Auction 85 - Judaica: Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
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Manuscript, Tiferet Shlomo on the Torah – Books of Bereshit and Shemot, and on the festivals, by R. Shlomo Aharon Auerbach, rabbi and maggid in Boyan (Boiany). [Boyan, ca. 1870s-1880s].
Neat writing, with additions, emendations and deletions (this may be the author's original manuscript). Approximately half the present manuscript remains unpublished: the work on Bereshit and the festivals was published (with many textual differences) by the author in 1891 in Czernowitz, while the work on Shemot is yet unpublished.
There is an additional 7-page composition between the works on Bereshit and Shemot, with wonderous stories about the author's great-grandfather, R. Aryeh Leib Auerbach of Stanislav (disciple of the Baal Shem Tov). To the best of our knowledge, these stories have never been published, and they are not known from any other source.
The author writes about the warmth the Baal Shem Tov showered on his grandfather R. David Tzvi, whom the Baal Shem Tov met in the Brody Kloiz as a 7-year-old orphan (R. David Tzvi was born after a blessing from the Baal Shem Tov, who also served as sandek at his circumcision and gave him his name).
R. Shlomo Aharon Auerbach (1825-1893), leading rabbi in North-Bukovina (presently: Ukraine). Grandson of R. David Tzvi Auerbach Rabbi of Kremenets (ca. 1743-1808, father-in-law of Moharnat – R. Natan of Breslov).
Manuscript lacking beginning, starting with leaf 17 – in the middle of Parashat Lech Lecha (besides one remaining leaf of the preface – torn and detached).
[1], 17-97 leaves; 1-64, [14] leaves. 19.5 cm. Condition varies. Open tears at beginning of volume, to most leaves of Part I (published), affecting text. Part II (unpublished) in good condition. Stains and wear not affecting text. Detached leaves. Without binding.
PLEASE NOTE: Item descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Manuscript, 41 large leaves – Chassidic essays, Aggadic novellae and homiletics on the Torah portions, Neviim and Ketuvim, teachings of the sages and various topics, by R. Moshe Teitelbaum Rabbi of Ujhel (Sátoraljaújhely), author of Yismach Moshe. Written by a scribe, with dozens of glosses and transition sentences handwritten by his grandson and close disciple, Rebbe Yekutiel Yehuda Teitelbaum Rabbi of Sighet – the Yitav Lev. [Gorlitz/Sighet, ca. 1848-1861]. With hundreds of glosses handwritten by Rebbe Moshe David Teitelbaum Rabbi of Laposch (Târgu Lăpuş). [Laposch, 1900s].
Large leaves, written on both sides (two columns per page), copying in preparation for printing from the novellae of the Yismach Moshe. These leaves were in the possession of the Yitav Lev and his grandson and disciple Rebbe Moshe David Teitelbaum. Both of them edited sections of this manuscript and printed them in the Yismach Moshe books which they published. Therefore, these leaves contain their handwritten glosses, notes, additions, emendations and instructions for the printer.
While preparing his grandfather's series of books on the Torah for print, the Yitav Lev selected several sections from the present manuscript and published them in the Yismach Moshe books on the Torah (Lviv, 1848-1861). Rebbe Moshe David later selected other sections from these leaves, and published them in the Yismach Moshe books on Neviim, Ketuvim and teachings of the sages (Sighet, 1906-1908).
Approximately, half the leaves bear glosses of the Yitav Lev (totaling dozens of glosses). The leaves also bear glosses by his grandson Rebbe M.D. Teitelbaum added his glosses (hundreds of glosses).
At least four leaves (marked) contain sections of teachings of the Yismach Moshe which apparently, have never been printed, some with glosses of the Yitav Lev which have never been printed. Other leaves may also contain unpublished sections.
Rebbe Moshe Teitelbaum Rabbi of Ujhel (1759-1841), prominent Chassidic leader in Hungary and Galicia. Outstanding Torah scholar and kabbalist, renowned as a holy man and wonder-worker. Author of the Yismach Moshe series and other books.
Rebbe Yekutiel Yehuda Teitelbaum, the Yitav Lev (1808-1883), close disciple of his grandfather the Yismach Moshe and his successor as rabbi of Ujhel. Later appointed rabbi of Sighet, he opened a large yeshiva and drew thousands of Chassidim seeking his counsel and blessings.
Rebbe Moshe David Teitelbaum (1855-1935), grandson and close disciple of the Yitav Lev of Sighet. Published the works of his ancestors, the Yismach Moshe and the Yitav Lev. Served as rabbi of Laposch from 1882, settling in his final years in the United States, where he served as the Volova Rav.
[41] leaves (80 written leaves). 42 cm. Overall good condition. Stains (including dark stains), tears and wear. Large open tears to a number of leaves (approx. 10), affecting text. Markings and inscriptions in blue ink in the text (presumably indicating sections to be printed).
Throughout his life, the Yismach Moshe composed novellae on all parts of the Torah – Halachah, Aggadah, Derush and Chassidut. He wrote these novellae sporadically, on pieces of paper, rather than in an organized fashion. After his passing, his writings were given to the Yitav Lev, his grandson and disciple, who gave them to a scribe to be copied methodically. After the writings were copied, the Yitav Lev began editing and arranging the novellae according to topics. While he was editing them, he added glosses, introductory and transition sentences, and many sources. From these writings, the Yitav Lev printed the Yismach Moshe series on the Torah portions, in 1848-1861. Later, the Yitav Lev became busy with his rabbinical position, his yeshiva and disseminating Torah to his many disciples, and handed over the rest of the writings to his son-in-law, R. Yisrael Yaakov Yukel Teitelbaum Rabbi of Gorlitz and to his grandson R. Moshe David Teitelbaum Rabbi of Laposch, for them to edit and arrange other works of the Yismach Moshe for print. R. Yisrael Yaakov Yukel Teitelbaum of Gorlitz edited Responsa Heshiv Moshe (Lviv, 1866). R. Moshe David Teitelbaum of Laposch edited Tefillah LeMoshe on Tehillim (Krakow, 1880), and in 1906 and 1908, he compiled and published two new volumes of Yismach Moshe, comprising a compendium of ten small works on Neviim, Ketuvim, Megillot, Aggadot and more.
These leaves were used in the preparation of several books of the Yismach Moshe series, and show the initial stages of editing – prior to the rearrangement according to subjects – bearing the handwritten editing notes of his holy descendants.
PLEASE NOTE: Item descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Letter handwritten and signed by Rebbe Avraham Yehoshua Freund of Năsăud. Rodna (Romania), 1905.
Letter of recommendation for the groom R. Avraham Shmuel Binyamin Shor (Farkash), descendant of the Tevuot Shor and attendant of the rebbe of Deyzh. Appeal for financial assistance for the groom, who was about to travel to Eretz Israel. The rebbe concludes the letter with blessings of "life, sustenance and offspring" for the donors.
[1] leaf. 23 cm. Fair condition. Stains and wear. Folding marks. Tears to margins and folds, affecting text. Tape repairs to folds.
PLEASE NOTE: Item descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Collection of letters and draft letters – descendants of R. Yitzchak Böhm (Chassid) of Karoly (Carei) and of the rebbes of Deyzh:
The collection includes:
• Letter handwritten and signed by R. Elimelech Paneth of Deyzh, to R. Avraham Shmuel Binyamin Farkash of Jerusalem (groom of the granddaughter of R. Yitzchak Böhm). Klausenburg (Cluj-Napoca), 1939.
• Letter handwritten by R. Avraham Shalom Yerucham Friedman (married to the granddaughter of R. Yitzchak Böhm; later rabbi of Turcz), to R. Avraham Yehoshua Freund of Năsăud. Karoly (Carei), [ca. 1903-1905]. The letter is incomplete – only the first leaf (written on both sides) and a small piece of the final leaf, with part of the signature, remain.
• Three draft letters handwritten by the above-mentioned R. Avraham Shmuel Binyamin, to Rebbe Yechezkel Paneth and his brother Rebbe Yitzchak Yechiel Paneth, heads of Kollel Siebenbürgen; 1907-1909.
• Birth certificate issued by Kollel Siebenbürgen in Jerusalem, dated 13th February 1912, for R. Avraham Shmuel Farkash.
• Letter from R. Yechezkel Halperin, a descendant of the Deyzh dynasty, to R. Yaakov Yehuda Farkash (presumably son of R. Avraham Shmuel Binyamin). Șomcuta Mare, [ca. 1930s].
7 items. Size and condition vary.
PLEASE NOTE: Item descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Manuscript, Torah novellae on various Talmudic topics and halachah by the Avnei Nezer – Rebbe Avraham Borenstein of Sochatchov (Sochaczew), recorded by his disciple.
The present copying was made by R. Avraham Abba Fränkel of Shedlitz (Siedlce; 1872-1961), who studied in the Avnei Nezer's yeshiva for two years.
Most of the novellae in the present manuscript were published in Responsa Avnei Nezer and in the book Eglei Tal, and two sections were published in the Beit Avraham anthology (1-3, 1977), based on the present manuscript.
The manuscript also contains several apparently unpublished sections: pp. [47-56]; p. [75], pp. [146-148, 161-163]; pp. [171-175], and more.
This manuscript was scribed before Avnei Nezer and Eglei Tal were published.
A table of contents appears on the final page. Stamps of the writer R. Avraham Abba Fränkel of Shedlitz on the endpaper and other leaves (in Hebrew and Cyrillic characters). Late handwritten inscriptions, with corrections, sources and notes as to where some sections were printed.
Over 100 written pages (and many blank leaves). 31.5 cm. Fair condition. Stains. Wear, tears and worming, affecting text in several places. Detached leaves. Original leather binding, damaged, detached and without spine.
PLEASE NOTE: Item descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Two postcards, handwritten and signed by Rebbe Aharon Moshe Leifer of Nadvorna. Zolin (Żołynia), 1913 and 1914.
Addressed to R. Iser Kris of Kolomyia, with detailed instructions on the distribution of Eretz Israel funds in Safed and Meron.
R. Aharon Moshe Leifer (ca. 1855 – Cheshvan 1925), son of R. Mordechai of Nadvorna, descendant of R. Meir of Premishlan. Served as rebbe in Zolin and later, Łańcut. He often fasted from Shabbat to Shabbat and was renowned for his awe-inspiring wonders.
Two postcards. 14X9 cm. Written on both sides. Good condition. Stains. Postmarks.
PLEASE NOTE: Item descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Letter with signatures of prominent rabbis and rebbes in Jerusalem – a call to donate to the Tomche Achim mutual aid society, which provided assistance to the ill and lent medical equipment. Jerusalem, [ca. 1945].
The rabbis announce that Mrs. Chaya Esther Perlmutter volunteered to collect donations in Brooklyn for the Tomche Achim society and urge to donate money and equipment.
Typewritten letter, with signatures and stamps of prominent Jerusalem rabbis and Torah scholars (16 signatures and 18 stamps):
R. "Mordechai Rokeach son of the Belzer Rebbe" (father of the present Belzer Rebbe, known as the "Bilgoray Rav", immigrated to Eretz Israel in 1944 and died 1949); R. Akiva Sofer rabbi of Pressburg; R. Isser Zalman Meltzer "Rabbi of Slutsk, dean of the Etz Chaim Yeshiva"; R. Zalman Sorotzkin rabbi of Lutzk; R. Shmuel Weingart "formerly rabbi of Plauen, Germany"; R. Baruch Abba Rakovsky "Rabbi of Even Yisrael and Ezrat Yisrael neighborhoods and their surroundings"; R. Yitzchak Yaakov Wachtfogel "Rabbi in Me'ah She'arim"; R. Yosef Gershon Horowitz "Posek in Jerusalem… Dean of the Me'ah She'arim Yeshiva"; R. Moshe Chaskin "Rabbi of Pryluky, formerly in Krekenava"; R. Shmuel HaLevi Wosner (at that time, served as posek of the Geula – Even Yisrael neighborhood); R. Yitzchak Arieli "Rabbi of the Knesset Yisrael neighborhood and its surroundings… founder and dean of the Mercaz HaRav Yeshiva, author of Einayim LaMishpat"; Rebbe Yosef Meir Kahane of Spinka "formerly rabbi of Seredně"; R. Eliyahu Re'em "Dayan and posek in Jerusalem"; R. Chaim Yehuda Leib Auerbach "Dean of the Shaar HaShamayim Yeshiva"; R. Aharon Yaakov Klapfish "Rabbi of Śniadowo and now in Jerusalem"; R. Yaakov Moshe Charlap.
Stamps without signatures, of R. Shimshon Aharon Polonsky "Rabbi and posek of the Beit Yisrael neighborhood", and of the "Beit Din Tzedek of the Sephardi community in Jerusalem".
[1] leaf, official stationery. 32.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains and wear. Open tears. Folding marks.
PLEASE NOTE: Item descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Gefen Yechidit, on matters pertaining to ethics and fear of Heaven, by R. Ze'ev Wolf Walldürn, with Luach HaChaim – brief health guidelines. Hanau, [1717].
Miniature format. Both works are rhymed.
Gefen Yechidit includes several poems by the author, including a lamentation for those murdered and taken captive in Podolia, 1676 or 1677. The persecutions documented in this lamentation are not known from any other source, see: Sefer Podhajce, pp. 24-25.
36 leaves. 11 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains and wear. Old binding.
PLEASE NOTE: Item descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Babylonian Talmud, Tractate Sanhedrin and Tractate Shavuot, with the classic commentators. Vilna: Widow and Brothers Romm, 1887.
Lengthy inscription in pencil on the front endpaper, in which the owner of this Talmud volume, a Jew from Czernowitz, describes the trials and tribulations he endured during WWI, beginning from his expulsion from Czernowitz, Bukovina far into Russia, his arrest, the danger he was in, the fellow Jewish exiles he met, and more. The inscription concludes with a list of the tractates he studied during his wanderings. The present tractates – Sanhedrin and Shavuot, were studied upon his return to Czernowitz in 1917.
Other inscriptions on the front endpapers.
124; 32; 50; 24; 60; 5; 8; 33; 18; 5 leaves. 40 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains. Tears to several leaves. Worming. Original leather binding, damaged.
Torah Study Under Perilous Conditions – During Expulsion and Imprisonment in WWI
The present Talmud volume contains a unique historic documentation from WWI, first hand testimony of a Jew from Czernowitz who was arrested, presumably during the Russian conquest, in the village of Prilipcze, Bukovina, in Adar 1915, and deported deep into Russia. He describes the difficulties he endured, including arrest and even danger of death. Eventually he was brought to Penza, Russia, where he was released. In Penza, he met some six hundred Jews who had also been exiled from Bukovina and Galicia. He stayed there for over a year, until he was granted permission to return to Czernowitz, which he reached in Kislev 1916. He found it conquered, empty of its inhabitants and ransacked. His sons and daughters were not there anymore, and he remained there alone. Throughout this difficult period, the author studied and completed eight tractates, including one which he studied in prison in Surazh (Chernihiv Oblast, Russia), as he records at the end of his inscription.
PLEASE NOTE: Item descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Printed booklet, "Or Gadol LaYehudim" / Beschryving van alle plechtigheeden, vreugde-gezangen, en gebeeden, verricht in de Portuguese Joodse Synagogue – account of the visit of William V, Prince of Orange, and his wife, Princess Wilhelmina of Prussia, to the Portuguese synagogue in Amsterdam. Amsterdam: Gerhard Johan Janson & Israel Mondovy, [1768]. Hebrew, Dutch and Portuguese.
Account of the visit (printed in Portuguese and Dutch), with the prayers read during the ceremony (printed in Hebrew and Dutch) and a long blessing by R. Shlomo Shalem, Sephardic Chief Rabbi of Amsterdam.
[4], 6-31 pages 25.5 cm. Wide margins. Good condition. Stains. Loose gatherings. Original card binding, with damage; front board detached.
PLEASE NOTE: Item descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Printed proclamation, announcement of the fundraising campaign for the community's charity fund, to be read out in the synagogues on Shabbat, Parashat Vayehi 1801. Amsterdam: Widow of Yosef Proops Katz, [Tevet] 1801.
An appeal to all community members to donate to the communal charity fund, to finance its various projects (distributing money to the poor, supporting the sick and burying the dead).
[1] leaf (printed on one side). 39 cm. Good condition. Stains and creases. Folding marks.
PLEASE NOTE: Item descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.
Derush Hesped, printed booklet – eulogy for Empress Maria Theresa, by R. Yechezkel Landau Rabbi of Prague, author of Noda BiYehuda. Prague, [1780].
As stated on the title page, the Noda BiYehuda delivered this eulogy two weeks after the death of Empress Maria Theresa, at the Maisel Synagogue in Prague. The eulogy highly praises the empress, although she was known for her hatred of Jews and caused great suffering to the Jews of Prague. At the same time, it praises her son and successor, Emperor Joseph II, expressing joy upon the commencement of his reign. For further information, see: Marc Saperstein, 'Your Voice Like a Ram's Horn': Themes and Texts in Traditional Jewish Preaching, Cincinnatti 1996, pp. 445-484.
6 leaves. 16 cm. Fair condition. Stains, dampstains and traces of mold. Wear. Worming, not affecting text. Abrasions to title page, affecting imprint. Deleted stamp on last page. Inscriptions. Leaves partially detached.
PLEASE NOTE: Item descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to Hebrew text.