Auction 90 Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Letters, Ceremonial Art
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Appeal for the yeshiva soup kitchen, addressed to the philanthropist R. Aharon Farkash. Official stationery, with a group picture of the yeshiva students at the top. Written by a scribe, with the signature and stamp of the rebbe at the end of the letter (on verso).
Rebbe Menachem Mendel Hager of Visheve (1885-1941), son of the Ahavat Yisrael of Vizhnitz. Served as rabbi of Vizhnitz, and later of Visheve, where he founded the Beit Yisrael yeshiva. A leader of Agudath Yisrael and member of the Moetzet Gedolei HaTorah.
[1] leaf, official stationery. 30.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Minor stains. Wear and folding marks, with minor tears to folds.
PLEASE NOTE: Item description was shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Lengthy letter (2 pages) addressed to the philanthropist R. Aharon Farkash, from the gabbaim of the Vizhnitz Beit Midrash in Grosswardein, asking for his assistance in fundraising for a new building for the Beit Midrash. The funds would be raised by selling letters in a Sefer Torah to be written and dedicated to the Beit Midrash.
This historic letter was photographed and published in the Vizhnitz journal Kesher Etan, Kislev-Tevet 2016, p. 9 (issue enclosed).
Rebbe Chaim Meir Hager, the Imrei Chaim of Vizhnitz (1888-1972), second son and successor of the Ahavat Yisrael of Vizhnitz. During WWI, he fled with his father to Grosswardein, where he assisted his father in leading the Vizhnitz Chassidic court. Rebuilt the Vizhnitz Chassidut in Eretz Israel after the Holocaust.
[1] double leaf (2 written pages). 23.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains and wear. Folding marks. Tears in several places, repaired in part with tape on verso.
PLEASE NOTE: Item description was shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Written in the lifetime of his father, the Imrei Chaim, in response to a letter of congratulations he received upon his appointment as rabbi of the Vizhnitz community in Bnei Brak, alongside his father. Concludes with blessings for the recipient, who appears to have also been appointed as rabbi or leader of a community.
[1] leaf. 15.5 cm. Approx. 17 autograph lines. Good condition. Folding marks. Top of leaf, presumably with name of recipient, cut away.
PLEASE NOTE: Item description was shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
• Aerogram with letter handwritten and signed by Rebbe Yehuda Horowitz of Dzikov. [Jerusalem, ca. 1950s-1960s]. Many blessings, including good year wishes.
• Letter handwritten and signed by Rebbe Avraham Yehoshua Heshel Twersky of Machnovka. [Bnei Brak, Elul 1950s-1970s]. Blessings for a complete recovery and a good year. Additional letter handwritten by the Rebbetzin at the foot of the leaf.
• Letter of wedding congratulations, handwritten and signed by R. Moshe Neuschloss, rabbi of New Square. [New Square, NY], Cheshvan 1968.
• Lengthy letter handwritten and signed by R. Elchanan Halpern, a rabbi of Golders Green. London, 1950. Brief halachic responsa on various topics.
• Letter handwritten and signed by Rebbe Eliezer Hager of Seret-Vizhnitz. Haifa, Elul 1971. Good year wishes.
5 letters. Size and condition vary. Overall good condition.
PLEASE NOTE: Item description was shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
• Greeting cards from rebbes, including: Rebbe Chanoch Henich Twersky of Radomysl-Malin, Chicago; Rebbe Nachman Kahana of Spinka, Bnei Brak; Rebbe Chananya Yom Tov Lipa Deutsch of Helmetz, New York; and others.
• Greeting cards from rabbis in the U.S. and elsewhere, including: R. Eliezer Silver, Springfield Massachusetts. (U.S.); R. Moshe Stern, rabbi of Debrecen and Neuhäusel, Brooklyn NY; R. Y.L. Gurwitz, Melbourne (Australia); and others.
• Greeting cards from rabbis in Eretz Israel, including: R. Zalman Sorotzkin Rabbi of Lutsk, Jerusalem; R. Yisrael Moshe Dushinsky (greeting on a Shanah Tovah card of his father R. Yosef Tzvi Dushinsky, Jerusalem); R. Shlomo Zalman Auerbach, Shaarei Chesed, Jerusalem; R. Natan Gestetner, Bnei Brak; R. Yehoshua Zelig Diskin, [Pardes Hanna]; and others.
• Card from Yeshivat Merkaz HaRav, with printed greetings and picture of R. Avraham Yitzchak HaKohen Kook. Stamp over picture stating his passing.
• Shanah Tovah postcard, with picture of R. Aharon Shmuel Aszód Rabbi of Dunaszerdahely [Hungary, after 1905].
• And more.
See Hebrew description for more details.
Approx. 85 items. Size and condition vary. Some envelopes enclosed.
Provenance: Collection of Dr. Haim Grossman.
PLEASE NOTE: Item description was shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Halachic responsum on laws of marriage, addressed to a R. Yehuda (presumably of Briceva, Moldova).
At the conclusion of the responsum, R. Yehuda Leibush Landau mentions his preoccupation with the printing of his books, and relates to the recipient's rabbinic salary.
R. Yehuda Leibush Landau (1823-1900), a Galician Torah scholar and leading halachic authority. Appointed at the initiative of Rebbe Avraham Yaakov of Sadigura as rabbi of Sadigura and the region. His Yad Yehuda series on Shulchan Aruch Yoreh De'ah became a classic work for the study of Shulchan Aruch until this day.
[1] leaf (written on both sides) + envelope with handwritten inscription. Approx. 21 cm. Fair condition. Wear. Tears, slightly affecting text (repaired in part). Folding marks.
PLEASE NOTE: Item description was shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Letter of Torah thoughts on various topics, sent to R. Gershon Litsch-Rosenbaum in Pressburg.
To the best of our knowledge, the present letter was not published, thought later correspondence between them from Sivan 1862 was published in Responsa R. Azriel Hildesheimer and in the Tzohar Torah anthology.
R. Azriel Hildesheimer (1820-1899), a leader in his times, disciple of the Aruch LaNer and of R. Yitzchak Bernays of Hamburg. He served as rabbi of Eisenstadt and later Berlin, where he established the Rabbinical seminary, standing at the helm of Orthodox Jewry in Germany.
The recipient of the letter, R. Gershon Segal Litsch-Rosenbaum (1837-1901), was a disciple of the Ketav Sofer and R. Yehuda Aszód. Rabbi of Tállya for over thirty years.
[1] double leaf (one and a half written pages). 23.5 cm. Thin, bluish paper. Good-fair condition. Stains. Folding marks. Wear and tears.
PLEASE NOTE: Item description was shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Seven handwritten documents, in German and in Hungarian, with signatures (in Latin characters) and stamps (some in Hebrew) of the following rabbis: R. Nathan Binyamin Liber head of the Pressburg Beit Din, R. Menachem Eisenstadt Rabbi of Ungvar, R. Mayer Abelis Rabbi of Kittsee and R. Yaakov Shalom Freyer Rabbi of Raab (Győr):
• Marriage certificate, signed in German by R. Nathan Wolf Liber (1805-1881), alongside the stamp of R. Avraham Shmuel Binyamin Sofer, the Ktav Sofer: "S.W. Schreiber Oberabbiner in Pressburg". [Pressburg], 1871.
• Official document signed in German by R. Menachem Eisenstadt (1808-1870), with his wax seal. [Ungvar], 1862.
• Two official documents signed in German by R. Mayer Abelis (1806-1887), with his wax seals (one damaged). One of the documents also bears the wax seal of the Kittsee community, with other signatures. [Kittsee], 1857-1860.
• Three official documents signed in German by R. Yaakov Shalom Freyer, with his wax seals (in Hebrew and German). [Raab], 1855-1856.
• Enclosed: document (a double leaf) with two marriage certificates of Jewish soldiers, from the headquarters of the Austrian army and the military rabbinate (mentioning also the Vienna rabbinate). [Milano], 1857.
[8] leaves. Approx. 31 cm. Overall good condition. Stains. Folding marks.
PLEASE NOTE: Item description was shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Letter pertaining to an agunah, addressed to R. Efraim Fishel Sofer Sussman, head of the Pest Beit Din (1867-1942). The letter describes a testimony received from someone who witnessed the husband being injured and dying during WWI. R. Yeshaya discusses the validity of the testimony and of the witness, and raises several points in favor of permitting the woman to remarry.
R. Yeshaya Silberstein (1857-1930) author of Maasai LeMelech and foremost Hungarian rabbi. He studied in Pressburg under the Ktav Sofer. He served as rabbi of Waitzen (Vác, Hungary), where he established a large yeshiva numbering hundreds of students, many of whom later held rabbinic and Torah positions.
[1] leaf (two written pages). 33.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Tear to upper part of leaf, slightly affecting text, repaired with paper. Folding marks. Inscriptions and stamps. New leather binding.
PLEASE NOTE: Item description was shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Written on the official stationery of the directorate of Kollel Shomrei HaChomot in Bratislava. The letter discusses various matters pertaining to the management of Kollel Shomrei HaChomot, and is addressed to R. Yosef Chaim Sonnenfeld in Jerusalem.
R. Akiva Sofer (1878-1960), author of Daat Sofer, grandson of the Ketav Sofer. Served as rabbi and dean of Pressburg for 33 years, and later reestablished his yeshiva and community in Jerusalem.
[1] leaf (written on both sides), official stationery. 29 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains. Folding marks. Filing holes, slightly affecting text.
PLEASE NOTE: Item description was shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Response to various points raised by the student R. Avraham Shmuel Binyamin Sofer of Erloi on his book Maharam Brisk part I (printed in 1939).
R. Mordechai Brisk – Maharam Brisk (1886-1944; perished in the Holocaust), leading Hungarian Torah scholar and prominent Torah disseminator. Posek in Margareten and later rabbi of Tasnad, where he established his famous yeshiva and taught his thousands of disciples.
The recipient of the letter, R. Avraham Shmuel Binyamin Sofer (1922-1948), eldest son of R. Moshe Sofer of Erloi the Yad Sofer, and brother of R. Yochanan Sofer of Erloi. An outstanding, brilliant Torah scholar. He exchanged halachic correspondence with the leading Torah scholars of his times, who held him in high esteem. He authored Responsa Divrei Sofer.
[1] double leaf (2 and a half written pages), official stationery. 34 cm. Good condition. Minor stains. Folding marks.
PLEASE NOTE: Item description was shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Archive of Rabbi Dr. Heinrich (Chaim) Brody (grandson of R. Shlomo Ganzfried author of Shulchan Aruch), chief rabbi of Prague – including many letters from his father R. Shlomo Zalman Brody dayan in Ungvar (Uzhhorod); letters from rabbis, writers and intellectuals of the Chochmat Yisrael movement; photographs; certificates and other documents. Ungvar, Berlin, Náchod, Prague and other places, [ca. late 19th to mid-20th century]. Hebrew, Yiddish, Hungarian and German.
The archive includes:
• Close to 200 letters from his father R. Shlomo Zalman Brody (dayan in Ungvar, son-in-law of R. Shlomo Ganzfried). Most the letters were sent from Ungvar to Prague (a few to Berlin and Náchod), in the 1890s-1910s. With letters from his mother Rachel (daughter of R. Shlomo Ganzfried) and other family members. Ink stamps of R. Shlomo Zalman on some letters. Some original envelopes enclosed. Approx. 130 letters are written on postcards (mostly undivided postcards), and 15 letters are written on stubs of postal forms.
• Handwritten booklets and leaves (presumably in the hand of R. Heinrich Brody) – sermons and Torah novellae.
• Close to 50 letters from rabbis, dayanim, poskim and Torah scholars, such as R. Simcha HaLevi Bamberger Rabbi of Wandsbek; R. Leib Rubinstein dayan of Pressburg; R. Yisrael Brody, dayan of Michalovce, author of Ishei Yisrael; R. Chaim David Brandeis Rabbi of Istrik (Galicia); his uncle R. Binyamin Posen of Frankfurt am Main (publisher of Or Zarua); and more.
• Close to 100 letters from various friends, researchers, writers and scholars from the Chochmat Yisrael movement, including: Salomon Buber; Achad HaAm – Asher Zvi Ginsberg (four letters); Avraham Kahana; Isidore Goldblum (Yafaz; Perach Zahav); Samuel Benjamin Schwarzberg of New York; Shaul Pinchas Rabinovich (Shefer); Dr. Shlomo Mandelkern, author of the Heichal HaKodesh Biblical Concordance; and many dozens more letters (Hebrew, German and Hungarian) to R. Heinrich Brody and his family.
• Some 90 photographs documenting R. Heinrich Brody and his family during various periods of their life, together with acquaintances and members of the community. Some with photographers' and studio stamps.
• Items from WWI, including: ration cards; postcards with military stamps and various letters; postcards with portraits of senior commanders in the Austro-Hungarian army; and more.
• Certificates, paper items, invitations and various documents, belonging to R. Heinrich Brody and his family, including: three official certificates from the Austro-Hungarian Empire – Order of the Iron Crown awarded to R. Heinrich Brody (Vienna, 30th August 1917).
• Bookplate of R. Heinrich Brody, produced by Hermann Struck (28 copies), and bookplates of his son Yisrael Brody.
• Wooden stamp of R. Heinrich Brody (Latin characters). • Various ephemera items, mostly from the archive of his son R. Yisrael Brody.
• And more.
Rabbi Dr. Heinrich (Chaim) Brody (1868-1942), chief rabbi of Prague. Born in Ungvar, where he was raised by his father R. Shlomo Zalman Brody, and his grandfather R. Shlomo Ganzfried, both dayanim in the city. He studied in the Pressburg yeshiva, and later in R. Hildesheimer's rabbinical seminary in Berlin. Served as rabbi of Náchod, later succeeding his father-in-law R. Nathan Ehrenfeld as chief rabbi of Prague. He specialized in the study of manuscripts from the Rishonim, and was known as one of the most prominent researchers of Spanish Jewry's medieval poetry. An enthusiastic Zionist activist, and president of the Mizrachi in Czechoslovakia. Immigrated to Jerusalem in 1934, where he directed Salman Schocken's Institute for the Research of Hebrew Poetry.
His father, R. Shomo Zalman Brody (1839-1917), dayan and posek in his hometown of Ungvar, successor of his father-in-law R. Shlomo Ganzfried. Some of his novellae was published at the end of his father-in-law's book Ohalei Shem.
Approx. 1000 items. Size and condition vary.
PLEASE NOTE: Item description was shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.