By Dovid Zaklikowski

An illustration of King David praising G-d in a rare Haggadah published in 1710 in Frankfurt am Maine, Germany

NEW YORK, NY — The central Chabad-Lubavitch library in New York made 1,000 Passover Haggadahs, many of them rare, available on the Internet for browsing by the public. The Agudas Chasidei Chabad Library has one of the largest collections of the Passover orders of service in the world.

Library Makes 1,000 Rare Haggadahs Available Online

By Dovid Zaklikowski

An illustration of King David praising G-d in a rare Haggadah published in 1710 in Frankfurt am Maine, Germany

NEW YORK, NY — The central Chabad-Lubavitch library in New York made 1,000 Passover Haggadahs, many of them rare, available on the Internet for browsing by the public. The Agudas Chasidei Chabad Library has one of the largest collections of the Passover orders of service in the world.

Housed in a facility adjacent to Lubavitch World Headquarters, the library’s Haggadah collection began years ago with a nucleus of some 400 volumes purchased on behalf of the Sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, of righteous memory, by renowned collector and bibliographer Shmuel Wiener in 1924.

The posting at ChabadLibraryBooks.com represents close to half of the library’s total Haggadah collection and is part of chief librarian Rabbi Sholom Ber Levine’s goal of making the library more accessible to the public. All told, the library possesses more than 2,200 editions of the Haggadah. Although the rarest of the books, all handwritten, are not yet available, Levine is looking for ways to post them next year. Hebrew Books, directed by Chaim Rosenberg, collaborated on the project.

Those available online offer a snapshot of Jewish publishing history from the Middle Ages to the modern era. The oldest was printed in Berlin in 1527, while the most recent Haggadah was published in 1960 in Tel Aviv.

Article continued (Chabad.org News)