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Ez Hadar, R. Abraham Isaac Kook, Jerusalem 1907

עץ הדר - First Edition - Polemic

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Details
  • Lot Number 46915
  • Title (English) Ez Hadar
  • Title (Hebrew) עץ הדר
  • Note First Edition - Polemic
  • Author R. Abraham Isaac Kook
  • City Jerusalem
  • Publisher Samuel ha-Kohen Kook
  • Publication Date 1907
  • Estimated Price - Low 200
  • Estimated Price - High 500

  • Item # 1327926
  • End Date
  • Start Date
Description

Physical Description

First edition. 10, 16 pp., 17-62 ff. , 209:138mm., nice margins, usual age staining. A good copy bound in modern cloth wrappers. 

 

Detail Description

Ez Hadar, deals with the halakhic status of esrogim grown in Erez Israel: Are they grafted with lemon trees? The grafting of etrogim with other citrus trees was invented as a method of producing a beautiful fruit. There are several distinguishing signs by which the grafted and the ungrafted etrog can be distinguished. The skin of the latter is generally rougher than that of the former, and, according to some halakhic authorities, the seed of the latter lies longitudinally within the fruit, and that of the former, latitudinal.

Rav Kook was born in Griva, Latvia in 1865. His father was a student of the Volozhin Yeshiva, the center of mitnagdut, whereas his maternal grandfather was a member of the Hassidic movement. He entered the Volozhin Yeshiva in 1884, where he became close to the Rosh HaYeshiva, Rav Naftali Zvi Yehuda Berlin (the Netziv). Already in his youth, he was well known as a prodigy. At the age of 23, he entered his first rabbinical position. Between 1901 and 1904 he published three articles which anticipate the fullydeveloped philosophy which he developed in the Land of Israel.

In 1904, he came to the Land of Israel to assume the rabbinical post in Jaffa, which also included responsibility for the new secular Zionist agricultural settlements nearby. His influence on people in different walks of life was already noticeable, as he attempted to introduce Torah and Halakha into the life of the city and the settlements. The outbreak of the First World War caught him in Europe, and he was forced to remain in London and Switzerland for the remainder of the war. While there, he was involved in the activities which led to the Balfour Declaration. Upon returning, he was appointed the Rav of Jerusalem, and soon after, as first Chief Rabbi of Israel (though the state had not yet been been born). Rav Kook was a man of Halakha in the strictest sense, while at the same time possessing an unusual openness to new ideas. This drew many religious and nonreligious people to him, but also led to widespread misunderstanding of his ideas. He wrote prolifically on both Halakha and Jewish Thought, and his books and personality continued to influence many even after his death in Jerusalem in 1935. His authority and influence continue to this day. R. Kook was a prolific writer, who, according to his students, wrote out of the constant urge to create. He never attempted to construct a comprehensive system, and his style mirrors the quality of his personal insights and mystical reflections.

 

Hebrew Description

עץ הדר... משא ומתן של הלכה ע"ד היתרון אשר לאתרוגים הכשרים המשומרים של אחינו בני המושבות באה"ק... ופסולן של המורכבים, מאת אברהם יצחק הכהן קוק, עבד לעם קדוש... פה... יפד... (חוברת א.)

 

References

BE ayin 1013; EJ; CD-NLI 0163247