× Bidding has ended on this item.
Ended

Or Yisrael, R. Israel Hapstein of Kozieni, Czernowitz 1862

אור ישראל - First Edition - Kabbalah - Hasidic

Listing Image
Payment Options
Seller Accepts Credit Cards

Payment Instructions
You will be emailed an invoice with payment instructions upon completion of the auction.
Details
  • Lot Number 47294
  • Title (English) Avodat Yisrael
  • Title (Hebrew) אור ישראל
  • Note First Edition - Kabbalah - Hasidic
  • Author R. Israel Hapstein of Kozieni
  • City Czernowitz
  • Publisher Johann Eckhardt
  • Publication Date 1862
  • Estimated Price - Low 300
  • Estimated Price - High 600

  • Item # 1360382
  • End Date
  • Start Date
Description

Physical Description

First edition. [3], 57 ff., quarto, 211:170 mm., light age and damp staining, wide margins. A  good copy not bound.

 

Detailed Description  
One of the basic works of Hasidus by R. Israel ben Shabbetai Hapstein of Kozienice. It encompasses pesahtim on the Torah, festivals, the Pesah Haggadah, and Avot, all in the manner of Hasidus. R. Israel ben Shabbetai Hapstein of Kozienice (1733–1814), hasidic zaddik and preacher, born in Apta; one of the first propagators of Hasidism in Congress Poland. His teachers were R. Samuel Shmelke Horowitz of Nikolsburg, R. Dov Baer the Maggid of Mezhirech, R. Elimelech of Lyzhansk, and R. Levi Isaac of Berdichev, with whom he was on friendly terms. In his early years, Israel withdrew from society and became an ascetic. After the death of his father, a poor bookbinder, he moved to Przysucha where he earned his living as a teacher (melammed). He then settled in Kozienice where his eloquent preaching gained him the appellation the "Maggid of Kozienice." Israel's homilies were notable for their elegant structure and lucid exposition, even though they included much kabbalistic symbolism, and had a great impact on his listeners. He would admonish them "with pleasing and sweet persuasion and not with hard words" (Avodat Yisrael, Avot). On the role of the preacher he taught: "He who reproves people and teaches them the Law and the word of God must have insight into the heart of every single one of them, even of the very wicked." However, Israel became noted mainly for his activity as a zaddik. Many followed him because of his whole-hearted approach to the worship of God and his ecstatic mode of prayer through Devekut. According to Israel, the principal duty of the zaddik was to give spiritual guidance to his followers and assist them in divine worship. The devotion to God by the zaddik is a dynamic action through which those under his protection also attain devotion to God. Thus the zaddik elevates the spirit of the average man and brings him nearer to the Creator, which is the aim of Hasidism. However, the simple man will never attain the heights which the zaddik himself reaches. As a "practical zaddik" Israel gained great popularity, actively assisting his followers apart from his duties of spiritual guidance. He thus cared for the welfare, children, and livelihood of his Hasidim and even distributed remedies and amulets. The Mitnaggedim sharply criticized him for this activity while the Hasidim justified it, explaining that the amulets contained his name only. R. Israel's fame also reached high-ranking Poles, and he apparently had connections with the family of the Polish prince Czariorski. He was alive to public affairs and during the period of the grand duchy of Warsaw was to have participated in a convention of delegates of the Polish communities convening in Warsaw mainly to discuss the heavy taxes imposed on the Jews. R. Israel took steps against the opponents of Hasidism and tried, unsuccessfully, to prevent the printing of anti-hasidic works appearing in Warsaw in the late 18th century. A man of the people, he spiced his discourse with proverbs. With his friend R. Jacob Isaac ha-Hozeh of Lublin he was among the principal disseminators of Hasidism of the school of R. Israel b. Eliezer Ba'al Shem Tov in the interior of Poland. He had a profound knowledge of both traditional and esoteric learning, and participated with the greatest scholars of his time in a halakhic discussion on the question of the agunah. His principal halakhic work is Beit Yisrael (Warsaw, 1864). His tractates on the Kabbalah testify to his great esoteric knowledge. A hasidic story relates "that before he traveled to the Maggid of Mezhirech he studied 800 books on Kabbalah and after all that when he came to the holy Maggid of blessed memory he realized that he had not yet learned anything" (Toledot Adam le-Shabbat Hanukkah); however, his writings on Kabbalah (Or Yisrael, Czernowitz, 1862; Ner Yisrael, Vilna, 1822; and others) do not contain original interpretations of his own.

In 1847 the Shapira printing press was established by the three brothers Hanina Lipa, Aryeh Leib, and Joshua Heschel Shapira, sons of R. Samuel Abraham Abba Shapira, the printer in Slavuta. Until 1862 this was one of the only two Hebrew presses the Russian government permitted to operate in the whole of Russia, the other being in Vilna. This press had 18 hand presses and four additional large presses. In 1851 Aryeh Leib broke away and established his own printing press in Zhitomir. In these two establishments only sacred books of every kind were printed.                     
           

Hebrew Description

ביאורי התקוני זוהר ... יצא מפי ... מוה’ ישראל זצוקללה"ה בהמנוח מוהר"ר שבתי ז"ל מ"מ דק"ק קאזניץ. ע"י המביא לביה"ד ... מו"ה אברהם אביש נ"י בהרב ... מוהר"י [ר’ יוסף] מטאמשוב זללה"ה, ובהתאמצות ... ר’ משולם הילער נ"י בהמנוח מוה’ שמעון ארי’ ז"ל ...

שני שערים.

"מחברת הקודש הזה הי’ מסודר עפ"י דפי תקונים הקדומים ... הצבנו ציוני הדפין כפי ... תקוני קאריץ וסלאוויטא ודומיהן" (הקדמה, דף [3, א]).

בסוגריים מרובעים נוספו הגהות המחבר ובסוגריים עגולים הגהות המביא לבית הדפוס.

 

References 

Bibliography of the Hebrew Book 1470-1960 #000126606; BE 1163; EJ