Berek Ber Page153 Birkenthal(Birkenfeld)

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Berek Ber Page153 Birkenthal(Birkenfeld)

Also Known As: "Ber", "Berj", "Ber of Bolechów", "Ber Birkenthal also Breser or Birkenfeld Page 153"
Birthdate:
Death: March 10, 1805 (81)
Bolekhiv, Ivano-Frankivs'ka oblast, Ukraine
Immediate Family:

Son of Judah (Yehuda) and Esther
Husband of Leah (2nd wife) Horowitz and unknown(1st wife) unknown
Father of Joshua Birkenthal?; Joseph of Bolechow Josefsberg; Unknown stepson of Ber and Unknown(Page 47) Birkenthal
Brother of Aryeh Loeb AKA Leyba; Axelrod Bendet; Zeeb Wolf and Blimah

Managed by: Kenneth Josefsberg
Last Updated:

About Berek Ber Page153 Birkenthal(Birkenfeld)

Go to google play books and type Ber of Bolechow. The books are free one in English and one in Hebrew. Place them in your my books folder. On the bottom right of the icons click the 3 dots and then click export. Save as PDF or can read here https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=GsJtAAAAMAAJ&pg=GBS.PP2 and here https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=uJZHAAAAYAAJ&hl=en_US&pg=GB... Original here https://digitalcollections.jtsa.edu/islandora/object/jts%3A536876#p...

From: http://www.yivoencyclopedia.org/article.aspx/Ber_of_Bolechow

https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015013943355&view=1up&...

The National Library Of Canada
https://central.bac-lac.gc.ca/.item?id=TC-QMM-22375&op=pdf&app=Libr...

Page 153 of Ber's writng is the only mention of his surname " Breser " .
Ber assumed in the Austrian time – Bolechow became Austrian in
1772 together with Galicia — the surname of Birkenfeld . Breser or Brzesier
is derived from the Polish brzóza , the German Birke . This is the only
place in the Memoirs where the family surname occurs.
Page 47 His grave is situated in the old part of the cemetery among the tombs
of the then prominent Jews of Bolechow . The inscription on the tombstone
is plain and short. Ber Birkenthal is described in it as “ the learned, the
renowned leader, the open -handed , the aged” .

(in some sources, Ber Birkenthal; 1723–1805), wine merchant, Hebrew writer, and memoirist. Born in the Polish province of Ruthenia (later Galicia), Ber of Bolechów proves the existence of a class of men within the eighteenth-century Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth whose worldviews encompassed deep traditional Jewish learning and broad secular knowledge even before the formal Jewish Enlightenment movement began in Eastern Europe.

Most of the information about Ber of Bolechów comes from his Hebrew memoirs, written sometime between 1790 and 1800 and first published by Mark Wischnitzer in 1922. They are a rich source on eighteenth-century Polish Jewish life, not only revealing the inner world of a Jewish merchant who was tutored in Polish, Latin, French, and German from an early age, but also illuminating the central role of Jews in the Commonwealth’s economy as merchants, lessees, and tenants of noble lands.

Ber of Bolechów was married at a young age and turned to business to support his family, first trading in wool, herring, spices, and other domestic products. But he soon joined his father, a veteran wine merchant, to import Hungarian vintage wines into Poland. His successful business required extensive travel to Hungary for the tasting, mixing, and importation of nonritual wines such as Máslás, Tokay, and Suchyjagod (a form of raisin wine). His dealings brought him into contact with a broad network of Armenian, Greek, French, and German wine traders as well as Polish noblemen and representatives of the Polish crown.

While Ber of Bolechów’s memoirs focus on business activities, their larger goal is to encourage his readers to combine Jewish and secular knowledge, particularly of history and political thought. Like his father, Ber of Bolechów read widely, and mentions in his memoirs works by Giovanni Botero, Humphrey Prideaux, Hugo Grotius, and Josephus. When bandits pillaged Bolechów, he noted that a female servant had rescued “over a hundred books, most of them by ancient authors,” from his library (Wischnitzer, 1973, p. 100). He believed that study of non-Jewish areas of learning and languages could protect Jews from unfair economic treatment by the Polish nobility and could help them to defend Judaism against religious slander.

Ber of Bolechów’s memoirs boast of the efficacy of his Polish-language skills in helping him to mediate internal Jewish matters, such as the case of a disputed will that went into arbitration. He felt that these same skills led to positive Jewish–gentile encounters, such as negotiations with the representatives of the king and noble landlords over Jewish communal taxes. Both in his memoirs and in “Divre binah” (Words of Wisdom; unpublished, ca. 1780–1800), a history of Jewish sectarianism, Ber of Bolechów discussed his role at the 1759 public disputation between the Frankists and the Jewish community. Ḥayim ha-Kohen Rapoport (1700–1771), head of the rabbinical court in Lwów, represented the rabbinic side against the Frankists’ charges (most notoriously, of the blood libel) and relied on Ber of Bolechów’s flawless Polish and knowledge of general history and Christianity to defend Jews. Though he was a wine merchant by economic necessity, it was as a shtadlan (communal intercessor) for the Jews of Bolechów specifically and for Poland generally that Ber of Bolechów hoped to be remembered.

Suggested Reading Majer Bałaban, Le-Toldot ha-tenu‘ah ha-frankit (Tel Aviv, 1933/34–1934/35); Abraham Brawer, Galitsyah ve-Yehudeha: Meḥkarim be-toldot Galitsyah ba-me’ah ha-shemoneh-‘esreh (Jerusalem, 1965); Mark Wischnitzer, ed. and trans., The Memoirs of Ber of Bolechow, 1723–1805 (1922; rpt., New York, 1973).

Author Nancy Sinkoff

From, "Genealogy of the Josefsberg Family" by Joseph Josefsberg (1993): "Bar, who was probably the founder of the family and there is rather much to tell, because he not only was a successful merchant, but also a considerable scholar, as he wrote in Polish, German and Latin, quite an unusual achievement in those days. He was married to a daughter of the chief rabbi of Bolechow by the name of Yakel Segal Horowitz, who was also one of my mother's ancestors. This Bar of Bolechow, whose memoirs are kept in the British Museum in London, was engaged in Oriental commerce coming mainly from Turkey, Moldavia via Hungary to Bolechow and Lemberg (Lviv). His memoirs, among other things, relate of the idle life of the Polish nobility under King Augustus III. At that time Bolechow went over into the possessions of another absentee landowner, Count Joachim Potocki, in whose time (1759) the whole town was again burned to the ground and was again rebuilt, but this time only with the efforts of Jews alone. It was also in this time when the relations between the Jews and others became more strained and his memoirs tells of an attack of Polish peasants on a Jewish college (Baith Hazidrash), in which all the students were killed.....Much history has been gathered from his memoirs in which he mentioned family names and family relations, but since I never had access to them and my information stems from a book entitled The Memoirs of Bar of Bolechow written by Dr. M. Vishnitzer (Oxford University Press, 1922)."
Also see
https://shtetlroutes.eu/en/bolekhv-putvnik/
And
http://jewish-heritage-travel.blogspot.com/2008/11/ukraine-ber-of-b...

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Berek Ber Page153 Birkenthal(Birkenfeld)'s Timeline

1723
March 13, 1723
1743
1743
1748
1748
Bolekhiv, Ivano-Frankivs'ka oblast, Ukraine
1805
March 10, 1805
Age 81
Bolekhiv, Ivano-Frankivs'ka oblast, Ukraine
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