Auction 97 Part 2 Rare and Important Items
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Letter on postcard (about sixteen lines), handwritten and signed by Rebbe Meir Rosenbaum. Kretshnif (Crăciunești), [Sivan] 1905.
Sent to his son R. Itamar of Nadvorna, who was living at the time in Czernowitz (Chernivtsi). The letter contains many blessings and a report on the health condition of his mother who had undergone an eye surgery: "With the help of God… life and peace and all good forever, and good success and help of heaven in all matters, for my dear son… R. Itamar". The Rebbe tells of the telegram he received on the success of the surgery, on the hope for her complete recovery, and he asks the son to pray and act for his mother's recovery: "…But we still need much mercy for it to be totally good… Therefore it is your duty, my son, to honor your father and mother, to ask for mercy from our merciful Father, for His mercy and kindness to manifest in the complete recovery of your mother, may she soon come home with her sense of sight intact… to arouse mercy for your mother for her complete recovery from heaven… From me, your father, hoping to hear and deliver good tidings, salvations and healings. Meir Rosenbaum".
Rebbe Meir Rosenbaum of Kretshnif (1852-1908), son of Rebbe Mordechai Leifer of Nadvorna and son-in-law of R. Yechiel of Dorohoi (grandson of R. Chaim of Czernowitz, author of Be'er Mayim Chaim). Served as Rebbe of Jassy in his father's lifetime, and moved to Kretshnif (Crăciunești, near Sighetu Marmației). Many Chassidim were drawn to his presence. He was celebrated for the many wonders he performed and was the only son permitted by his father to write amulets. His sons were: Rebbe Eliezer Ze'ev of Kretshnif, Rebbe Itamar of Nadvorna, Rebbe Yaakov Yissachar Ber of Solotvyno and Rebbe Mordechai of Rachów.
His son, the recipient of the letter, Rebbe Itamar of Nadvorna (1886-1973, Encyclopedia LaChassidut I, pp. 212-213), son-in-law of R. Asher Yeshayah of Kolbasov (Ropshitz). Already in his youth in 1901 (during his father's lifetime) he was appointed rebbe in Czernowitz (Chernivtsi), and later succeeded his father as rebbe in Kretshnif (Crăciunești). He survived the Holocaust and immigrated to the United States in 1947. He immigrated to Israel in 1969 and established his court in Tel Aviv, where many Chassidim visited him to receive a blessing in person. At the end of his life, he was considered the eldest Nadvorna rebbe in Eretz Israel. His sons include Rebbe Chaim Mordechai of Nadvorna, Rebbe Yitzchak Eizik of Zutshka, Rebbe Asher Yeshayah of Nadvorna-Hadera, and more.
[1] postcard. Approx. 14X9 cm. Good-fair condition. Dark stains and wear.
Letter handwritten and signed by Rebbe Aharon Rokeach of Belz. [Belz, ca. fall 1927].
Letter on public affairs sent to his relative in Vienna, Rebbe Yisrael Friedman of Chortkov. Most of the letter is in scribal writing, in the margins of which the Rebbe concludes in his handwriting (about two and a half lines in a different ink): "the words of his relative who writes for the strengthening of the holy Torah and seeks the welfare of his holy excellency with love, Aharon of Belz".
The main text of the letter deals with the need for the Orthodox community to organize for the elections to the Polish community councils, and the Rebbe calls for an assembly of rabbis on the topic.
"With the help of God, Belz.
Much blessing and all good forever to my relative… R. Yisrael.
After seeking the welfare of his holy excellency, his letter reached me. Now as to elections for the communities, while some see some good sides, there are other matters in the decree that relate to the very destruction of Torah religion, God forbid, such as the questions for electing rabbis, and more. Therefore, we are compelled to have an assembly of rabbis in order to come up with a plan for this. And there is a good chance that an organization of rabbis could facilitate acting for the good of our fellow Jews in all matters. Therefore, we ask of my relative to please, for the sake of Torah religion, write to our fellow rabbis to gather on a specific date together with us, and to join us in one group. And due to the great urgency of the matters, it is necessary for his holy letter to be as soon as possible, and may God complete this for our good…".
The present letter, written early on in Rebbe Aharon Rokeach's tenure as Rebbe of Belz (succeeding his father who passed away in Cheshvan 1926), demonstrates the Belzer Rebbe's high status in the leadership of Orthodox Jewry in Poland. R. Aharon addresses the Rebbe of Chortkov, who was one of the greatest Orthodox leaders and president of the Moetzet Gedolei HaTorah, and expresses a clear, new opinion about the law instating elections for the Jewish community councils, directs his attention to the concerns involved in the new law, and calls for an assembly of rabbis for communal preparation for these elections.
Background to the Letter
After World War I, the Polish government offered their country's Jews an option to establish official, organized communities (a right that they had been deprived of by the Russian tsar in 1844). The decree to establish the communities was made by the Polish government in the years 1927-1928, and people across the cities began to prepare for the elections for leadership of communities. While the Jewish public initially rejoiced, the Rebbe of Belz penetratingly noticed the danger of the destruction of the rabbinic office and observance of religion which was liable to arise from giving the various parties the power of leading the communities.
Rebbe Aharon Rokeach of Belz (1880-1957) was renowned as a miracle worker and a holy man, earning the epithet "Aharon, the holy one of God". A foremost rebbe and leader of European Jewry before the Holocaust, he also rebuilt Torah and Chassidut after the war. He was the son of Rebbe Yissachar Dov (Maharid) of Belz and grandson of Rebbe Yehoshua of Belz. From a young age, he was known for his great holiness and toil in Torah and Chassidut, together with his outstanding asceticism. He earned the reputation of a wonderworker benefiting from Divine Inspiration, and he encouraged the tens of thousands of Jews who flocked his court to seek blessings, advice and salvation.
He was appointed rebbe of the Belz Chassidut in 1927 and became one of the foremost leaders of Eastern European Jewry. As a worldwide Jewish leader, he was especially targeted by the Nazis during the Holocaust. His followers smuggled him from ghetto to ghetto, until he miraculously managed to escape to Budapest, Hungary, where he remained for a short period, until the Nazis demanded his extradition. From there he was smuggled to Eretz Israel on a difficult journey that spanned Romania, Bulgaria, Greece, Turkey and Syria. His wife, children, grandchildren and entire extended family were killed by the Nazis, and he arrived in Eretz Israel accompanied only by his brother, R. Mordechai of Biłgoraj (who also lost his entire family, his only remnant being his son, Rebbe Yissachar Dov, current Belzer Rebbe, born of his second marriage in Eretz Israel). Rebbe Aharon of Belz settled in Tel Aviv, where he worked to encourage the survivors. Together with his brother R. Mordechai of Biłgoraj, he reestablished Belz Chassidut institutions in Eretz Israel and around the world – in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Bnei Brak and elsewhere.
The recipient of the letter, Rebbe Yisrael Friedman of Chortkov (1854-1933), prominent leader of Orthodox Jewry in the generation preceding the Holocaust. He was a founder of Agudat Yisrael and president of Moetzet Gedolei HaTorah. Son of R. David Moshe of Chortkov and son-in-law of R. Avraham Yaakov of Sadigura (sons of Rebbe Yisrael of Ruzhin), he was an important Ruzhin rebbe. In World War I his court in Chortkov, Galicia was destroyed, and he moved to Vienna. His thousands of followers included many Torah leaders such as R. Meir Shapiro of Lublin (who founded the Chachmei Lublin yeshiva at his behest), R. Meir Arik and R. Avraham Menachem Steinberg of Brody.
One leaf, approx. 22 cm. Good condition. Stains and folds.
This letter was published (with a photocopy) in Heichal HaBesht (XI, Tamuz 2005, pp. 77-78), based on the present item, which was previously in the possession of R. Mordechai Harlig, attendant of the Rebbe of Chortkov.
Handwritten letters by Rebbe Aharon of Belz are exceptionally Rare. The present letter is especially unique in that he adds more than two lines of his handwriting, in addition to the important content documenting his involvement and lofty status in leading Orthodox Jewry in Poland (on the assembly of rabbis initiated by the Rebbe of Belz in 1928, see further: Admorei Belz, IV, pp. 225-226).
Marriage certificate printed by the "city council of the Ashkenazi community in Jerusalem", filled in by hand with details of a wedding held in Elul 1937, with the signature of the officiating rabbi, the Rebbe of Oshpitzin, "Elazar HaLevi Rosenfeld", son-in-law of the Divrei Chaim, the first Rebbe of Sanz.
Rebbe Elazar HaLevi Rosenfeld of Oshpitzin (Oświęcim; 1862-1943), youngest son-in-law of the Divrei Chaim of Sanz and son of Rebbe Yehoshua of Kaminka (son of Rebbe Shalom of Kaminka). Peer and student of his brother-in-law's son, Rebbe Shlomo Halberstam (the first) of Bobov. Rabbi in Bochnia from 1885. Succeeded his father as rebbe in Kaminka in 1897, and in 1907 moved to serve as rabbi and rebbe in Oświęcim (Auschwitz), after which he is known as the Rebbe of Oshpitzin. He immigrated to Eretz Israel in 1936, establishing his Beit Midrash in Jerusalem (the Oshpitzin Beit Midrash exists to this day on Chesed LeAvraham St., near Mea Shearim), yet he returned to Poland just before the outbreak of World War II, and perished in the Sosnowiec ghetto.
[1] leaf. 25.5 cm. Good condition. Creases and filing holes.
Invitation from R. Yosef Yitzchak Schneerson, the Rebbe Rayatz of Lubavitch, to the wedding of his daughter Rebbetzin Chayah Mushka and the bridegroom R. Menachem Mendel Schneerson (later the Lubavitcher Rebbe). Riga: Splendid, [1928]. Printed invitation, in purple ink.
The wedding of R. Menachem Mendel Schneerson, eldest son of R. Levi Yitzchak Schneerson, Rabbi of Yekaterinoslav (Dnipro), with Rebbetzin Chayah Mushka, second daughter of the Rebbe Rayatz of Lubavitch, was held in the courtyard of the Tomchei Temimim yeshiva in Warsaw, Poland, on 14th Kislev 1928. The bride's father, the Rebbe Rayatz, sent out fourteen different invitations. The invitations differed from each other in form, style and content, corresponding to different types of guests and different places of residence. An additional invitation was printed by the bride's mother, Rebbetzin Nechamah Dinah, and sent only to her friends and acquaintances; another invitation was sent by the bridegroom's parents, R. Levi Yitzchak Schneerson and his wife Rebbetzin Chanah, who were unable to attend their son's wedding in Warsaw and celebrated in Yekaterinoslav.
The present item is a rare invitation sent to Chabad Chassidim who were unable to attend the wedding. For their sake the Rebbe Rayatz added the request in the third paragraph: "Let them rejoice together with us even from afar". At the bottom of the invitation is printed an address for sending telegrams to the Rebbe Rayatz in Warsaw.
[1] leaf. 24 cm. Fair-good condition. Folding marks and creases. Dark stains. Open tears (coarse tear to upper part of leaf, slightly affecting the word at the top of the invitation: "With the help of G-d").
Rare. This invitation has never been offered for auction.
