Moshe Greenwald

From Justapedia, unleashing the power of collective wisdom
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Responsa Arugat HaBosem – First Edition, Svaliava, 1912

Moshe Greenwald (1853–1910), also spelled Grunwald, was one of the greatest rabbis of Hungary at the end of the 19th century. He was the Rav of Chust, Hungary and progenitor of the Pupa Hasidic dynasty through his son Rabbi Yaakov Yechezkiya. He was also the author of Arugas Habosem, a book of responsa covering a wide breadth of halakhic issues.

Biography

Ohel (grave) of Rabbi Greenwald and other Rabbonim of Khust

He was the eldest son of Amram Greenwald (1831–1870), one of the leading students of the Ksav Sofer. His father, not wanting to enter the rabbinate, married his wife on that condition.[1] He was buried in the cemetery in Farád, Hungary (son of Yosef Grinwald, brother-in-law of Amram Hasidah) and Esther who was buried in the cemetery in Csorna, Hungary.

From a young age, he studied at the yeshiva of Menachem Katz, a disciple of Hatam Sofer in Tzehlim (Deutschkreutz, now in Austria) and with his grandfather Yosef Greenwald. From the age of sixteen, he studied at the Pressburg Yeshiva with his teacher, the Ketav Sofer, where he studied together with his friend Yosef Chaim Sonnenfeld, later the rabbi of the Eda Haredit in Jerusalem. Greenwald was one of a group of students of the Ksav Sofer who took on Hasidic customs.[2] At the age of twenty, he was orphaned from his father, and the burden of supporting the family fell on his shoulders, and he was forced to engage in timber trading, but continued his studies with great persistence. At that time, he married his relative Zissel Gestetner.

At that time, he began to say Shiurei Torah in a yeshiva in the city of Csorna, and at the age of twenty-six, began to serve as rabbi in the city of Humenné in Hungary (today in Slovakia). In 1887, Greenwald was appointed rabbi of the city of Kleinvardein (Kisvárda) in Hungary. Greenwald was originally from a non-Hasidic family, which behaved like the custom of the Chatam Sofer, but from his youth, he became a Hasid and traveled to the Admorim of Belz and Siget. From that time he also made sure to wear the Shtreimel. He was a disciple of the second Belzer Rebbe, Rabbi Yehoshua Rokeach.[3] His descendants led a Hasidic community, called the community of Papa, after the city where his son served as Rebbe and Admor.

Greenwald began his rabbinic career as the Rav and av beis din in Humenné (Homonna in Hungarian), where he established a yeshiva.[2] From there he accepted the rabbanut of Kleinwardein, or Kisvárda in Hungarian and in 1887 he moved to Khust (Huszt in Hungarian), where he also headed a yeshiva. Among his favorite students in Chust were Shraga Feivel Mendlowitz, the future founder of Yeshiva Torah Vodaath.[2] In 1893, Greenwald was appointed rabbi of the city of Khost in Hungary (now in Western Ukraine), and many of the greatest rabbis of Hungary, headed by Maharam Schick, served in the rabbinate of the city of Hust. Greenwald replaced Rabbi Yoel Zvi Rata who died that year. Greenwald expanded the Hust Yeshiva, which became one of the largest yeshivas of Hungarian Jewry. Many Hungarian rabbis of the twentieth century were among his disciples. Students also came from outside the borders of Hungary and even from the United States.

Like his rabbis, Greenwald continued his war against the Neo-Reform movement and against any deviation from the tradition of Orthodox Judaism. In his responsa, he refers harshly to changing the place of the cantor from the cantor's lectern to the stage in the middle of the synagogue. He also decrees that his son will be careful to shave his son's hair at the age of three and not before, according to tradition.

Greenwald was a prolific author, but most of his fame comes from the responsa he wrote – "Arugat HaBosem".

Greenwald eschewed pilpul and advised his students to acquire breadth and depth in the study of Torah and Gemara.[2]

Lineage

Rabbi Yehoshua Greenwald
  • Rabbi Moshe Greenwald of Chust – author of Arugas Habosem
    • Rabbi Avraham Yosef Greenwald, Rav of Ungvar, son of the Arugas Habosem
      • Rabbi Mayer Gruenwald, Rav of Tetch
      • Rabbi Yehoshua Gruenwald (1909 – 6 Av 5729, July 1969) was Ravid Ungvar and the last rabbi of Khust.
    • Rabbi Yaakov Yechezkiya Greenwald, Rav of Pupa, son of the Arugas Habosem
      • Rabbi Yosef Greenwald, Pupa Rav of Williamsburg, son of Rabbi Yaakov Yechezkiya Greenwald I
        • Rabbi Yaakov Yechezkiya Greenwald II, Pupa Rebbe, son of Rabbi Yosef Greenwald
        • Rabbi Yisroel Menachem Greenwald, Pupa Rav of Boro Park, son of Rabbi Yosef Greenwald
        • Rabbi Aron Greenwald, Pupa Dayan of Williamsburg, son of Rabbi Yosef Greenwald
    • Rabbi Yekusiel Yehuda Greenwald, Rav of Yoreh, son of the Arugas Habosem
    • Rabbi Yisroel Meir Greenwald, son of the Arugas Habosem (died age 30)
    • Rabbi Levi Yitzchok Greenwald, Rav of Tzehlim and later Kehillas Arugas Habosem in Williamsburg, son of the Arugas Habosem

Notable students

References

  1. ^ "Pirkei Avot". Hamaayan. 30 April 1994. Archived from the original on 7 July 2011. Retrieved 3 April 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d Rosenblum, Yonasan (2001). "Reb Shraga Feivel: The Life and Times of Rabbi Shraga Feivel Mendlowitz, the Architect of Torah Life in America". Mesorah Publications, Ltd. Chapter 1. Retrieved 3 April 2010.
  3. ^ A World That Was, Hamodia Magazine, 18 March 2010, p. 7.

Ben-Menahem, Naphtali; Alfassi, Itzhak (2007). "Grünwald, Amram". In Skolnik, Fred; Berenbaum, Michael (eds.). Encyclopaedia Judaica. Vol. 8 (2 ed.). Farmington Hills: Thomson Gale. p. 113. ISBN 978-0-02-865936-7.

Tisbi, Illés (1929). "Grünwald Móse". In Ujvári, Péter (ed.). Magyar Zsidó Lexikon [hu] (in Hungarian). Budapest. p. 326.

External links