Rabbi Mendel Weinbach | |
---|---|
Rabbi Mendel Weinbach in 2010
|
|
Position | Rosh yeshiva |
Yeshiva | Ohr Somayach |
Began | 1970 |
Ended | 2012 |
Personal details | |
Birth name | Chona Menachem Mendel Weinbach |
Born | September 24, 1933 Kańczuga, Galicia |
Died | December 11, 2012 Jerusalem, Israel |
(aged 79)
Buried | Har HaMenuchot |
Denomination | Orthodox Judaism |
Residence | Kiryat Mattersdorf |
Parents | Yechezkel Shraga and Tshezye Genendel Weinbach |
Spouse | Sylvie (Shaindel) Lamm |
Children | 6 sons 6 daughters |
Alma mater | Yeshiva Torah Vodaas |
Semicha | Yeshiva Torah Vodaas |
Chona Menachem Mendel (Mendel) Weinbach (September 24, 1933 – December 11, 2012) was an Orthodox Jewish rabbi and one of the fathers of the modern-day baal teshuva movement. He was a co-founder and dean of Ohr Somayach Institutions, a Jerusalem-based yeshiva for newly-observant Jewish men.
Chona Menachem Mendel Weinbach was born in Kańczuga, Galicia, to Yechezkel Shraga and Tshezye Genendel Weinbach. At the age of 4 he immigrated with his parents to America and settled in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where he grew up. At age 12 he left home to learn in Yeshiva Torah Vodaas, where he studied under Rabbis Yaakov Kamenetsky and Gedalia Schorr. He received rabbinic ordination at Torah Vodaas.
In 1953 Weinbach was one of 10 Torah Vodaas students recruited by Rabbi Simcha Wasserman to open a Beth midrash in Los Angeles to generate interest among parents in Wasserman's proposal to open a mesivta high school in that city. At the end of the summer, he went to study at Beis Medrash Elyon in Monsey, New York.
In 1960 he married Sylvie (Sheindel) Lamm (b. 1941), a Belgian war orphan who had come to New York at the age of 5. She and her parents, Abraham Israel and Rachel Lamm, had been interned in the Mechelen transit camp in 1942. She had been liberated on 13 January 1944 and sent to a Jewish orphanage; her parents were deported to Auschwitz two days later. She was raised by her uncle and aunt in New York City. In 1962 the couple decided to settle in Israel, becoming one of the first American Orthodox Jewish families to do so. They were one of the first families to settle in the new neighborhood of Kiryat Mattersdorf in northern Jerusalem, where they raised 12 children.