jewish judaica rabbi Kalonymus Kalmish Shapiro Warsaw Poland book 1936 WW2


jewish judaica rabbi Kalonymus Kalmish Shapiro Warsaw Poland book 1936 WW2

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jewish judaica rabbi Kalonymus Kalmish Shapiro Warsaw Poland book 1936 WW2 :
$75.00


jewish judaica rabbi Kalonymus Kalmish Shapiro Warsaw Poland book 1936 WW2
Rabbi Kalonymus Kalamish Shapira - the Admor of Piaseczno (July 1, 1889 - November 2, 1943) was an Admor who operated in Poland between the two world wars He was known as a great Hasidic thinker and was famous for his innovative writings on Hassidic education, including \"The Obligation of the Pupils.\" During the German occupation he stayed in the Warsaw Ghetto and continued to demand his followers.
After the First World War, in light of the great crisis in ultra-Orthodox Judaism, when many of the youth left religion, the Rebbe decided to engage in youth education. He divided his time between Piaseczno and Warsaw, where he established in 1923 the Da\'at Moshe Yeshiva. He was known as an educator and was famous for his innovative writings on Hasidic education, the most important of which was the \"obligation of the students\" and \"the training of the yeshiva students.\"
With the outbreak of World War II, he was captured in Warsaw surrounded by the Germans. His son, his daughter-in-law (daughter of Rabbi Shlomo Chaim Perlov) and his aunt were killed in the shelling, and his mother died shortly after the beginning of the German occupation. Despite the personal disaster, and in spite of the general situation, he refused various offers of escape, and preferred to stay with his followers in the Warsaw ghetto. Where he continued to conduct a \"Chassidic table\" every Saturday and even gave sermons according to the circumstances of the days. The Rebbe of Piaseczna continued to encourage the Jews imprisoned in the ghetto even as the ghetto\'s distress grew. The Rebbe made a supreme effort to assist the Jews in performing the commandments in the ghetto. He worked to enable women\'s access to the mikvah, to baking matza on Pesach, to circumcision, and more.
His sermons continued until the liquidation of the ghetto. He wrote down his teachings during the Holocaust, and hid them in a jar of milk, together with a request that they be sent to his brother Rabbi Yeshayahu to print them. A few years later, the reporters were found by workers who dug in the ruins of the ghetto. The texts were brought to the Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw. In 1956, as part of his job at the Jewish Agency, Mr. Baruch Davidi examined a large, unpublished material from the Holocaust period, and a letter from the Rebbe came asking him to write the writings that would be discovered. Following the discovery of the letter, Mr. Duvdevani searched for the reporters, and when he found them, he transferred them to the Piechasna Chassidim in Israel. These writings were published in the book \"Esh Kodesh\" in the year 1960.
When the Aktionen began in the ghetto in the summer of 1942, with the help of Rabbi Avraham Hendel, he registered as an employee of Shultz\'s shop and continued his spiritual leadership there. The Rebbe was saved from the great deportation to the Treblinka death camp in July 1942, because he was a vital worker (the Admor\'s daughter was kidnapped and deported to Treblinka on Monday 2 Elul 5702). For a while he was hidden in the Henken aircraft factory. Later in 1943, he was deported to the Treblinka concentration camp in the Lublin region and was apparently murdered on the 5th of Cheshvan 5704, together with the rest of the camp\'s Jews. Hy \"d.
15x22 cm46pp
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jewish judaica rabbi Kalonymus Kalmish Shapiro Warsaw Poland book 1936 WW2 :
$75.00

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