Auction 95 Fine Judaica: Printed Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinic Letters, Ceremonial & Graphic Art
By Kestenbaum & Company
Nov 11, 2021
The Brooklyn Navy Yard Building 77, 141 Flushing Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11205, United States
 הטקסט בעברית מהווה 'ראשי פרקים' בלבד. לכן, מומלץ מאוד לקרוא את הקטלוג באנגלית.
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LOT 169:

(HASKALAH). Kethav Yosher VeDivrei Emeth. Moses Reinthal [polemic regarding the practice of speedy burial in Jewish ...

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Start price:
$ 550
Estimated price :
$600 - $900
Buyer's Premium: 25%
sales tax: 8.875% On commission only
Auction took place on Nov 11, 2021 at Kestenbaum & Company
tags:

(HASKALAH). Kethav Yosher VeDivrei Emeth. Moses Reinthal [polemic regarding the practice of speedy burial in Jewish Tradition].

First Edition. ff. (1), pp. 3-15. Lightly stained. Recent boards. 12mo. Vinograd, Berlin 783. Berlin, Hevrath Hinuch Ne'arim, circa 1795.


One of the early battles between radical Haskalah and Orthodox Judaism concerned the traditional practice of burying the dead without delay. According to medical opinion of the time, it took no less than three days to ascertain death, consequently Maskilim argued that Jewish burial be delayed. Notable among the written polemics that abounded, is one authored by Marcus Herz, who gave a vivid description of a man suffocating to death in his own subterranean coffin. In Breslau, Maskilim visited the local rabbi's home on Purim disguised as those 'dead' while in fact those supposedly prematurely buried - and who had now escaped their graves! The rabbinic response was uncompromising. Rabbis such as R. Ya'akov Emden and the Noda B'Yehudah firmly rejected any change to tradition. The matter was ultimately decided by the secular authorities who decreed that Jewish burial could only be carried out with the approval of the local police. For more on the controversy, see Moshe Samet, Early Burial: The History of the Controversy on Determining Time of Death, Asufot 3 (1988) pp. 433-49.


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