Jewish orphanage in Safed, founded in 1919 by R. Yisrael Hager of Radovitz. Safed, [ca. 1919].
Title page in calligraphic script, in gold, copper-red and black. Color ornaments (flower garland surrounding part of title; ornamental border). Fine, gilt-decorated leather binding. The title page and binding were made by the artist R. Yosef Tzvi Geiger of Safed.
The following leaves contain information about the founding of the orphanage by the rebbe of Radovitz, its objectives, and lists of the gabbaim and board members appointed by the rebbe.
Further in the booklet are various letters of recommendation.
[7] written pages, dozens of blank leaves. Approx. 28 cm. Elegant leather binding. Fine endpapers. Placed in original slipcase.
PLEASE NOTE: Item descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Collection of prayer and supplication booklets printed in London in 1938-1947 – prayers for the success of the British Army, prayers for the Jewish people, memorial prayers for Holocaust victims, and more. Hebrew and English.
16 booklets, including:
• The Nazi War, Prayer of Supplication. London, 1940.
• Order of Service on the Day of Fasting Mourning and Prayer for the Victims of Mass Massacres in Nazi Lands. London, 1942. Two copies.
• Memorial Prayer for the Victims of the Mass Massacres of Jews in Nazi-Occupied Lands. London, 1942.
• Pray for the Living! Remember the Dead!, a Passover Message by the Chief Rabbi. London, [1943].
• Order of Service for the National Day of Prayer and Dedication on the Fourth Anniversary of the Outbreak of Hostilities. London, 1943.
16 booklets. Size and condition vary.
PLEASE NOTE: Item descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Printed booklet – Dedication Service of Bad Nauheim Synagogue. [Bad Nauheim, Germany], 24th June 1945. English.
The synagogue on Karlstrasse 29 in the spa town of Bad Nauheim (some 28 km north of Frankfurt am Main) was built by the German-Jewish architect Richard Kauffmann. The synagogue, which was completed in 1929, was one of the last synagogues built in Germany before the rise of the Nazis to power and one of the only ones to survive the Kristallnacht pogroms. Though the synagogue was set on fire, its doors broken and windows smashed, its furniture destroyed and the Torah scrolls and holy books, burned, the building itself was preserved. In the subsequent years, the synagogue served as a municipal warehouse.
On 27th April 1945 (a month after the town was occupied by US troops and two weeks after Germany officially surrendered on 7th May 1945), public prayers were held in the synagogue for the first time since 1938, mostly attended by Jewish soldiers in the US army, alongside a few camp survivors. On 24th June 1945, after it was restored and renovated, an official dedication service was held by the headquarters of the XIX corps of the US army. The service program was printed in the present booklet.
The ceremony was led by Chaplain Samuel Blinder accompanied by cantor Melvin Miller, and was attended by Jewish soldiers serving in the XIX corps.
[1] folded leaf (3 printed pages). 21 cm. Good-fair condition. Folding marks. Brittle paper. Tears, including open tears, to margins and folds, not affecting text. Browned paper. Minor stains.
PLEASE NOTE: Item descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Letter handwritten and signed by Rebbe Ben Tzion Yehuda Leib Twersky of Hornosteipel (Hornostaypil). [Chicago, ca. 1940s].
The letter is addressed to his close acquaintance, the elderly R. Asher [Segal?]. The Rebbe sends condolences upon the passing of his wife and blesses him "may G-d help you come safely to be with us". Most of the letter relates to immigration attempts of Chassidim to the United States (probably WWII refugees).
Rebbe [Ben Tzion] Yehuda Leib Twersky (1867-1951), son of Rebbe Mordechai Dov of Hornosteipel and grandson of the Divrei Chaim of Sanz. A tremendous Torah scholar and Tzaddik, renowned for his great charitability. He succeeded his father as rebbe of Hornosteipel. Escaped to the United States from Belgium just before the Nazi invasion, and established his Beit Midrash in Chicago, where he continued his charitable activities.
[1] leaf, official stationery. 28 cm. Good condition. Stains. Some wear. Ink smudged in a few places. Folding marks. The letter is mounted on fabric for reinforcement.
PLEASE NOTE: Item descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Assorted collection of letters from various rabbis. Hungary and Eretz Israel, ca. 1930s-1940s, most are from the times of the Holocaust:
• Letter handwritten and signed by R. Asher Anshel Katz Rabbi of Duna-Szerdahely (Dunajská Streda), addressed to Rabbi Dr. Yitzchak Eizik Reiner, regarding the rescue of his son-in-law R. Yechiel David Salzer. Av 1943.
• Letter signed by R. Shimon Yisrael Posen Rabbi of Pupa (Pápa), previously rabbi of Sopron. Recommendation for R. Yerachmiel Yaakov Dushinsky Rabbi of Rákospalota. Pápa, 1948.
• Letter handwritten and signed by R. Tzvi Hirsh Katz Rabbi of Derecske, to R. Shmuel Sanvil Kahana head of the Orthodox Bureau in Budapest, request for funding for rescue matters. Derecske, Adar II 1943.
• Postcard with a typewritten letter (unsigned) – announcement from the Kehal Yere'im Beit Din in Budapest that the chametz in yeast factories had not been sold that year, therefore the public should refrain from using this product for 14 days after Passover. Budapest, Chol HaMoed Pesach, Nissan 1940.
• Letter (mimeographed – unsigned), invitation to a rabbinic conference of the Central Committee of the Orthodox Bureau in Hungary. Budapest, Tevet 1942.
• Printed letter completed by hand, from the Chevra Mishnayot of Machzikei Lomdei Torah in Grosswardein (Oradea). Announcement regarding the distribution of the study of the Six Orders of Mishnah. Completed by hand in Kislev 1929.
• Letter from the Relief Committee for Refugee Rabbis (from Russia and other countries), signed by R. Isser Zalman Meltzer and R. Shmuel Kipnis. Jerusalem, Shvat 1946.
7 letters. Size and condition vary.
PLEASE NOTE: Item descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Large collection of rabbinical letters and various documents, for the release of agunot whose husbands were murdered by the Germans in ghettos and extermination camps. Hungary, ca. 1945-1950.
Beit Din rulings, marriage permits and various authorizations, signed by the dayanim of the special Beit Din for Agunot in Budapest (under the Central Bureau for Orthodox Jewry in Hungary): R. Yisrael Welcz, R. Yaakov Segal Leibowitz, R. Yehoshua Lerner Rabbi of Volovets', R. Tzvi Hirsh HaKohen, R. Avraham Eliezer Czitron, R. Chananyah Dov HaKohen and R. Yaakov Snyders.
Letters and testimonies signed by various rabbis in Hungary, Germany and other countries: R. Yechezkel Shraga Lipschitz Halberstam, rabbi of the DP camp in Bamberg, Germany (later rebbe of Stropkov in Jerusalem); R. Chaim Yaakov Rottenberg Rabbi in Antwerp, R. Meir Segal Landau and their Beit Din; R. Ze'ev Wolf Samet dayan and posek of Kleinwardein (Kisvárda) and his Beit Din; R. Moshe Stern dayan and posek of Debrecen; R. Yekutiel Yehuda Heilprin Rabbi of Nanash (Hajdúnánás) and his son R. Ben Tzion Heilprin; R. Yehoshua Lerner (Rabbi of Volovets'); R. Amram HaLevi Jungreis Rabbi of Gyöngyös (Dindish); R. Moshe Natan Schick; R. Yaakov Shraga Heiman of Tokey (Tokaj); R. Menachem Tzvi son of R. Chaim Eliyahu [Neiman, disciple of the Kedushat Yom Tov]; R. Mordechai Grünfeld of Teglash (Téglás) and his Beit Din; R. Moshe Mordechai Pollak Rabbi of Vadkert (Soltvadkert) and his Beit Din; R. Tzvi HaKohen Rabbi of Derecske; R. Naftali Elimelech Grünfeld and his Beit Din in Mátészalka; R. Shlomo Dov Wieder of Niredhaz (Nyíregyháza); R. Simcha Bunem of Ujhel (Sátoraljaújhely) and his Beit Din; R. Yoshe Katz Rabbi of Makova (Makó) and his Beit Din; and more.
One notable letter was to be sent to many rabbis, with the purpose of obtaining a Heter Me'ah Rabbanim. The letter outlines various factors that allow the remarriage of men whose wives disappeared during the war (the letter was written in October 1945 – six months after the end of the war). The letter is signed by 11 rabbis and dayanim: R. Yaakov Segal Leibowitz; R. Avraham Gutenplan Rabbi of Tinnye (author of Keter Kehunah); R. Elazar Shapiro, head of the Beit Din of [Kleinwardein?]; R. Mordechai son of Chaim Yehuda [Hoffman], dayan and posek in Berettyóújfalu; R. Meir Lamet Rabbi of the Tarnów Geulei Tzion community; R. Yaakov Tzvi Katz Rabbi of Soboslo (Hajdúszoboszló; author of Leket HaKemach HaChadash); R. David Gross Rabbi in Tab; R. Tzvi Aryeh Schick Rabbi in Sharvar (Sárvár); R. Yehoshua Lerner Rabbi of Volovets'; R. Yekutiel Tzvi Schick, head of the Miskolc Beit Din; R. Yaakov Tzvi Jungreis Rabbi of Feherd'rmat (Fehérgyarmat).
46 signed letters, some on official stationery and others on regular paper. Seven permits written on verso of photograph of permit recipients. Size and condition vary. Overall good condition.
PLEASE NOTE: Item descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.