Manuscript comprised of 3 notebooks laden with dozens of leaves of Torah novellae across all Torah topics by Rabbi Mordechai Meir Friedmann, Av Beit Din of Kitsee (one of “The Seven Communities”). Rabbi Mordechai Meir son of Rabbi Yisrael Yom Tov Friedmann [d. 1988] was the last rabbi of Kitsee. He was a disciple of Rabbi Yosef Elimelech Kahana, Av Beit Din of Ungvar and of the author of Da’at Sofer of Pressburg. When his grandfather, the Av Beit Din of Kitsee – Rabbi Tzvi Hirch Abeles, became elderly, and the work in the rabbinate became too difficult for him, he appointed his grandson to succeed him. Although quite young, his grandfather saw that he was destined for greatness, and he was assigned to the rabbinate of Kitsee while yet unmarried. Rabbi Mordechai Meir founded a senior yeshivah for young men, where he delivered regular lectures just as one with great experience – all this before he married. When he came of age, he married a daughter of Rabbi Baruch Moshe Lebel, rosh yeshivah of Pressburg. After a short time as rabbi in Kitsee, when the guillotine came down on the people of the Seven Communities, Rabbi Meir Mordechai managed to escape. After a grueling journey, he ascended to the Land of Israel. He settled in Tel Aviv, where he was asked to become rabbi of the Maccabi neighborhood. However, upon request of his rabbi, author of Da’at Sofer, and with extraordinary greatness of spirit, he declined the offer in favor of another rabbi who was crushed and despondent after the Holocaust, despite the fact that this also involved declining minimal income for basic sustenance. After several years, he moved to Bnei Brak, where he dedicated himself once again to disseminating Torah through the dozens of lectures he delivered each week, such as in the Heichal Shlomo synagogue on Pardes Katz, where he served as rabbi, as well as in the Benedict synagogue. He was especially well-known for the special lecture he delivered there on Shabbat evening. Many dozens of listeners came each Shabbat to hear his delightful lessons on the weekly Torah portion. He also delivered lessons in Tel Aviv, in the synagogue on Yehudah HaLevi Street, where he would also pray on the high holidays. For years, he would walk for a long time (2 hours!) all the way from his home in Bnei Brak to that synagogue, until an apartment in the vicinity of the synagogue was arranged for him. He proudly raised the banner of the Chatam Sofer and his legacy. His soul’s desire was to bequeath the next generation what he received from his rabbis, to study with their methods, to conduct themselves according to their doctrine, and to follow the customs of the holy communities in Hungary, and in “The Seven Communities.” With his insistence and perseverance and not budging at all from the way of his fathers and his rabbis, he was able to appreciate the greatness of the Orthodox communities and their rabbis, their yeshivahs, and their community leaders, all of whom were steeped in the refined truth of their way. He was one of the leaders and founders of the “Chug Chatam Sofer” institutions in the Land of Israel. Everywhere he found himself, he established a beacon of Torah and sanctity. Fine condition.