Abraham Hayyim Adadi | |
---|---|
Personal | |
Born | Abraham Hayyim Adadi 1801 |
Died | June 13, 1874 (aged 72–73) |
Religion | Judaism |
Children | Saul Adadi |
Parent | Mas'ud Hai Adadi |
Position | Dayan, Av Beit Din |
Organisation | Jewish community of Tripoli |
Began | 1838 |
Ended | 1870 |
Yahrtzeit | 28 Sivan 5634[1] |
Buried | Safed, Palestine |
Abraham Hayyim Adadi (Hebrew: אברהם חיים אדאדי, 1801 – June 13, 1874)[1] was a Sephardi Hakham, dayan (rabbinical court judge), av beit din (head of the rabbinical court), and senior rabbi of the 19th-century Jewish community of Tripoli, Libya. In his younger years, he lived in Safed, Palestine, and traveled to Jewish communities in the Middle East and North Africa as a shadar (rabbinical emissary) to raise funds for the Safed community. He returned to Safed a few years before his death and was buried there. He published several halakhic works and also recorded the local minhagim (customs) of Tripoli and Safed, providing a valuable resource for scholars and historians.[2]
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page).