Tziduk Ha’Din / Ordnung der Gebete bei Beerdigungen [Burial Service].

AUCTION 38 | Thursday, November 29th, 2007 at 1:00
Fine Judaica: Printed Books, Manuscripts, Autograph Letters & Graphic Art

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Lot 135
(HOLOCAUST.

Tziduk Ha’Din / Ordnung der Gebete bei Beerdigungen [Burial Service].

Hebrew with vowel points (nikud) and German. Marginalia in blue pen pp. 11. Lightly browned. Printed wrappers. 8vo

Berlin: Nova-Druckerei 1940

Est: $10,000 - $15,000
PRICE REALIZED $15,000
A remarkable and tragic publication. A small pamphlet containing the Jewish Burial Service - poignantantly, and without doubt, the very last religious Hebrew text published in Berlin upon the onset of the Nazi Holocaust. The tragic fate of German Jewry is particularly reflected on page 9: “Gebet bei Beisetzung von Asche” (Funeral Service for Ashes). The Gestapo would choose on occasion to return to loved ones the cremated remains of family members who had been interned and subsequently murdered in concentration camps. The Gestapo sadistically forced these bereaved families to pay the financial costs for the duration the murdered individual was "housed and fed" before his murder and only then would they return the body. Contemporary German rabbis were thus forced to determine a view as to how these cremated remains might be laid to rest, given that Jewish law categorically forbids the practice of cremation Rabbi Menachem Mendel Kirschbaum, the Chief Justice of the Bet Din of Frankfurt-am-Main published a halachic text: Takanoth eich le-hithnaheg be-epher ha-nisraphim, (Cracow, 1939), according to whose guidelines, the Burial Society are to place the remains into a coffin together with a Talith and Tachrichin (shrouds), as if the remains were fully intact, in order to affirm the traditional Jewish belief in the Resurrection of the Dead. An exceptionally rare publication