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Yeshivas Knesses Beis Yitzchak-Kaminetz

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yeshivas Knesses Beis Yitzchak
הישיבה הגדולה כנסת בית יצחק
Location

Information
TypeYeshiva
Religious affiliation(s)Orthodox Judaism
Established1897
Closed1941
DeanRabbi Boruch Ber Leibowitz
Faculty
Enrollment350-400 (before World War II)
Rabbi Boruch Ber Leibowitz with students

Yeshivas Knesses Beis Yitzchak was an Orthodox Jewish yeshiva, founded in Slabodka on the outskirts of Kaunas, Lithuania (then ruled by the Russian Empire), in 1897. The yeshiva later moved to Kamyenyets, then part of Poland, and currently in Belarus, and is therefore often referred to as the Kaminetz Yeshiva or simply Kaminetz. The yeshiva was famously led by Rabbi Boruch Ber Leibowitz.

Early years

Founding

Originally, Slabodka boasted the famous Knesses Yisrael yeshiva, founded by Rabbi Nosson Tzvi Finkel in 1882.[1]: p. 50  However, in 1897, controversy broke out in the yeshiva, as many of the students were opposed to the yeshiva strong focus on mussar (Jewish ethics), as opposed to only studying Talmud.[1]: p. 56  The yeshiva therefore split into two, with the one against mussar going under the name Knesses Beis Yitzchok (named for the previous rabbi of Kaunas, Rabbi Yitzchak Elchanan Spektor).[2] The rav of Slabodka, Rabbi Moshe Danishevsky, served as rosh yeshiva. Rabbi Moshe Mordechai Epstein, the rosh yeshiva of Knesses Yisrael, served alongside Rabbi Danishevsky in the town's beis din (Torah court). Despite the friction between the two yeshivos at the time of their division, the cooperation between the two rosh yeshivas thawed the ice.[2] Rabbi Chaim Rabinowitz also served as rosh yeshiva. However, a controversy between pro- and anti-Zionists broke out in the yeshiva, and Rabbi Rabinowitz left the yeshiva. Rabbi Baruch Ber Leibowitz, a student of Rabbi Chaim Soloveitchik and formerly a rosh yeshiva in Halusk, was appointed as rosh yeshiva.

Rabbi Baruch Ber Leibowitz

Despite the fact that Knesses Beis Yitzchak was not a mussar yeshiva, Rabbi Baruch Ber himself was uncomfortable being labeled as an opponent to mussar. His son-in-law, Rabbi Reuven Grozovsky, who taught in the yeshiva, was a student of the Knesses Yisrael yeshiva in Slabodka, and Rabbi Leibowitz said that only Knesses Yisrael could've produced such a fine personality.[1]: p. 57  Both of his sons-in-law, Rabbi Grozovsky and Rabbi Moshe Bernstein, taught in the yeshiva.

World War I

When World War I broke out in 1914, the yeshiva fled Slabodka for Minsk, and when the war reached there as well, the yeshiva moved further east, settling in Kremenchug in Ukraine, also under Russian Rule, in 1917;[3] Rabbi Leibowitz was with the yeshiva throughout its travels. However, war was rampant in Kremenchug also, with fighting between Ukrainian nationalists and the Russians, as well as between the Red and White armies, and in the yeshiva moved again in 1921, this time to Vilna, a bustling city in Lithuania with a large Jewish population, where they remained for five years. In Vilna, the action of the big city served as a disturbance, and Rabbi Leibowitz moved the yeshiva in 1926 to Kaminetz, a city in the Second Polish Republic.[4]

Golden Years

The yeshiva was welcomed by the Kaminetz Jewish community; the community marched out to greet them, clad in holiday attire, with an orchestra leading the way. Rabbi Leibowitz was seated on a fancy chair, upholstered in velvet, and lifted into the air. The procession then walked with the yeshiva until they reached the yeshiva's new building. A festive meal was then had.[3]

The yeshiva grew exponentially in their new home, with as many as 350-400 students (generally in their late twenties, although a few students were in their thirties),[5] with another 50 in the mechina (a preparatory school for younger students), and seven men in the kollel.[4] Students flocked to the yeshiva from all over the continent, as well as from Palestine and America.[6] The growth of the yeshiva led to a lack of space in their building, and so Mr. Gershon Galin, a Kaminetz native who had emigrated to the United States, took upon himself to erect a new building, and took the first step by purchasing a piece of land and being the first one to donate towards the building fund. In 1932, the building's foundation was laid. On the eighth day Chanukah in 1937, the dedication of the new building was celebrated, in the presence of rabbis from throughout the region.[3]

World War II

Exile to Lithuania

Modern photo of Rasein in Lithuania

In early September 1939, the German Army invaded Kaminetz. They told the local residents that they did not plan to stay for long, as they had signed the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, which stated that the Soviet Union would get the eastern half of Poland, and treated them decently. The yeshiva stayed in Kaminetz during the German occupation, and had prayed regularly during the Jewish holiday of Rosh Hashana. The Germans left the city, leaving behind only a small headquarters, at the time that the Russians were supposed to come. However, the Russians didn't come right away, and local gentile anti-Semites took advantage of the anarchy to attack Jews and loot their properties. Ironically, the Jews went to the local Nazi headquarters and requested that their soldiers return to protect them until the Soviets arrived.[5] The Russians arrived on the day before Yom Kippur.

Rabbi Chaim Ozer Grodzensky, the rabbi of Vilna as well as gadol hador (leader of the generation),[7] sent a message to all of the yeshivos under Russian rule that they should escape to Vilna; the Russians had taken the city from Poland and were going to give it back to Lithuania (which it had previously been part of). Therefore, many yeshivos escaped and crowded into Vilna.[8] In the Kaminetz Yeshiva, many of the foreign and Polish students returned home, leaving only half of the yeshiva, approximately 160 students, in the yeshiva, and together they fled to Vilna.

In Vilna, local Jews arranged for the yeshiva to study in the Lokishok Bais Medrash[9] and families offered to take in refugees for lodging[5] The Lithuanian prime minister, who treated the Jews well, decided that having fifteen thousand refugees crowded into the capital city was unsustainable and he therefore ordered the yeshivos to disperse to the nearby towns. The Kaminetz Yeshiva settled in Rasein, where the classes continued as usual. Rabbi Leibowitz died then in 1939.[10]

Dispersion

Despite their temporary safety, the students understood that they were in the center of a war-zone and tried all they could to leave the country, but all their attempts went in vain. About a year and half later, the Russians reassumed control of Lithuania; when they discovered that the yeshiva students in the countryside were attempting to leave for America, they made plans to send the yeshivos to Siberian labor camps, farther away from the border, as they were worried about anti-communists being so close to the front, lest they join forces with the Nazis and fight against the Soviet Union. Russian soldiers had seized Jewish homes, and the hosts warned the yeshiva students of their plan of relocation. Many went into hiding, while many went along with the plan;[9] the ones who stayed behind in Lithuania ended up getting killed by the Nazis three days later.[5] The students that were deported did not end up going to Siberia, rather to the remote Komi Republic in Russian Asia. They ended up getting split into four groups. The first was dropped off in the village of Zeschart; there were fifteen Kaminetz students in the group. The second group was dropped off in Aykany;[a] the third group, consisting of forty people, in settlement near Syktivkar; and the fourth group was left 150 kilometres from the capital city. Among the fourth group was Rabbi Naftali Leibowitz, the yeshiva's mashgiach.

Legacy

Notes

  1. ^ This is likly the village of Aykino, Komi Republic; Russian Wikipedia quotes a resident describing a Soviet work camp in the city. See ru:Айкино (Коми)

References

  1. ^ a b c Rosenblum, Yonasan (February 1993). "Chapter 2 - The Meaning of Slabodka". Reb Yaakov: The Life and Times of HaGaon Rabbi Yaakov Kamenetsky (First ed.). Mesorah Publications, Ltd. ISBN 0-89906-413-2.
  2. ^ a b Cohen, Dov (2017). "In the Shadow of Gedolim". To Rise Above - A Journey to Greatness Against All Odds. Jerusalem, Israel: Feldheim Publishers. p. 165. ISBN 978-1-68025-270-5.
  3. ^ a b c Bobrowski-Aloni, Leah. "The "Knesset Beit Yitzhak" Yeshiva". Jewishgen.com. Tel Aviv, Israel: JewishGen. pp. 61–63. Retrieved August 6, 2020.
  4. ^ a b Wein, Berel (November 8, 2001). Faith & Fate: The Story of the Jewish People in the Twentieth Century. Brooklyn, NY: Shaar Press. ISBN 978-1-5781-9593-0.
  5. ^ a b c d Eliach, Rabbi Dov (2016). "Suffering and Miracles - Based on the Personal Memoir of Rav Simchah Hochgelenter zt"l". Tales of Devotion. p. 40.
  6. ^ Edelstein, Rabbi Yitzchak. "Rabbi Baruch Dov Leibowitz -Head of the Yeshiva of Kamenetz-Litovsk". Jewishgen.org. JewishGen. p. 65. Retrieved August 6, 2020. You have before you a miniature gathering of the exiles: the yeshiva is packed with youth from all of the Jewish Diaspora. The boys sitting here are from Poland, America, Germany, England, Belgium, Denmark, Switzerland, Hungary, as well as from the Land of Israel.
  7. ^ Fishoff, Avi (November 14, 2017). "TWiSTED PARENTING". YouTube. Retrieved August 6, 2020. When the young bachur "Yankele Galinsky" met the Gadol Hador "HaRav Chaim Ozer Grodzinski ...
  8. ^ Wein, Berel (October 1990). "Hitler's War Against the Jews". Triumph of Survival (First ed.). Brooklyn, NY: Shaar Press. p. 355. ISBN 1-4226-1514-6.
  9. ^ a b Eliach, Rabbi Dov (2016). "You Kept Me from Death; You Rescued Me from the Pit - Based on Conversations with Rav Eliyahu Dolinsky". Tales of Devotion. p. 361.
  10. ^ "Rabbi Boruch Ber Leibowitz, Rosh Yeshiva of Kamenitz (1870-1939)". True Torah Jews. Retrieved August 6, 2020.
  11. ^ "Yeshiva Toras Emes Kamenitz Inc". Bloomberg.com. Retrieved August 6, 2020.
  12. ^ "BDE: HaGaon HaRav Yitzchak Scheiner, Z'TL, Rosh Yeshivas Kaminetz, Is Niftar From COVID". January 31, 2021.
This page was last edited on 23 March 2024, at 03:00
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