Joseph Meir WeissJoseph Meir Weiss (March 15, 1838 – May 26, 1909,[1] Hebrew: יוסף מאיר ווייס), was a Hungarian rabbi and founder of the Spinka Hasidic dynasty.[2][1] He is often known as the "Imrei Yosef" after his major work.[3] The family name is sometimes spelled Weisz.[2] Early lifeWeiss was born in Munkács (Munkacz), Hungary (now Mukacheve, Ukraine). His father, Rabbi Samuel Zevi (Shmuel Tzvi) Weiss,[4] was Av Beit Din of Munkacz, and his mother was the daughter of Tzvi Hirsch of Drohobycz, Austrian Empire (now Drohobych, Ukraine).[1] Weiss attended the yeshiva of Rabbi Meir Eisenstaedter in Ungvár, Hungary (now Uzhhorod, Ukraine).[1] When Meir Eisenstaedter died in 1852, Weiss continued his studies under Meir's son, Rabbi Menachem Eisenstaedter.[1] Weiss then studied with Rabbi Shmuel Smelke Klein of Hust (Huszt), Hungary (now Khust, Ukraine), author of Tzeror HaChaim.[1] His foremost mentor of Hasidism was Rabbi Yitzchak Isaac Eichenstein of Ziditshov.[1] Eichenstein is to have said: "I don't know why [Weiss] continues to visit us...He certainly does not need to acquire the fear of God from me."[1] Weiss was also influenced by Rabbis Chaim Halberstam of Sanz, Sholom Rokeach of Belz,[1] and Menachem Mendel Hager, the first Rebbe of Vizhnitz.[4] In 1854, when Weiss was 16, his mother died.[1] That year, he married the daughter of Mordechai of Borsa (now Borşa, Romania), but she died three years later.[1] Weiss married again and had two daughters, but his second wife died in 1868. In 1870, he married Perl, the daughter of Ezra Yaakov Basch of Szaplonca (Yiddish: Spinka), (now SăpânțaRomania), near the Hungarian border.[1] In Spinka, Weiss would later become a study partner of the renowned Kabbalist Rabbi Yaakov Yehuda Aryeh Leib Frenkel.[5] RabbinateIn Munkács, Weiss established a yeshiva with a high level of Talmudic studies that drew students from other countries.[6] Following the death of his mentor, the Rebbe of Zidichov, in June 1873, Weiss established his own Hasidic sect in his third wife's hometown of Spinka.[1] Weiss was called a "miracle worker",[1] and attracted thousands of followers.[4] He was also known for his self-mortification and ecstatic prayers.[4] He prayed during festivals with the words from Musaf Amidah:
LegacyWeiss died in 1909. In 1972, his remains were reinterred in Petah Tikva, Israel.[1] Weiss was succeeded as Rebbe by his son, Rabbi Yitzchak Isaac Weiss (1875–1944).[2][3] When World War II broke out, Yitzchak Isaac moved the Spinka court to Munkács.[4] Yitzchak Isaac was murdered by the Nazis in the Auschwitz concentration camp, together with thirty one family members, in 1944.[1] After the war, Yitzchak Isaac's grandson, Jacob Joseph Weiss, re-established the dynasty in Jerusalem.[4] Other offshoots were established by descendants of Yosef Meir in Williamsburg, Boro Park, Flatbush, Queens, Kiryas Joel, London, Antwerp, and Bnei Brak.[citation needed] WorksWeiss died in 1909. His writings, published posthumously, were:[4]
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