Chanukah treasures revealed in eight languages in National Library of Israel new series

Each clip is about two to three minutes long with items presented in Spanish, Italian, Polish, Hebrew, German, French, Russian and English.

By JNS.org

In honor of the eight nights of Chanukah this year, the National Library of Israel has produced eight clips featuring rare items from the library’s collections, presented in eight different languages, all with English subtitles.

A number of the items appear publicly for the first time. Each clip is about two to three minutes long with items presented in Spanish, Italian, Polish, Hebrew, German, French, Russian and English. Each day of the eight-day festival, a new clip will go up on the National Library’s Facebook and Twitter pages.

Treasures showcased in the films include a rare printing of a Medieval French text that includes what is believed to be the oldest written mention of latkes (fried potato pancakes traditionally eaten during Chanukah); a special Chanukah booklet prepared for Jewish German soldiers during World War I and a stunning late 18th-century “Book of Antiochus” manuscript from the Bukharian Jewish community.

Also highlighted is a rare booklet of Ladino Chanukah verses printed around 1828 in the Ottoman Empire; a traditional holiday recipe printed in Polish and Yiddish in Warsaw just before the Holocaust; and late 19th-century Chanukah flyers from Italy and India.

The Hebrew clip features a recording of legendary Moroccan-Israeli performer Jo Amar singing the traditional holiday blessings at the Israeli president’s official candle-lighting ceremony in 1957.

The National Library of Israel’s Haim and Hanna Salomon Judaica Collection includes the vast majority of Hebrew and Jewish books, journals and magazines ever published; thousands of Hebrew-letter manuscripts; the world’s largest collection of Jewish music and sound; hundreds of personal archives of leading figures; and much more.

Some highlights of the collection include Maimonides’s commentary on the Mishna in his own handwriting; some of the earliest Talmudic manuscripts and fragments; the world’s largest collections of ketubahs and Haggadahs; Hebrew books dating to the advent of the printing press; archival collections of leading rabbinic figures; and the Gershom Scholem Library—the world’s foremost resource for the study of Kabbalah, Jewish mysticism and Chassidism.

The clips were produced as part of the library’s “A Look at the Jewish Year” series, which provides insights into the Jewish calendar and holidays through the lens of the National Library of Israel’s world-leading collection of Jewish manuscripts, books, printed materials and more.

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