Large Slavuta & Zhitomir collection, Belz, Satmar, Chabad, Hungarian Gedolim, Letters, Manuscripts, a outstanding collection of silverware & paintings.
Por Appel Auction
4.5.23
Pomona NY 10970, Estados Unidos
La subasta ha concluído

LOTE 60:

Agreement of Yeshivas Toras Emes in Jerusalem with 2 letters of the Rebbe, with addition in his holy hand.


Precio inicial:
$ 2 000
Comisión de la casa de subasta: 25%
IVA: 8.375% IVA sobre el precio total del lote y la comisión
Los usuarios de países extranjeros pueden estar exentos de pagar impuestos, de acuerdo con la normativa fiscal de su país
4.5.23 en Appel Auction
etiquetas:

Agreement of Yeshivas Toras Emes in Jerusalem with 2 letters of the Rebbe, with addition in his holy hand.


Group of letters/agreement concerning the Toras Emes Yeshiva in Jerusalem.


With two letters of the Rebbe & his signature. On one letter the Rebbe adds a line of 7 words in his Holy hand.


Signed by Rabbi Eliyahu Simpson.


Rabbi Shlomo Aaron Karzanovsky. See Hebrew description for a short biography.



Rabbi Israel  Jacobson.


Rabbi Yisroel Jacobson (1895-1975) was a Chabad Hasidic rabbi and the representative of the sixth Chabad rebbe, Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, to the United States during the 1920s and 1930s. He was one of the first Lubavitcher activists to arrive in to the United States. He was born in Russia and migrated to the United States in 1925.


Jacobson was born in Zurowitz, Belarus, on 20 November 1895 and died on 27 May 1975.Jacobson moved from Poland to New York in 1925 to help Chabad Hasidim emigrate to the United States. He became a rabbi and teacher and became active in fundraising activities, sending the funds to Schneersohn in Eastern Europe, supporting Chabad activities and enabling Schneersohn to leave Russia.


Jacobson was the rabbi in the Anshei Bobroisk synagogue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. He founded Yeshivas Achei T’mimim in New York in 1932 for young men.


After the start of World War II, Jacobson arranged for Schneersohn and his family to leave Poland. After Schneersohn's secured passage from Nazi-occupied Poland to Riga, Latvia, Jacobson interceded unsuccessfully with the American consul in Berlin to secure Schneersohn's library of books and manuscripts in Otwock, Poland. Subsequent attempts to secure the library were made after the war.


Following the death of Schneersohn in 1950, Jacobson became an early supporter of Menachem Mendel Schneerson (who was not yet leader of Chabad) backing him over his brother-in-law Shemaryahu Gurary.


Jacobson served on the faculty of the central Lubavitch yeshiva at 770 Eastern Parkway. He also helped found the Yeshiva Hadar Hatorah for baalei teshuvah ("returnees" to Judaism) where he served as dean. He was also the dean of the Beth Rivkah school for girls


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