Obj. ID: 56347
  Sacred and Ritual Mizrah, Jerusalem, circa 1905
The following description was prepared by William Gross:
Mizrah (Hebrew: מזרח "east") is the Hebrew word for "east" and the direction that Jews in the Diaspora face during prayer. Jewish law prescribes that Jews at prayer face the site of the Temple in Jerusalem. In addition, "Mizrach" refers to an ornamental wall plaque used to indicate the direction of prayer in Jewish homes. In a synagogue, that direction would be obvious as it is the side of the building on which the ark was placed. But in a home or Sukkah the direction had to be indicated. It is customary in traditional Jewish homes and the Sukkah to mark the wall in the direction of Mizrach to facilitate proper prayer. For this purpose, people use artistic wall plaques inscribed with the word Mizrach and scriptural passages like "From the rising (mi-mizrah) of the sun unto the going down thereof, the Lord's name is to be praised" (Ps. 113:3), Kabbalistic inscriptions, or pictures of holy places. Such plaques were most often manuscript forms or printed sheets, ranging from the simplest idea of the word only to elaborately decorated pages with a wide range of images and texts. These plaques are generally placed in rooms in which people pray, such as the living room or bedrooms. The four letters of the Hebrew word MiZRaCH are sometimes indicated as the initial letters of the Hebrew phrase Metzad Zeh Ruach CHaim (From this side the source of life).
Printed Mizrachs were an important part of Jewish art around the end of the 19th century. For the first time, the increasing efficiency of the printing and paper industries made such printed sheets available at reasonable prices to a much wider public that previously. Such Mizrachs a popular item from printers in the Holy Land: for use in that country, for sending as gifts abroad and as souvenirs for tourists. To this Mizrach has been added a panorama of holy places. This is a variant printing of another Mizrach in the Gross Family Collection, 056.011.026. The larger oval vignettes of the holy places are arranged somewhat differently in the present example and there is one new example. In addition, there are two small oval vignettes. The border in this example is decorated and with texts, and the colors of the printing are different. This particularly large sheet was printed by Shmuel Zuckerman.
Shmuel ben Ya’akov Halevy Zuckerman was born in Mesiritch in 1856. As a six-year-old child he made Aliyah with his parents. He learned the printing trade while working for Yisrael Bak, after whose death he continued in the printing house of Bak’s son Nisan. He soon went to London, however, and worked in printing there before returning to Eretz Israel to work in the shop of Ag”n. By 1885 he was a partner in that enterprise and from 1886 became the sole owner, publishing books under his name. The press operated in the Old City of Jerusalem until Zuckerman moved it to the new city in 1926. Up to 1890 almost 80 books were printed from his press in addition to many single sheets. Almost 100 items from the Zuckerman printing house exist in the Gross Family Collection.
Sephardi Synagogue Beit El is shown in the cross-section view.
sub-set tree: 
H | Holy and other places in the Land of Israel | Holy Tombs | Absalom's Tomb
C | Columns
H | Heraldic composition | Supporters | Two lions
C | Crown
M | Menorah
H | Holy and other places in the Land of Israel | Holy Tombs | Rachel's Tomb
H | Holy and other places in the Land of Israel | Holy Tombs | Cave of Machpelah (Tomb of the Patriarchs/Matriarchs)
A | Animals, the Four (Mishnah, Avot, 5:20)
T | Temple of Jerusalem
C | Columns | Twisted columns
H | Holy and other places in the Land of Israel | Cities | Shechem (Nablus) שכם
H | Holy and other places in the Land of Israel | Cities | Jericho יריחו
J | Jerusalem
H | Holy and other places in the Land of Israel | Abraham's Tree (Eshel Abraham)
H | Holy and other places in the Land of Israel | Holy Tombs | Dynasty of King David, Tomb of קברי מלכי בית דוד
H | Holy and other places in the Land of Israel | Holy Tombs | Tomb of the Kings of Judea and of Kalba Savua
M | Menorah | Tongs (melkahayim)
M | Menorah | Stepping Stone of the Menorah (Kevesh)
S | Sanctuary | Sanctuary Implements | Oil Jar
H | Holy and other places in the Land of Israel | Cities | The Four Holy Cities | Tiberias טבריה
H | Holy and other places in the Land of Israel | Cities | The Four Holy Cities | Safed צפת
H | Holy and other places in the Land of Israel | Holy Tombs | Simeon bar Yohai (Rashbi), Tomb of (קבר רשבי)
H | Holy and other places in the Land of Israel | Holy Tombs | Samuel the Prophet, Tomb of
H | Holy and other places in the Land of Israel | Holy Tombs | Rabbi Meir Baal HaNes (the miracle maker), Tomb of, in Tiberias
J | Jerusalem | Sites in Jerusalem: | Synagogues and Yeshivas | Tiferet Israel Synagogue
J | Jerusalem | Sites in Jerusalem: | Tower of David מגדל דוד
H | Holy and other places in the Land of Israel | Holy Tombs | Simeon the Righteous, Tomb of קבר שמעון הצדיק
J | Jerusalem | Sites in Jerusalem: | Synagogues and Yeshivas | Sephardi Synagogue Beit El
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