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Hefez Hashem, R. Chaim ibn Attar, Amsterdam
חפץ ה' - First Edition
- Sold Winning Bid: $1,100.00
- 34 Bid(s) View Bid History
Details
- Lot Number 46731
- Title (English) Hefez Hashem
- Title (Hebrew) חפץ ה'
- Note First Edition
- Author R. Chaim ibn Attar
- City Amsterdam
- Publisher Solomon Proophs
- Publication Date 1732
- Estimated Price - Low 2,000
- Estimated Price - High 5,000
- Item # 1312379
- End Date
- Start Date
Description
Physical Description
First edition. [2], 17, 71 ff., folio, 297:192 mm., wide margins, damp and age staining, stamps.
A good copy bound in later boards, rubbed.
Detail Description
Novellae to several tractates by the Ohr ha-Hayyim ha-Kodosh,R. Hayyim ben Moses ibn Attar, (1696–1743). He was born in Sale, Morocco and received his early education from his grandfather, R. Hayyim Atar. He settled in Meknes after the death of his great-uncle
Shem Tov in order to manage his business in partnership with Shem Tov's son, whose daughter he married. There he studied and taught but the deterioration of the economic and political situation in Morocco and his belief that redemption was imminent induced
him to settle in Erez Israel. He was encouraged in this decision when he learned that R. Hayyim Abulafia had renewed the community of Tiberias. Desirous of establishing a college in Erez Israel to which Diaspora students would flock in order to hasten the
redemption, he set out for Erez Israel together with his closest disciples, among whom were R. David Hasan and R. Shem Tov Gabbai, reaching Leghorn in 1739. There his saintly nature soon earned him an eager audience. His home in Leghorn became a center for
students who gathered to study under him, and there he preached to large audiences, urging them to repent. R. Moses Franco states that "all the people used to come early in order to find seats and it became impossible to enter because of the multitude." Groups
were organized to assist his yeshivah and philanthropists financed the publication of some of his works. He sent proclamations to Jewish communities throughout Italy, urging immigration to Erez Israel, and for that purpose he traveled extensively, visiting
Venice, Ferrara, Modena, Reggio, and Mantua. Learning about the epidemics in Erez Israel, some of his disciples became hesitant about making the journey to the Holy Land, but R. Hayyim declared: "It is immaterial to me who comes and who remains; he who has
ideals will immigrate and inherit the Land." In 1741, Attar with a group of 30, including Jews from Morocco and young rabbis from Italy, set sail from Leghorn. Moses Franco and Abraham Ishmael Sangvinetti describe the voyage in their writings. The group reached
Acre in the late summer. Hearing of the epidemics raging in Jaffa and Jerusalem, ibn Attar decided to establish a temporary yeshivah in Acre which continued for nearly a year. He then decided to move to Peki'in, attributing the deaths of two of his disciples
to the fact that Acre, according to the Talmud, was not within the historic boundaries of Erez Israel. During a visit to Tiberias R. Hayyim Abulafia urged him to reestablish his school there, but when the epidemic subsided, the group set out for Jerusalem.
There he established the Midrash Keneset Israel Yeshivah, which had one division for advanced and one for young scholars. He acted as head of the former division, which did not study the Talmud with the commentaries, but concentrated on the codes and their
connection with the talmudic sources. Special attention was paid to reconciling the decisions of Maimonides with the Talmud. The students indulged in ascetic practices, spending their nights in supplication and prayer for the redemption and peace of Diaspora
Jewry. The group also used to prostrate themselves in prayer on holy graves in supplication for the Jewish community. The Hida, who studied at the "Midrash," describes it in reverential terms, and in his works he gives details of his customs as well as sermons
and explanations that he heard from him. He passed on approximately a year after settling in Jerusalem.
Hebrew Description
אשר חיבר ... הרב ... ר' חיים בן עטר נר"ו ... על ארבע מסכתות ברכות, שבת, הוריות, חולין ...
בשנת אשרי האיש ירא את ה' ב'מצ'ות'יו חפץ מאוד. הסכמות: ר' דוד ישראל עטיאש, ר' יצחק חיים ן' דנא די בריטון , אמשטרדם, יז אדר תצ"ב; ר' יוסף ב"ר שמעון עקיבא בער, ר' משה ב"ר שמעון פרנקפורט , אמשטרדם, ערב ראש-חודש אייר תצ"ב; ר' יהודה בן עטר, פאס, ב שבט תצ"א; ר' יעקב ב"ר ראובן אבן צור, תצ"ב; ר' אהרן ב"ר אברהם הצרפתי, ר' שלמה ב"ר מרדכי הכהן, ר' שמואל ב"ר שלמה קארו, סאלי, יז שבט תצ"א; ר' שמואל ב"ר משה די אבילה, סאלי, תצ"א; ר' חנניה ב"ר ישעי' אבן זכרי, תצ"א.
References
CD-NLi 0106430; Amsterdam, Vinograd 1394 (wrong pagination); Ner ha-Ma'arav (1911), 154–7; R. Margaliot, Toledot Rabbenu Hayyim ibn Attar (1918); EJ