• Produktbild: The Shochet
  • Produktbild: The Shochet

The Shochet A Memoir of Jewish Life in Ukraine and Crimea

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

12.10.2023

Abbildungen

schwarz-weiss Illustrationen, farbige Illustrationen

Verlag

Ingram Publishers Services

Seitenzahl

300

Maße (L/B/H)

24.2/16.5/2.9 cm

Gewicht

794 g

Übersetzt von

Michoel Rotenfeld

Sprache

Englisch

EAN

9798887193007

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

12.10.2023

Abbildungen

schwarz-weiss Illustrationen, farbige Illustrationen

Verlag

Ingram Publishers Services

Seitenzahl

300

Maße (L/B/H)

24.2/16.5/2.9 cm

Gewicht

794 g

Übersetzt von

Michoel Rotenfeld

Sprache

Englisch

EAN

9798887193007

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: The Shochet
  • Produktbild: The Shochet
  • Volume One 

    Acknowledgements

    A Note about the Translation

    Introduction: The Autobiography of Pinkhes-Dov (Pinye-Ber) Goldenshteyn—A Traditionalist’s Unique Depiction of Nineteenth-Century Jewish Life in Tsarist Russia

    An Exceptional Autobiographer: Pinye-Ber’s Status, Motives, And Choices

    Pinye-Ber in Contrast to Modern Jewish Autobiographers

    How Did Pinye-Ber Come to Write an Autobiography?

    Pinye-Ber’s Alltagsgeschichte: Traditional Jews in Tsarist Russia

    Common Life and Incidental Observations

    Work, Family Life, and Social Struggle

    The Rebbe as an Inspirational Light

    Anti-Fanaticism and Anti-Corruption

    Religious Self-Realization

    Pinye-Ber’s Sense of Divine Providence

    A Divine-Providence-Centered Consciousness

    Hasidism and Divine Providence

    A Life Seen as God’s Will

    Dates in the Autobiography

    Pinye-Ber’s Language

    Conclusion

    Bibliography


    The Shochet: A Memoir of Jewish Life in Ukraine and Crimea 

    In Lieu of a Preface

    Part I: My Family and Youth

    1. My Parents and Siblings

    Chapter 1: My Parents

    Chapter 2: The Deaths of My Parents, Brother-in-Law, and Brother, 1854–1857

    Chapter 3: Tragedy in the Lives of Three of My Sisters, ca. 1857–1864

          

    1. My Early Years, 1848–1864

    Chapter 4: My Early Childhood, 1848–1855

    Chapter 5: A New Set of Parents, 1856

    Chapter 6: With Grandfather in Groseles, 1857–1858

    Chapter 7: Shuffled Around, 1858–1860

    Chapter 8: Sent Off to an “Uncle,” 1860

    Chapter 9: My Dream of a Celestial Palace, 1860

    Chapter 10: Working as a House Servant for Shulem Tashliker, 1860–1863

    Chapter 11: Beyle’s Fiancé, 1863

    Chapter 12: Gaining Admittance to the Yeshiva in Odessa, 1863

    Chapter 13: In Odessa, Tiraspol, and Romanovke, 1863–1864


    Part II: Engagement, Marriage, and Seeking a Livelihood, 1864–1873

    Chapter 14: My Unexpected Engagement, 1864–1865

    Chapter 15: Obtaining a Romanian Passport and Traveling to Lubavitch, 1865

    Chapter 16: The Lubavitcher Rebbe and Studying in Shklov, 1865–1866

    Chapter 17:  Delivering an Esreg to the Lyever Rebbe, 1866–1867

    Chapter 18:  My Wedding and a Fiery Pursuit, 1867–1868

    Chapter 19: In Search of a Livelihood, 1868–1869

    Chapter 20: Studying to Be a Shoykhet and Searching for Uncle Idl, 1870–1872

    Chapter 21: Receiving Certification as a Shoykhet and Returning to Lubavitch, 1872–1873


    Volume Two

           Part III: My Forty Years as a Shoykhet, and Moving to Palestine, 1873–1929

    Chapter 22: As the Shoykhet of Slobodze, 1873–1875

    Chapter 23: The Nobleman’s Attack and Moving to the Crimea, 1876–1880

    Chapter 24: Corruption in Bakhchisaray and Ungrateful Relatives, 1880–1889

    Chapter 25: The Threat of Banishment from Tsarist Russia, 1881–1884

    Chapter 26: Persecution in Bakhchisaray, 1884–1889

    Chapter 27: Raising My Children and My Wife’s Death, 1884–1897

    Chapter 28: Remarrying and My Children’s Departure from Russia, 1896–1910

      Chapter 29: Preparing to Leave for Palestine, 1910–1914

           Part III—Addendum: My Life in Palestine, 1913–1928

    Chapter 30: The World War and the Death of My Second Wife, 1913–1916

    Chapter 31: Marrying Off My Niece and Writing a Torah Scroll, 1916–1917

    Chapter 32: Exile to Kfar-Saba, 1917–1918

    Chapter 33: Suffering in Exile and Returning to Petakh-Tikva, 1918

    Chapter 34: Completing the Torah Scroll, the Arab Attack, and My Children Join Me in Palestine, 1919–1929

    Appendices:

    Appendix A: The Author and His Relatives

    1. The Author’s Final Years in Petakh-Tikva

    2. The Author’s Children

    3. Isaac Goldstein, the Author’s Nephew

    4. Feyge, the Author’s Second Wife

    5. Bashe, the Author’s Third Wife

    6. Salomon Bernstein, Relative and Portraitist of the Author

    7. The Printing of The Author’s Autobiography


    Appendix B: Translations of Documents Written by the Author

    1. Hebrew Engagement Contract for His Daughter Nekhame (1897)

    2. Hebrew Ethical Will (1920)

    3. Family Letters


    Appendix C: Translations of Additional Documents

    1. Hebrew Letter from Rabbi Medini (Sdei Khemed) Regarding the Author (1879)

    2. Episodes Related by the Author about Rabbi Medini (Sdei Khemed)

    3. Two Certificates in Sh’khita Obtained by the Author’s Son Refúel (1904 and 1906)


    Appendix D: Genealogical Charts

    1. The Author’s Ancestors and Siblings

    2. The Extended Family of Ershl Teplitsky, the Author’s Brother-in-Law

    3. The Author’s Children and Grandchildren

    4. The Extended Hershkovitsh Family, the Family of the Author’s Wife Freyde 


    Appendix F: Photographs

    Appendix E: Maps

    1. Tiraspol and Its Environs

    2. Bakhchisaray, Crimea, and Its Environs


    Bibliography

    Glossaries:

    Introduction to the Glossaries and the Transliteration Schemes

    Glossary 1: Foreign Terms

    Glossary 2: Jewish Personal Names

    Glossary 3: Geographic Locations in Eastern Europe

    Index of Names, Places, and Subjects