Israel Moses Ḥazan

1808–1862

Israel Moses Ḥazan, born in Smyrna and raised in Jerusalem, was from a rabbinic family of Spanish and Turkish origin. He was appointed as a jurist in Jerusalem in 1842 and became an emissary in London for the Jewish community of Jerusalem in 1844. While in London, he condemned the reforms issued by the Brunswick rabbinical conference, in the form of a pamphlet, Kin’at tsiyon (1846). In 1847, he became chief rabbi of Rome, and later served in Corfu and Alexandria. He also composed religious poetry. In 1862, he moved back to the Land of Israel but died in Beirut.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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Kerakh shel romi (City of Rome)

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The Bah (Bayit Hadash) was asked concerning the practice in synagogues of using music which is sung in the houses of worship (of non-Jews). It is only forbidden regarding…