Auction 11 Historic Sale! Rare Sefurim and Unique Rabinical Letters
By Rarity Auction House
Nov 1, 2021
17 Perlman Dr. Suite 204 Spring Valley NY 10977, United States

Mighty and powerful! one of a kind! Shem Hagdolim with a personal dedication in the holy handwriting of the Hida to his eldest son Rabbi Raphael Yeshaya Azulai!


כוס של ברכה ממטבעות שמירה של הצדיקים הקדושים מסאטמאר פשעווארסק סקולען רבי משה אריה פריינד ועוד


Full Letter Handwritten and Signed by Reb Arele Roth of Shomer Emunim


Manuscript from the Compositions of the Yismach Moshe - With Glosses Handwritten by Rebbe Yekutiel Yehuda Teitelbaum Rabbi of Sighet, Author of Yitav Lev, and Glosses by Rebbe Moshe David Teitelbaum Rabbi of Laposch


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LOT 77:

Passover Haggadah with commentary "Maamar Agadata dePischa" out of the manuscripts of the sefer Shaar ...

Sold for: $150
Start price:
$ 150
Buyer's Premium: 22%
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Passover Haggadah with commentary "Maamar Agadata dePischa" out of the manuscripts of the sefer Shaar Yissachar, by Rabbi Chaim Elazar Shapiro of Munkatch, the Holy Minchas Elazar.

FIRST EDITION !! Mukachevo [Munkach] 1938. 120 pp. 23 x 15 cm.

with a very long preface from his son-in-law Rabbi Boruch Yerachmiel Rabinowitz. This preface was never printed again after the Holocaust!!

Rav Boruch Yehoshua Yerachmiel Rabinovicz (1913-1999) was born into a distinguished chasidic dynasty and was himself a renowned chasidic rebbe until he renounced his position following the turmoil of World War 2. His father, Reb Noson Dovid (1868-1930), was the Partzever Rebbe, the eldest son of Reb Yaakov Yitzchak of Biala (1847-1905). His mother was the daughter of Reb Moshe Leib Shapira of Stryzov (1850-1916) of the Munkatch dynasty. In 1933 Reb Boruch married the only daughter of Reb Chaim Elazar Shapira of Munkatch (1872-1937), his mother's first cousin, a union that set him on course to succeed his father-in-law as rabbi and 'admor' of Munkatch. His wedding - attended by some 30,000 guests - was one of the grandest and most celebrated chasidic weddings of the era that immediately preceded World War 2, and film footage of the wedding, shot by news teams who were t to record the event, were widely seen across the world. Reb Boruch's elevation to the position as rov and rebbe of Munkatch in 1937 following the death of his father-in-law was rudely disrupted by the beginning of the war, when he was unceremoniously deported to Poland. He was miraculously released soon afterwards and he promptly moved with his family from Munkatch to Budapest, w he managed to obtain visas and escape to Palestine. T he endeavoured to rebuild his shattered life, but as well as having to deal with the tragedy of the Holocaust and the deaths and disruption it had caused, his wife - always of frail health - died in April 1945. In 1946 Reb Boruch tried and failed to become the Chief Rabbi of Tel Aviv, and shortly tafter he moved to Sau Paulo, Brazil, together with his second wife, in this way totally cutting himself off from his surviving chasidim and from his position as head of one of pre-war Hungary's pre-eminent chasidic dynasties. In addition, as a result of a change of theological direction, Reb Boruch had become sympathetic to Zionism and the State of Israel, concepts that had been anathema to his father-in-law and most of pre-War Hungarian orthodoxy. The Munkatch chasidim who had survived the war were devastated by his refusal to lead them and many of them never forgave him for turning his back on them and for diverging so dramatically from the weltanschaung espoused by his esteemed father-in-law. Reb Boruch returned to Israel in 1963 to become chief rabbi of Holon. He later moved to Petach Tikva w he headed a small Beis Hamidrash until his death in 1999. Two of his sons, with whom he had strained relations, returned in adulthood to the Munkatch fold. Reb Moshe Yehuda Leib is the Rebbe of Munkatch in Boro Park, NY, and his brother Reb Yaakov is the Rebbe of Dinov in Flatbush, NY. Reb Boruch was a great scholar of Talmud and halacha and his encyclopedic knowledge of traditional Jewish sources was widely reputed. In addition to this he was also a gifted orator, although his relative obscurity and personal desire to remain out of the limelight meant that he rarely spoke outside of his own immediate vicinity