Beth Hatalmud Rabbinical College: Difference between revisions
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|date=May 1, 2020}}</ref> and Rabbi Chaim Leib Perkowski, Rabbi Mendel Bromberg also plays a significant role. The highest shiur is given by Rabbi Chaim Weinstein followed by Rabbi Leib Weiss and Rabbi Moshe Baron. Weekly chaburos are given by Rabbi Yitzchok Rubnitz. |
|date=May 1, 2020}}</ref> and Rabbi Chaim Leib Perkowski, Rabbi Mendel Bromberg also plays a significant role. The highest shiur is given by Rabbi Chaim Weinstein followed by Rabbi Leib Weiss and Rabbi Moshe Baron. Weekly chaburos are given by Rabbi Yitzchok Rubnitz. |
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Recently, a new initiative has begun to help invigorate the great yeshiva which seemed to be dwindling. Harav Hagaon Rav Avrohom Shlomo Katz Shlita has begun saying shiur for Beis Medrash Bochurim Upstairs in the Yeshiva with attendees numbering in the forties, something the Yeshiva hasn't seen in years. This has invoked mixed "feelings" among the old-timers. However, most see it as positive development and a opportunity to be mamashich the Heilige Mesorah of "The Mir". |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
Revision as of 20:37, 6 July 2023
This article needs additional citations for verification. (June 2023) |
Beth Hatalmud Rabbinical College,[1] or in short known as Bais Hatalmud,[2] is a Rabbinical college located in the Bensonhurst section of Brooklyn, New York.
Founding and mission
Background
Bais Hatalmud was founded in 1950 by students of the Mir Yeshiva in Belarus, which survived the Holocaust by escaping to Japan and ultimately found refuge in Shanghai where the yeshiva spent the war years. One of the deans of the Mir Yeshiva in Poland, Rabbi Avraham Kalmanowitz, managed to escape to America in 1940 and established a yeshiva in Brooklyn in 1946 that he called the Mir yeshiva. However, when the Mir student body arrived in the U.S. from Shanghai, they did not join the yeshiva founded by Rabbi Kalmanowitz. Some of the most distinguished students of the yeshiva held that while the yeshiva established by Rabbi Kalmanowitz was called the Mir Yeshiva, that yeshiva was not the Mir yeshiva that existed in Poland, and that the actual Mir Yeshiva was the one that went to Shanghai and arrived in America after World War II. This was because the institution of the Mir Yeshiva was based on the student body and that a yeshiva was based on the culture and values that were established by the yeshiva and that the yeshiva demanded its students abide by. In fact the idea that the basis of a yeshiva are the values and way of life it demanded of its students was how the original Mir yeshiva in Poland defined itself as what it gave it its identity.[3]
Within the walls
It was therefore decided by the students of the original Mir yeshiva to establish a new institution in America that would serve as the continuation of the original Mir yeshiva. The fact that the Mir yeshiva was the only yeshiva in Europe to survive the Nazi destruction of European Jewry in its entirety was a primary reason they held that there should be a continuation of the original yeshiva in Europe in America after World War II. They called this Yeshiva Bais Hatalmud,[4] which means The House of the Talmud.
The mission of this yeshiva was to have it be to continue the ideals and values of the Mir yeshiva was in Poland, and to preserve and uphold the way that things were in the original yeshiva. A very important aspect of the original yeshiva was a concept that was called living within the proverbial "walls" of the yeshiva. The concept of the "walls" of a yeshiva is that a yeshiva is its own world and culture separate from the world outside it. What is held to be important and what is respected and strived for within the yeshiva, is completely different than that of the outside world. Thus the proverbial "walls" of the yeshiva separate the world of the yeshiva, and those within it,[5] from the world outside.[6]
Bais Hatalmud was established to be a continuation of the Mir Yeshiva in Poland. Unlike other yeshivas in America which were shaped and formed to fit the American mentality of its students, Bais Hatalmud stressed the fact that the yeshiva's roots were the Mir Yeshiva in pre-war Europe and placed an emphasis on maintaining the spirit and values of that yeshiva.
Academics
Bais Hatalmud has an undergraduate division and a post graduate division. In the post graduate division students eventually move on from the subjects that are being studied in the yeshiva, which are limited to civil jurisprudence, and form groups where they study other parts of the Talmud. The school's accreditation is from the Association of Advanced Rabbinical and Talmudic Schools.[7]
History
A month after Rabbi Aryeh Leib Malin's marriage in 1948, a meeting was held in his home to establish Yeshivas Beis Hatalmud.[8] The founding chaburah included, Rabbi Bezalel Tannenbaum, Rabbi Levi Krupenia (R"Y Toras Emes Kamenitz), Rabbi Leib Shachar, Rabbi Leizer Horodzhesky, Rabbi Simcha Zissel Levovitz, (Rabbi Yeruchom Levovitz's son), Rabbi Shmuel (Charkover) Wilensky, Rabbi Chaim Wysokier, Rabbi Binyomin Paler, Rabbi Avrohom Levovitz, Rabbi Sholom Menashe Gottlieb, Rabbi Yisroel Perkowski, Rabbi Baruch Leib Sassoon and Rabbi Aaron Zablotsky.
Rabbi Aryeh Leib Malin, along with Rabbi Chaim Wysokier served as the Roshei Hayeshiva. After the passing of Rabbi Malin, Harav Chaim Wysokier remained alone at the helm of the Yeshiva. Later, after Rabbi Wysokier died, the Yeshiva was led by its three remaining elders, including Harav Shalom Menashe Gotlieb, Harav Yisroel Perkowski and Harav Binyomin Zeilberger. After the passing of the Rosh yeshivah Rav Chaim Wyoskeir, there was a din torah to decide who will lead the Yeshiva. Many years of confusion and controversy followed. Today the hanhala is led by Rabbi Naftali Kaplan along with Rabbi Yehuda Zeilberger[9] and Rabbi Chaim Leib Perkowski, Rabbi Mendel Bromberg also plays a significant role. The highest shiur is given by Rabbi Chaim Weinstein followed by Rabbi Leib Weiss and Rabbi Moshe Baron. Weekly chaburos are given by Rabbi Yitzchok Rubnitz.
Recently, a new initiative has begun to help invigorate the great yeshiva which seemed to be dwindling. Harav Hagaon Rav Avrohom Shlomo Katz Shlita has begun saying shiur for Beis Medrash Bochurim Upstairs in the Yeshiva with attendees numbering in the forties, something the Yeshiva hasn't seen in years. This has invoked mixed "feelings" among the old-timers. However, most see it as positive development and a opportunity to be mamashich the Heilige Mesorah of "The Mir".
See also
References
- ^ Dr. Yitzchok Levine (February 1, 2018). "Rabbi Aryeh Leib Malin And The Mir Yeshiva". The Jewish Press.
Rabbi Aryeh Leib Malin .. created Beth Hatalmud Rabbinical College in Brooklyn
- ^ "Yeshivas Bais Hatalmud Splitting Shabbos Shacharis Minyan". Hamodia. March 13, 2020.
- ^ Letter from Rabbi Chaim Wisoker to Rabbi Leizer Yudel Finkel, Dean Mir Yehivah, Jerusalem 1948
- ^ "Hachnasas Sefer Torah at Yeshiva Bais Hatalmud". Hamodia. December 4, 2016.
- ^ "Rabbi Chaim Yosef Bernikier zt"l". Matzav.com. May 10, 2020.
Rabbi Bernikier was a beloved longtime member of the Yeshiva Bais Hatalmud community in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn.
- ^ Rabbi Aryeh Leib Mallin, Introduction to Ha'Tvunah 1950
- ^ "Beth Hatalmud Rabbinical College". Retrieved December 21, 2020.
- ^ Part 2: A. HaCohen (January 29, 2003). "IN-DEPTH FEATURES: The Yeshiva's Home: HaRav Aryeh Leib Malin, 29th Teves 5763, His Forty-First Yahrtzeit".
- ^ "Rabbi Aryeh Zev Ginzburg Recovers! See What Rav Chatzkel zt"l says". Vosizneias. May 1, 2020.
Rabbi Yehudah Zeilberger shlita is one of the three Roshei Yeshiva of Bais haTalmud.
40°36′19″N 73°59′34″W / 40.6052°N 73.9927°W
External links
- 1950 establishments in New York City
- Belarusian-Jewish culture in New York City
- Educational institutions established in 1950
- Jewish seminaries
- Men's universities and colleges in the United States
- Mir Yeshiva
- Orthodox yeshivas in Brooklyn
- Seminaries and theological colleges in New York City
- Universities and colleges in Brooklyn