EPSTEIN, MOSES MORDECAI

EPSTEIN, MOSES MORDECAI
EPSTEIN, MOSES MORDECAI (1866–1933), talmudist and rosh yeshivah in Lithuania and Ereẓ Israel. Born in Bakst, Moses studied in his youth at the Volozhin yeshivah where he was known as the "illui ("prodigy") of Bakst." At Volozhin he supported the Ḥovevei Zion group, founded by students of the yeshivah and in 1891 was a member of a Ḥovevei Zion delegation, which bought the land for the settlement of Ḥaderah. In 1893 he was appointed head of the Keneset Israel yeshivah of Slobodka, a position he filled until his death. During World War I he wandered from town to town in Russia at the head of his yeshivah and after the war became one of the leaders of religious Jewry in Lithuania and a cofounder of its rabbinical council. In 1923 at the conference of the Agudat Israel held in Vienna, he was elected a member of the Kenesiyyahha-Gedolah, the supreme body of the organization, and the Mo'eẓet Gedolei ha-Torah, its rabbinical council, established on that occasion. In 1924 he transferred most of the Keneset Israel student body to their sister yeshivah in hebron , which he had established. After the 1929 riots in Hebron in which many of the students were killed, he moved the yeshivah to Jerusalem. His method of studying Jewish law was to seek an understanding of the structure of individual laws as a means of comprehending the system of talmudic law in general. To this end he made a special study of Maimonides, whose method of halakhic commentary he sought to elucidate. In his teaching, likewise, he stressed the understanding of the underlying principles of individual laws more than expertise in wider areas. Epstein's method was adopted in numerous yeshivot. A collection of his lectures, entitled Levush Mordekhai, was published in four volumes: on tractate Bava Kamma (1901); on Bava Meẓia (1929); on the four parts of the Shulḥan Arukh (1946); and on Yevamot and Gittin (1948). -BIBLIOGRAPHY: S.J. Zevin, Ishim ve-Shitot (19582), 275–91. (David Tamar)

Encyclopedia Judaica. 1971.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • EPSTEIN, HARRY H. — EPSTEIN, HARRY H. (1903–2003), U.S. rabbi. Epstein was born in Plunge, Lithuania, and raised in New York and especially Chicago. He attended the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary, where bernard revel became a mentor. Epstein continued his …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • MAIMONIDES, MOSES — (Moses ben Maimon; known in rabbinical literature as Rambam ; from the acronym Rabbi Moses Ben Maimon; 1135–1204), rabbinic authority, codifier, philosopher, and royal physician. BIOGRAPHY The most illustrious figure in Judaism in the post… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • ISAAC BEN MORDECAI — (known as Ribam, initials of Rabbi Isaac Ben Mordecai; 12th century), German tosafist. Isaac was also known as Isaac b. Mordecai of Bohemia and Isaac b. Mordecai of Prague. The abbreviated form of his name, Ribam, led to his being confused at… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • GALANTE, MOSES BEN JONATHAN (II) — (1620–1689), Jerusalem rabbi. Galante was called Ha Rav ha Magen after his major work Elef ha Magen which includes one thousand responsa and cases (unpublished). He was the grandson of Moses b. mordecai galante . He studied in Safed and later… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • ḤASIDISM — ḤASIDISM, a popular religious movement giving rise to a pattern of communal life and leadership as well as a particular social outlook which emerged in Judaism and Jewry in the second half of the 18th century. Ecstasy, mass enthusiasm, close knit …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • AḤARONIM — (Heb. אַחֲרוֹנִים; lit. the later (authorities), a term used to designate the later rabbinic authorities, in contrast to the rishonim , the earlier authorities. Although scholars differ as to the exact chronological dividing line between the two …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • SARNA, EZEKIEL — (1889–1969), rosh yeshivah in Israel. Born in Gorodok, Lithuania, Sarna was the son of Jacob Ḥayyim Sarna, the Maggid ( preacher ) of Slonim and a close associate of Ḥayyim Soloveitchik . At an early age Ezekiel was accepted in the famous… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • SLOBODKA YESHIVAH — SLOBODKA YESHIVAH, a leading European yeshivah which was dedicated to the ideals of the musar movement . In 1882 the yeshivah was founded in Slobodka, a suburb of Kouro, Lithuania, by R. Nathan Ẓevi Finkel as an advanced school for the graduates… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Synagogue (Kaliningrad) — Infobox religious building building name=Synagogue in Kaliningrad caption= location=flagicon|RussiaKaliningrad, Russia geo= religious affiliation=Orthodox Judaism district= functional status=destroyed leadership= website= architecture… …   Wikipedia

  • BROIDA, SIMḤAH ZISSEL BEN ISRAEL — (1824–1898), rabbi and moralist. He came from a distinguished family which traced its descent to abraham broda , rabbi of Frankfurt. Broida was the outstanding disciple and follower of Israel Lipkin (Salanter), the founder of the musar movement …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”