ABRAHAM BEN JOSIAH YERUSHALMI
- ABRAHAM BEN JOSIAH YERUSHALMI
- ABRAHAM BEN JOSIAH YERUSHALMI (c. 1685–after 1734), Karaite
scholar, one of the most important authors in the Crimea,
ḥazzan and teacher of Torah, from chufut-kaleh . The
agnomen Yerushalmi probably indicates that his father, Josiah, made the
pilgrimage to Jerusalem. His religious philosophical treatise
Emunah Omen, written in 1712 (pub. Eupatoria, 1846), dealt
with the following subjects: the divine origin and eternity of the
Torah; which religion is the true
one, the Karaite or the Rabbanite?; does tradition permit Jews to study
the secular sciences? Abraham defended the Karaite conception of the
Torah, arguing that the differences between the rabbinic and Karaite
views about fulfillment of the commandments are insignificant. He shows
respect for the talmudic authorities and later Rabbanite scholars with
whose work he was well acquainted. Although opposed to the study of
secular sciences (except in the service of the Torah), Abraham was
familiar with both Karaite and Rabbanite philosophical and scientific
literature. Abraham's numerous other works include homiletical
discourses, liturgical poetry incorporated in the Karaite prayer book,
and Sha'ol Sha'al (Ms. St. Petersburg, Evr. II
A 322), a treatise on the laws of ritual slaughter. Abraham was
the grandfather of Benjamin b. Samuel aga .
-BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Fuerst, Karaeertum, 3 (1869), 68–73; A. Geiger, Nachgelassene
Schriften, 2 (1875), 351–7 (analysis of Emunah Omen);
S. Poznański, in: Ha-Goren, 8 (1912), 58–75; Mann, Texts, 2
(1935), 1277–78. ADD. BIBLIOGRAPHY: S.
Poznanski, Ha-Kara'i Avraham ben Yoshiyahu Yerushalmi (1894).
(Jakob Naphtali Hertz Simchoni /
Golda Akhiezer (2nd ed.)
Encyclopedia Judaica.
1971.
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