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Bidding Information
Lot #    12217
Auction End Date    11/1/2005 12:23:00 PM (mm/dd/yyyy)
          
Title Information
Title (English)    Bi-shevile ha-tehiyah
Title (Hebrew)    בשבילי התחיה
Author    [First Ed. - Zionism] R. Meir Bar-Ilan
City    Tel Aviv
Publisher    ha-Berit ha-'Olamit
Publication Date    1940
          
Collection Information
Independent Item    This listing is an independent item not part of any collection
          
Description Information
Physical
Description
   288 pp. port. 228:146 mm.
          
Detailed
Description
   R. Meir Bar-Ilan, has collected in this volume (whose title translates as: In the Paths of Renaissance) his essays and addresses on Zionism, religion and faith, Torah and education, personalities and the Sabbath and Holy Days.

R. Meir Bar-Ilan (Berlin) (1880–1949) was a leader of religious Zionism. R. Bar-Ilan was born in Volozhin, the son of R. Naphtali Zevi Judah Berlin (the Netziv). He completed his studies in yeshivot at Volozhin, Telz, Brisk, and Novogrudok. As a young man he joined the Mizrachi movement, representing it at the Seventh Zionist Congress (1905), at which, unlike the majority of Mizrachi delegates, he voted against the Uganda Scheme. In 1911 he was appointed secretary of the world Mizrachi movement, working in Berlin, and he coined the Mizrachi slogan "Erez Yisrael le-Am Yisrael al Pi Torat Yisrael" ("The land of Israel for the people of Israel according to the Torah of Israel"). He moved to the United States in 1915, served as president of the U.S. Mizrachi, and from 1925 was a member of the Board of Directors of the Jewish National Fund. In 1926 Bar-Ilan settled in Jerusalem where he served as president of the World Mizrachi center and as the Mizrachi representative in Zionist and yishuv institutions, including clandestine committees for defense. Between 1929 and 1931 he was a member of the Zionist Executive. A leading opponent of the Palestine partition plan in 1937, and of the British White Paper of 1939, he advocated civil disobedience and complete non-cooperation of the Jewish population toward the British government. After the establishment of the State of Israel, he organized a committee of scholars to examine the legal problems of the new state in the light of Jewish law, and was an initiator of the National Religious Front, the group of religious parties that presented a united platform in the first Knesset elections. A central figure in the Zionist religious movement, Bar-Ilan founded and edited a religious Zionist weekly, Ha-Ivri ("The Hebrew"), which was published in Berlin from 1910 to 1914 and in New York from 1916 to 1921. Between 1938 and 1949 he was editor in chief of the Mizrachi daily, Ha-Zofeh, in Tel Aviv. Some of his articles were collected in his books Bi-Shevilei ha-Tehiyyah ("In the Paths of Renaissance," 1940) and Kitvei Rabbi Meir Bar-Ilan (1950). His memoirs, Mi-Volozhin ad Yerushalayim ("From Volozhin to Jerusalem," 1939–40), were originally published in Yiddish. He also wrote a book about his father, entitled Rabban shel Yisrael "Rabbi of Israel" (1943). He initiated and organized the publishing of the Talmudic Encyclopaedia, begun in 1947. He also founded the institute for the publication of a new complete edition of the Talmud. Bar-Ilan University near Tel Aviv is named in his honor, as is the Meir Forest in the Hebron hills, and the moshav Bet Meir near Jerusalem.

          
Paragraph 2    מאמרים והרצאות. "בלקוט החומר ובהכנתו טרח הח' משה קרונה >"רודגס"<". מוגש"ליובלו הששים" של המחבר. חלק מן המאמרים ומן ההרצאות נכנס לתוך "תורה ובנין" לזכר הרב מאיר בר-אילן, ירושלים תש"י, וכן לתוך "כתבי רבי מאיר בר-אילן", ירושלים תש"י.
          
Reference
Description
   CD-EPI 0113629, EJ
        
Associated Images
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Listing Classification
Period
20th Century:    Checked
  
Location
Israel:    Checked
  
Subject
Other:    Zionism
  
Characteristic
First Editions:    Checked
Language:    Hebrew
  
Manuscript Type
  
Kind of Judaica