Thursday, December 4, 2008

An Israeli Masonic Publication

Have begun cataloging the large Hebrew lot. This item got me thinking:

Levin, Z., editor. Haboneh Hahofshi. The Freemason. Vol. XXXII, May 1965, No.1. Tel Aviv, The Grand Lodge of the State of Israel on Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, 1965. (47750) $25.00

Jews are of course the master conspirators in the paranoid fantasies of Right and Left-Wing lunatics worldwide. However, Freemasons come up a close second. Here we have proof positive for these loopy intellects that there really is a Jewish-Masonic conspiracy. The rear, English Language, cover promotes an article entitled, "Egypt Armed Forces Weekly Says: Eliminate Freemasonry in All the Arab States." The publication as a whole objects to Arab anti-Freemasonry and compares Nasser's anti-Freemasonry to that of the Nazi regime and points out that many of Nasser's associates in anti-Freemasonry are "former Nazi murderers and assistants of Goebbels." In general the publication is an apologia for Freemasonry. A report on the Tel Aviv Grand Lodge's recent activities is included. Laid-in is a diagram of the layout of the Masonic Temple on Mount Zion.

It makes you wonder how Freemasonry plays into Israeli life today.

Monday, December 1, 2008

More rather than less

These days I seem to be busier cataloging books than answering emails and phone calls. It has occurred to me that I might be better off leaking out a bit of what I'm doing while I'm not answering the cell phone messages that I never answer (cell phone doesn't work in the house and battery dies after the first couple of messages anyway). I hope to post briefly here on general Hollander Books doings, new arrivals and travels.

This year I missed the CIROBE convention in Chicago, but I did get some bid lists and was able to buy out most of the copies of Fred Astren's "Karaite Judaism and Historical Understanding," the product of many year's efforts on Fred's part. He is the head of Jewish Studies here in San Francisco at San Francisco State University.

The flap copy on the book states, "
Notions of history and the past contained in literature of the Karaite Jewish sect offer insight into the relationship of Karaism to mainstream rabbinic Judaism and to Islam and Christianity. Karaite Judaism and Historical Understanding describes how a minority sectarian religious community constructs and uses historical ideology. It investigates the proportioning of historical ideology to law and doctrine and the influence of historical setting on religious writings about the past.

In the present volume, Fred Astren discusses modes of representing the past, especially in Jewish culture, and then poses questions about the past in sectarian, particularly Judaic sectarian, contexts. He contrasts early Karaite scripturalism with the literature of rabbinic Judaism, which, embodying historical views that carry a moralistic burden, draws upon the chain of tradition to suppose a generation-to-generation transmission of divine knowledge and authority. Karaites in the medieval Islamic world eschewed historical thinking, in concert with their rejection of the rabbinic concept of tradition. One important medieval Karaite, al-Qirqisani, however, constructed a sophisticated historical argument as part of his philosophical exposition of Karaism, demonstrating theological and philosophical strategies common in Islam and Christianity.

The center of Karaism shifted to the Byzantine-Turkish world during the twelfth through sixteenth centuries, when a new historical outlook unoblivious of the past accommodated legal developments influenced by rabbinic thought. Reconstructing Karaite historical expression from both published works and previously unexamined manuscripts, Astren shows that Karaites relied on rabbinic literature to extract and compile historical data for their own readings of Jewish history, which they recorded in an encyclopedic literature similar to contemporary Byzantine Christian Orthodox writing. Astren documents how as the Karaites moved toward a concept of tradition and echoed rabbinic historical formulations, they developed a version of the chain of tradition to link archaic biblical history to their own community.

During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Karaite scholars in Poland and Lithuania collated and harmonized historical materials inherited from their Middle Eastern predecessors. Astren portrays the way that Karaites, with some influence from Jewish Renaissance historiography and impelled by features of Protestant-Catholic discourse, prepared complete literary historical works that maintained their Jewishness while offering a Karaite reading of Jewish history."

The book was published at $50.00. Our price is $22.50. The book can be found at the website at http://www.hollanderbooks.com/cgi-bin/hollander/47730.html


I expect to start in on another big group of Hebrew books tomorrow. The lot is mixed and is comprised of Seforim, Hasidut and Ancient Israel.