David ben Amram Adani

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David ben Amram Adani (14th-century CE) was a

Yemenite Jewish scholar renowned for his authorship of Midrash HaGadol,[1][2][a] a collection of homiletical expositions drawn from ancient rabbinic sources. Adani is believed to have descended from a line of prominent Jewish leaders in Aden,[3] as he is referred to in one ancient source as "David b. Amram, the nagid from the city of Aden."[1] Nagid is a title borne by the leader of the Jewish community of Aden from the 12th century.[1]

Life

Little is known of Adani's life, except that he was a gifted poet. All that which remains of his poetry, however, are the rhymed Hebrew poems which he penned at the introduction to each biblical

Judeo-Arabic.[3] Other poems of his which have survived are a poetic introduction to the Jewish laws of ritual slaughter (Shechita) and a poem in Aramaic signed with his acrostics.[4]

In his capacity as community leader, he had access to rare books of Jewish literature and

oral traditions, of which he frequently cites in his Midrash HaGadol.[3] Adani's Midrash HaGadol is the most disseminated of all midrashic literature found in Yemen, all of which being hand-made copies of Adani's work, written before the introduction of the printing press in Yemen.[4] Many of these works are now housed in the manuscript department of major libraries in New York, London and Berlin
.

Correspondence with Egypt's chief rabbi

In 1346, the head of Egypt's Jewish community,

Mishne Torah and his Sefer ha-Mitzvot, although other questions simply relate, not to Maimonides, but to one of the other rabbinic sources, such as the words of the Sifra, in affirmative command no. 89. Some of the questions deal with practical halakha, such as those issues addressed in Seder Ahavah and Zemanim of Maimonides' Mishne Torah, as well as on the laws affecting women and marriages.[6] In one question, David Adani requests of the Nagid in Egypt to arrange for the people of Yemen the set-order or cycle of nineteen calendar years, according to the Hebrew calendar, with their intercalated months, beginning with the year 1,663 of the Seleucid era
(1352 CE). More than one-hundred questions and responsa were exchanged between the two men.

Poetry

The rhymed poetic openings used by David Adani at the start of each parashah in the Midrash HaGadol are reminiscent of Rabbi Hai ben Nahshon Gaon's midrash Pitheron Torah (Torah Solution), a work thought to have been compiled about 886–896 CE. Their primary intent is to grace the midrashic works under discussion.

מרשות בורא שבעה רקיעים merǝšūṯ boré šivʻah rǝqīʻīm By the authority of Him who creates seven firmaments
מיוחד ומפורש בשמות שבעים meyuḥad u-mǝforaš bešemoṯ šivʻīm He who is Special, and who is expressed by seventy names
יתברך שמו שכחו עולם מרעים yiṯbaraḫ šǝmo šǝkoḥo ʻolam marʻīm May His name be blessed, by whose power the world shakes
הכל מודים לו טובים ורעים ha-kol modīm lo ṭovīm wǝ-raʻīm All persons acknowledge Him, both good men and wicked men
בחר בעמו והבדילם מן התועים baḥar bǝʻammo wi-hivdillam min ha-toʻīm He that chose His people and distinguished them from those who err
סגלם וקראם ילד שעשועים siğlam u-qra’am yeled šaʻašūʻīm He made of them a peculiar [race] and called them a delightful child.
ונתן לנו תורתו מפלאות תמים דעים wǝ-naṯan lanū ṯoraṯo miflǝ’oṯ tǝmīm deʻīm And He gave unto us His Law, even the wonders of the All-knowing
על יד ציר נאמן אביר הרועים ʻal yad ṣīr ne’eman ’abīr ha-roʻīm Through a faithful messenger, the noblest of the shepherds
כן ישפיע שלומינו כנחלי מבועים ken yašpīaʻ šǝlomeinū kǝnaḥǝlei mabūʻīm Thus may He cause our peace to emanate, as the brooks of flood waters
ונהיה דשנים ורעננים ובתורה שבעים wǝ-nihǝyeh dǝšenīm wǝ-raʻanǝnīm u-vǝ-torah sǝveʻīm And let us be full of ripeness and wholesomeness and satisfied in the Divine Law
ונאמר הללויה כי טוב זמרה אלהינו כי נעים wǝ-nomar hallelū-yah kī-ṭov zamǝrah ’eloheinū kī-naʻīm And let us say, Hallejah! For it is good to sing [to] our God, for it is pleasant[7]

References

  1. ^ a b c Yehuda Ratzaby, ed. (1971), "Adani, David ben Amram", Encyclopaedia Judaica, vol. 2, Jerusalem: Keter Publishing House, p. 250
  2. ^ Neubauer, A. (1893), The Jewish Quarterly Review 5, p. 339
  3. ^ a b c Tobi, et al. (2000), p. 197
  4. ^ a b Ratzaby (1978), p. 103
  5. ^ Cf. Jewish Theological Seminary of New York (Ms. 10709)
  6. ^ Ratzaby (1989), p. 15 (Preface)
  7. ^ Excerpt from Midrash HaGadol, on Genesis, parashat Vayechi, p. 794

Notes

  1. Abraham ben Moses Maimonides
    .

Bibliography

Further reading