Saul Adadi

Saul Adadi (Hebrew: שאול אדאדי, 1850 – September 18, 1918)[1] was a Sephardi Hakham, rosh yeshiva, and paytan in the 19th-century Jewish community of Tripoli, Libya. He was heavily involved in youth education, founding a yeshiva and co-founding and serving as principal of a Talmud Torah. He preserved the pinkasim (community record books) of the Tripoli Jewish community, unpublished manuscripts of 18th-century Tripoli Jewish leader Rabbi Abraham Khalfon, and sefarim belonging to his father, Hakham Abraham Hayyim Adadi, a senior rabbi of the previous generation.


Saul Adadi
Personal
Born
Saul Adadi

1850
Tripoli, Libya
DiedSeptember 18, 1918 (aged 6768)
ReligionJudaism
NationalityLibyan
ParentsAbraham Hayyim Adadi
PositionRosh yeshiva
Yahrtzeit13 Tishrei 5679[1]
BuriedTripoli

Family

Saul Adadi was born in Tripoli, the scion of a distinguished rabbinical family.[2] He was the son of Hakham Abraham Hayyim Adadi (1801–1874), head of the Tripoli rabbinical court and author of several halakhic works. He was the great-grandson of Hakham Nathan Adadi (1740–1818), one of the leaders of the Tripoli Jewish community in the 19th century, and the great-great-grandson of Hakham Mas'ud Hai Rakkah (1690–1768), author of Ma'aseh Rokeaḥ, who is credited with laying the foundation for the development of the Jewish community of Tripoli into one of "sages, scribes, and kabbalists".[3] He was a contemporary of Hakham Jacob Rakkah (1800–1891), another great-great-grandson of Mas'ud Hai Rakkah and author of approximately 40 sefarim.[4]

On Lag BaOmer 1870, Adadi's father and mother returned to Safed in the Levant, where the senior Adadi had lived in his younger years and served as a shadar (rabbinical emissary). Saul remained in Tripoli and corresponded with his father until the latter's death in 1874.[5]

Rabbinic career

Adadi founded a yeshiva in Tripoli[1] and served as rosh yeshiva.[6] With secular educational streams making inroads in Tripoli, Adadi, together with Rabbis Zion Tzaror, Mas'ud Jenah, and Nissim Nahum, founded a Talmud Torah called Yagdil Torah in 1893.[7][8] In its first year, this Talmud Torah enrolled 330 children, and by 1905, when its permanent building was erected, 400 students, mostly from poor families.[7] Adadi was the principal of the school,[1][9] and was responsible for testing the children once a week and recording their grades to track the success of the program.[7]

Adadi also built a synagogue in Tripoli; a commemorative marker that records his name along with the names of builders of all of the other synagogues built in Tripoli from the Middle Ages until the Second World War appears in the Eitz Chaim synagogue in Or Yehuda, Israel,[10] where many North African Jews settled.

Adadi also composed piyyutim (liturgical poems), and left a volume of piyyutim in manuscript form.[1] He died in Tripoli[11] on September 18, 1918 (13 Tishrei 5679).[1]

Legacy

Scholars have uncovered the pinkasim (community record books) of the Tripoli Jewish community in Adadi's study hall, as well as unpublished manuscripts (ktav yad) of Rabbi Abraham Khalfon, one of the heads of the community in the 18th century.[12][13] Adadi also preserved the sefarim of his father, which carry his (Saul Adadi's) stamp and which have been sold at auction.[14][15]

Rakkah-Adadi family tree

Aharon Rakkah
Mas'ud Hai Rakkah
Yitzhak RakkahNathan Adadi
Baruh RakkahMas'ud Hai Adadi
Shilomo RakkahAbraham Hayyim Adadi
Jacob RakkahZion RakkahSaul Adadi
Abraham RakkahMeir Rakkah

References

Notes

  1. Halpern 1987, p. 301.
  2. Abramsky-Belli 1997, p. 43.
  3. Hallamish 2001, p. 78.
  4. "הילולת ר' יעקב רקח זצ"ל" [Hillula of Rabbi Yaakov Rakkaḥ zt"l] (PDF) (in Hebrew). World Organization of Libyan Jews. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 August 2014. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
  5. "Rabbi Avraham Chaim Adadi". My Tzadik. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
  6. "הילולא וצדיקיא" [Hilula and Tzaddikim] (PDF) (in Hebrew). Orot Hayyim V'Moshe. 2013. p. 1. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
  7. Pedatzor, Benetiya (2 February 2004). "הזהרו בבני עניים שמהם תצא תורה" [Be Careful of the Children of the Poor, For the Torah Will Come From Them] (in Hebrew). Or-Shalom. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
  8. Spector & Wigoder 2001, p. 1327.
  9. Slouschz 1927, p. 10.
  10. "אשרי עין ראתה כל אלה" [Fortunate is the Eye That Saw All This] (in Hebrew). Siftei Raananot. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
  11. Tagger & Kerem 2006, p. 243.
  12. Ha-Cohen 1993, p. 37.
  13. Malachi & Mirsky 1986, p. 412.
  14. "Sefer Leket HaKemach – Amsterdam, 1707 – With Many Glosses". Kedem Auction House. 13 July 2011. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
  15. "A Collection of Books Printed in Salonika and Izmir". Kedem Auction House. 2 March 2011. Retrieved 14 October 2015.

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.