Juspa Schammes Explained

Juspa Schammes (February 14, 1604 in Fulda – February 5, 1678 in Worms) was a chronicler of the Jewish community of Worms, Germany, synagogue caretaker (shammes), and a writer.

Life and career

Personal life

He was born as the son of Rabbi Juda in Fulda. In 1625 he married Breunge[1] or Faierchen[2] (* before 1610; † August 8, 1688), daughter of Michel and Güttle, who lived in the house "Zur hinter Sichel" in Judengasse in Worms. Juspa and his wife had five children:[3]

Juspa Schammes died in 1678, and was buried at Heiliger Sand, a Jewish Cemetery in Worms.[4] His gravestone has not been preserved and was probably destroyed in the Second World War.[5]

Training and work

In 1620 he studied in the yeshiva in Fulda with Rabbi Pinchas Levi Hurwitz from Prague.[6] In 1623 he came to Worms following Elia ben Mosche Loanz, called Baal Shem, to continue his studies with the well-known Kabbalist at the yeshiva there.[7]

He performed numerous tasks in the Jewish community of Worms. He was schammes (caretaker) of Worms Synagogue and scribe. In the latter function, he issued official documents, such as divorce letters, and was an official witness in business transactions. He made transcriptions for Rabbi Moses Simson Bacharach (1607-1670), who had been a rabbi in Worms since 1650. In addition, Juspa was probably also active as a Torah scribe and could, if necessary, slaughter animals and perform circumcisions.[8]

He became known for his writing, that, however, didn't appear in print during his life. He collected customs, habits, music, and stories about the Jewish community of Worms. These records are today a highly valuable primary source on Judaism in Worms during the early modern period.[9]

His main works are:

  1. David Oppenheimer originally owned a copy. It is now in the Bodleian Library in Oxford (Codex Oxford 909).[14] This is reproduced as a facsimile at Eidelberg.[15]
  2. Another copy was in the possession of the Amsterdam family Lehren and was sold to A. Epstein after an auction[16] in 1899.[17] It was owned by a family in Jerusalem[18] and is said to have reached the Bodleian in Oxford in the meantime[19] in the 1980s.[20]
  3. A third copy is owned by the Mainz Jewish Community and is on loan from the Raschi-Haus Museum in Worms.[21] It was saved because the last rabbi of Worms, Helmut Frank (Jakob bar Israel), was able to take it with him when he emigrated to the USA in 1938.[22] In 1972 he returned it to the Mainz Jewish Community, the legal successor to the Worms Jewish Community.[23]

References

The article was translated from German wiki, see original at .

Sources

Further reading

External links

Maase Nissim digitized:

Notes and References

  1. F. Reuter, U. Schäfer: Wundergeschichten. 2007, p. 78.
  2. Eidelberg: R. Juspa. p. 10.
  3. F. Reuter, U. Schäfer: Wundergeschichten. 2007, S. 78.
  4. F. Reuter, U. Schäfer: Wundergeschichten. 2007, S. 80.
  5. F. Reuter, U. Schäfer: Wundergeschichten. 2007, S. 80; eine Fotografie ist erhalten: Eidelberg: R. Juspa. S. 113.
  6. Eidelberg: R. Juspa. S. 9.
  7. Reuter: Warmaisa. S. 55.
  8. F. Reuter, U. Schäfer: Wundergeschichten. 2007, S. 79.
  9. Riemer: Juden und Christen. S. 121ff; Eidelberg: R. Juspa. S. 12.
  10. F. Reuter, U. Schäfer: Wundergeschichten. 2007, S. 86.
  11. Vgl.: Raspe: Yuzpa Shammes. p. 100, Anm. 9 und den hiesigen Abschnitt „Literatur“.
  12. Raspe: Yuzpa Shammes. p. 102; Reuter/Schäfer: Wundergeschichten. p. 85.
  13. Raspe: Yuzpa Shammes. p. 100.
  14. Eidelberg: Das Minhagbuch. p. 24.
  15. Eidelberg: R. Juspa. S. א1 – א115.
  16. So: Eidelberg: Das Minhagbuch. p. 24.
  17. S[alomon] Rothschild: Das Archiv der jüdischen Gemeinde von Worms. In: Vom Rhein. Beilage zur Wormser Zeitung 1 (1902), S. 21.
  18. Eidelberg: Das Minhagbuch. S. 24.
  19. F. Reuter, U. Schäfer: Wundergeschichten. 2007, S. 86.
  20. F. Reuter, U. Schäfer: Wundergeschichten. 2007, S. 86.
  21. F. Reuter, U. Schäfer: Wundergeschichten. 2007, S. 86; Eidelberg: Das Minhagbuch. S. 24.
  22. Eidelberg: Das Minhagbuch. S. 24.
  23. Eidelberg: Das Minhagbuch. S. 25.
  24. Web site: Braginsky Collection, Zurich .
  25. Web site: Achsanya Shel Torah .
  26. Vgl.: Reuter/Schäfer: Wundergeschichten. S. 79, wird von anderen aber als sicher angenommen: Eidelberg: R. Juspa. S. 97f.
  27. Eidelberg: R. Juspa. S. 100–108.