The Scholar's Haggadah: Ashkenazic, Sephardic, and Oriental Versions pdf epub fb2

The Scholar's Haggadah: Ashkenazic, Sephardic, and Oriental Versions by - pdf epub fb2

The Scholar's Haggadah: Ashkenazic, Sephardic, and Oriental Versions Author: -
Title: The Scholar's Haggadah: Ashkenazic, Sephardic, and Oriental Versions
ISBN: 1568212879
ISBN13: 978-1568212876
Other Formats: txt lrf lrf lit
Pages: 418 pages
Publisher: Jason Aronson, Inc.; First Edition edition (May 1, 1995)
Language: English
Category: Religion & Spirituality
Size PDF version: 1810 kb
Size EPUB version: 1328 kb
Subcategory: Judaism




In this unprecedented masterwork, Heinrich Guggenheimer presents the first Haggadah to treat the texts of all Jewish groups on an equal footing and to use their divergences and concurrences as a key to the history of the text and an understanding of its development.While many commentaries have been written on the Haggadah during the last one thousand years - most delineating the spiritual meaning or the ritual details of the Passover ceremonies - few historical investigations have dealt with texts that are not wholly Ashkenazic. Available for the first time to the reader is a Haggadah that includes the customs and ceremonies of not only Ashkenazic and Sephardic Jewry, but of Yemenite Jews as well. Additionally, the author provides a commentary that not only offers a key to the roots of the Passover ceremonies and an introduction to the thought and practice of talmudic-rabbinic Judaism, but also presents a history of the development of text and practice of the Seder celebration.While Yemenite Jewry still follows texts and prescriptions of Maimonides practically in their original form, unchanged for at least 800 years, European Ashkenazic and Sephardic practices have undergone many changes. While the history of Yemenite Jews is riddled with oppression and migration, the Moslem rulers of their country never extended their persecutions to Jewish books. On the other hand, the history of European Jews is dominated by continuous pogroms, beginning with the first crusade, and a permanent war of the Church against Jewish learning that resulted in many public burnings of the Talmud and rabbinic treatises.