Auction 24 The 'RESERVE' sale! Rare and special items!
By Rarity Auction House
May 1, 2023
17 Perlman Dr. Suite 204 Spring Valley NY 10977, United States

Complete issue 13 pages "Dini Sfek Sfika" in the author's handwriting - The "Arvei Nachall"


There is nothing like it! The Shlachan Aruch of Hagaon Harav Efraim Zalman Margalios with more than 200 handwritten glosses


Holiness and majesty! For the first time on Auctions! Chomash and Siddur that belonged to Rabbi Yitzchak Tovia Rubin of Sanz, the son-in-law of Rabbi Chaim of Sanz


Extremely Historic! Long letter in the original handwriting and Signed of Rabbi Mordechai Benet - Adar 1826 Niklesburg - about the appointment of a rabbi


A three-page letter from Rabbi Chaim of Liska on behalf of his father-in-law Rabbi Zvi Hirsch of Liska to Rabbi Shlomo Gantzfried - to justify the opinion of Rabbi Yitzchak Isaac of Kamerna 


Talmud Tractate Sotah - Historic Edition Lublin 1619 - Extremely Rare


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LOT 194:

A long letter from Rabbi Shalom Moshe Halevi Ungar, Rabbi of Neitra, to Rabbi Shaya Gross of Kerestir on the ...

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Sold for: $320
Start price:
$ 300
Buyer's Premium: 25%
Auction took place on May 1, 2023 at Rarity Auction House
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A long letter from Rabbi Shalom Moshe Halevi Ungar, Rabbi of Neitra, to Rabbi Shaya Gross of Kerestir on the occasion of becoming Admor of Kerestir


Rabbi Shalom Moshe Ungar of Nitra (1916-2003) was a talmudist and a Holocaust rescue worker in Slovakia. He was a descendent of the Abarbanel (who was himself a descendent of King David). He was born in Krumpach, Slovakia. In 1941 and married the daughter of Rabbi Simcha Greenberg, an ardent Munkatcher chasid. Supported by his father-in-law, Rabbi Shalom Moshe studied Talmud with his brother-in-law, Rav Meir Greenberg, later to become the Kezmarker Rebbe of New York. Rabbi Shalom Moshe worked with another brother-in-law, Rabbi Michoel Ber Weissmandl, in rescue operations during World War II. Deportations from Nitra began in Elul of 1944. The Nitra yeshiva (of 200 students) was the last yeshiva in Europe to remain open and was liquidated on the 17th of Elul. Hiding in the forest for the remainder of the War, Rabbi Shalom Moshe lost his father, his wife, and his three children. In 1947, he was officially named Rabbi of Nitra. In 1948, the Nitra kehilla was re-established in Mount Kisco, Westchester County, NY.



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