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Bidding Information
Lot #    23240
Auction End Date    4/28/2009 11:14:30 AM (mm/dd/yyyy)
          
Title Information
Title (English)    Tefillah Zakkah
Title (Hebrew)    תפלה זכה
Author    [Liturgy - Women] R. Abraham Danzig
City    Warsaw
Publication Date    1878
          
Collection Information
Independent Item    This listing is an independent item not part of any collection
          
Description Information
Physical
Description
   24 pp. octavo 145:84 mm., usual light age staining. A very good copy bound in modern wrappers.
          
Detailed
Description
   Moving prayer in Hebrew and Yiddish to be recited erev Yom Kippur by R. Abraham ben Jehiel Michal Danzig (Danziger). Normally recited prior to Kol Nidrei it is part confessional, part prayer, expressing remorse for misusing our God given faculties and pledging to rededicate ourselves to His service. The Hebrew is at the top of the page, the Yiddish text below it. Although the Jewish National Library Bibliographic Project records many editions of this popular prayer, including an 1878 Vilna edition (with different pagination) it does not have an entry for this printing.

R. Abraham ben Jehiel Michal Danzig (Danziger, 1748–1820) renowned halakhic codifier. Born in Danzig, he studied in Prague at the yeshivot of R. Joseph Liebermann and R. Ezekiel Landau. True to his family tradition, he refused to derive any material gain from his studies and earned his livelihood as a merchant. Although required at times to travel long distances to trade fairs in Germany, he continued to learn with great devotion. From 1794 to 1812 he served as dayyan in Vilna, in an honorary capacity; only in his old age, after losing his possessions, was he obliged to accept remuneration for his services. Danzig wrote a number of halakhic works, but his fame rests upon two publications: (1) Hayyei Adam ("Man's Life"), covering all the laws of the Shulhan Arukh dealing with daily conduct, based on the Orah Hayyim sections, with an addendum called Nishmat Adam, in which he justified his decisions which were not in accordance with the accepted view (Vilna, 1810); and (2) Hokhmat Adam ("Man's Wisdom"), covering all the laws of the Shulhan Arukh dealing with the dietary regulations, etc., contained in the Yoreh De'ah section, with an addendum called Binat Adam, which included discussions on various relevant halakhic subjects and responsa (Vilna, 1812). Both works were initially intended for youthful students and for educated laymen not fully versed in rabbinic literature who, in attempting to determine Jewish law, found themselves unable to grapple with the intricacies of the Shulhan Arukh and with its maze of conflicting opinions. In these works, Danzig shows himself possessed of considerable pedagogical talent. He arranges the laws methodically, defines his terms lucidly and precisely, presents the various views and their sources, and renders his own decisions and his reasons for them – all in clear, simple language. The pleasant tenor of his writing, which is suffused with unquestioning faith and true piety, contributed largely toward the acceptance of his works. Hayyei Adam appeared in almost a hundred editions. Groups called "Hevrot Hayyei Adam" were formed in several communities for the regular study of the code. Danzig's merits as a codifier were recognized also by renowned rabbis and codifiers, who gave due consideration to his decisions. His books include much of historical interest with regard to the daily life of Lithuanian Jewry in his generation.

          
Reference
Description
   Complete Artscroll Mahzor; EJ
        
Associated Images
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Listing Classification
Period
19th Century:    Checked
  
Location
Russia-Poland:    Checked
  
Subject
Liturgy:    Checked
Other:    Women
  
Characteristic
Language:    Yiddish
  
Manuscript Type
  
Kind of Judaica