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Bidding Information
Lot #    8188
Auction End Date    9/21/2004 4:34:00 PM (mm/dd/yyyy)
          
Title Information
Title (English)    Letter by R. Moshe Zevi Neriah
Title (Hebrew)    כתב מה'ר משה צבי נריה
Author    [Ms.]
City    Jerusalem
Publication Date    1973
          
Collection Information
Independent Item    This listing is an independent item not part of any collection
          
Description Information
Physical
Description
   [1] p., 205:165 mm., ink on Kenesset stationary, neat Ashkenazi script, signed and dated.
          
Detailed
Description
   R. Moshe Zevi Neriah (Menkin, 1913–1995), Israeli rabbi and rosh yeshivah. Neriah was born in Lodz, Poland. His father, R. Petahiah Menkin, later served as rabbi in various towns in Belorussia. At the age of 13, Neriah studied at the clandestine yeshivah in Minsk, and later in Shklov. In 1930 he immigrated to Erez Israel to study in the Merkaz Ha-Rav Yeshivah established by R. A. I. Kook, and while still there took a prominent part in the Bnei Akiva movement, formulating its educational program and editing its monthly Zera'im. He received semikhah from R. J. M. Harlap. Neriah was a youth delegate to the 20th and 21st Zionist Congresses. In 1940, he founded the Bnei Akiva Yeshivah in Kefar ha-Ro'eh, where he introduced many original educational principles which opened a new chapter in Torah education in Israel, including youth camps attached to the yeshivah. From this yeshivah there developed a network of some 20 Bnei Akiva yeshivot.

R. Neriah was particularly active in spreading Torah education, conducting study courses in Talmud over the radio, and lecturing extensively. A prolific writer, he devoted himself to halakhic problems connected with the emergence of the State, contributing articles to Dat u-Medinah and publishing inter alia Milhemet Shabbat on the right to wage war on the Sabbath; Kehal Gerim on conversion; Mishmeret Yihudenu on the "Who is a Jew?" question; and Ki Sheshet Yamim Asah Ha-Shem on the theological aspects of the Six-Day War. Following the reorganization of the educational system, he was elected to the Seventh Knesset in 1969, where he devoted himself particularly to questions of education, but was not a candidate for the Eighth Knesset.

In 1973 he published his Massekhet Nazir, a biography presenting the system of thought of R. David Cohen and was awarded the Tel Aviv Municipality Prize for Education. R. Neriah received the Israel Prize for special contribution to Israeli society in 1978.

          
Reference
Description
   EJ
        
Associated Images
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Listing Classification
Period
20th Century:    Checked
  
Location
Israel:    Checked
  
Subject
History:    Checked
Other:    Zionism
  
Characteristic
Language:    Hebrew
  
Manuscript Type
Letters:    Checked
  
Kind of Judaica