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Book

Object | Accession Number: 1992.8.16 a-b

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    Overview

    Brief Narrative
    Book codifying Jewish law concerned with "Life Ways," and the Passover liturgy, and also a loose page from another work found inside the book, from the library of Isaac Ossowski, a prominent member of the Jewish community in Berlin, Germany, who emigrated in 1938 to avoid the increasing persecution of Jews by the government of Nazi Germany.
    Title
    Shulchan Aruch
    Date
    publication/distribution:  1760
    Geography
    use: Berlin (Germany)
    Credit Line
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Sol Oster
    Contributor
    Subject: Isaac Ossowski
    Biography
    Isaac Ossowski was born in 1877 in Lubraniez, near Warsaw, Poland, to an extremely devout family and Hasidim, with a long tradition of religious study and service, as hazan [cantors], shochet [ritual slaughterer], mohels [perform ritual circumcision], and sofers [scribes.] His father, Menahem, was a shochet and Isaac attended Yeshiva in Russia. He resettled in Germany, first in Frankfurt am Main, then in Berlin. He married Frieda Schwartzbardt, born in 1888. They had three sons, Joseph, (1915-2011), Leo (b. 4/1/1913), and Sol (1919-2011), and one daughter, Nettie. Rabbi Ossowski became head shochet, overseeing the ritual slaughter of animals in Berlin. He also served as hazan, mohel, and sofer for the Alte Shule [Old Synagogue]. After Hitler was appointed Chancellor in 1933, the persecution of Jews became official government policy. Rabbi Ossowski and members of his family were interrogated several times by the SS (Schutzstaffel; Protection Squadrons) who gathered intelligence on opponents of the Nazi state and policed racial purity. In 1934, due to the threatening anti-Semitic climate of the Nazi state, he sent his young son, Sol, to Lithuania to study at a yeshiva. In 1938, Rabbi Ossowski, with his wife and daughter, escaped Nazi Germany for the United States. They joined their sons, Joseph and Leo, who had settled in the United States in 1936. Their son, Sol, joined them in the United States in 1939 after completing his rabbinical studies in England. Rabbi Ossowski, 66, died in Ohio in 1943.

    Physical Details

    Language
    Hebrew
    Object Type
    Books (lcsh)
    Physical Description
    a. Extremely, worn black leather covered religious book with sewn binding; the text block is misshapen and extends unevenly beyond the covers. There is a rectangular piece of cloth tape on the spine with a handwritten title in Hebrew.
    Title: Shulchan Aruch
    Publication: Amsterdam : Rabbi Naftali Herz Levi ; 1760 ; Description: 321 p. ; 17.5 cm
    b. Single loose sheet of brownish paper with Hebrew text in black ink found folded inside book (a); different dimensions and font than (a) suggests it is part of a separate, unknown work. Description: 16.5 cm
    Materials
    a : paper, ink, cardboard, leather, adhesive, graphite, cloth
    b : paper, ink
    Inscription
    a. inside front cover, black ink : illegible writing
    a. binding, black ink : Hebrew text

    Rights & Restrictions

    Conditions on Access
    No restrictions on access
    Conditions on Use
    No restrictions on use

    Keywords & Subjects

    Administrative Notes

    Record last modified:
    2022-07-28 21:56:14
    This page:
    http:​/​/collections.ushmm.org​/search​/catalog​/irn7105

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