Simcha Wasserman

Rabbi
Simcha Wasserman
Personal life
Born
Elazar Simcha Wasserman

1899
DiedOctober 29, 1992 (aged 92–93)
Jerusalem, Israel
SpouseFeiga Rachel Abowitz
Parents
Religious life
ReligionJudaism
DenominationOrthodox Judaism

Elazar Simcha Wasserman (1898 - October 29, 1992)[1] was an Orthodox rabbi and rosh yeshiva. Born in the Russian Empire, he was sent before World War II to the United States by his father, Rabbi Elchonon Wasserman, to improve the level of Jewish education there. He established yeshivas in the United States and Israel. He was described as "a pioneer educator".[2]

Early life and family

Elazar Simcha Wasserman was born in the Russian Empire,[2] the eldest of the three sons born to Elchonon Wasserman and his wife Michla. He was a nephew of Rabbi Chaim Ozer Grodzensky.[3] He married Feiga Rachel, the daughter of Rabbi Meir Abowitz, Rav of Novordok, and his wife Chana.[4]

Except for him and his brother David, all his birth family died during World War II. He and his wife, who outlived him, had no children.

Career

Although most of his career was in the United States, Wasserman established his first rabbinical seminary in Strasbourg in 1933.[2] During the 1940s Wasserman strengthened[2] Detroit's Yeshiva Beth Yehudah and served as dean. It had been founded in 1914 as a Talmud Torah and renamed as a yeshiva in 1925.

Yeshiva Ohr Elchonon

Two of the schools founded by Wasserman were named Yeshiva Ohr Elchonon, one in the United States, the other in Israel.

The school in Los Angeles included elementary, secondary, college, and post-graduate classes, with some students "from as far as Arizona and Colorado".[2] Ten of the initial students at the college and post-graduate school were sent from Yeshiva Torah Vodaas, handpicked by Rabbi Gedalia Schorr.[5] This was well before the school attained 300 students.[2]

Outreach

Among the keywords describing Wasserman's methodology are patience and simplicity:[6] "Whatever is within my ability to fulfill I do, and whatever I can’t accomplish I don’t worry about."[7]

In 1970 he wrote an article for The Jewish Observer titled "Memorandum To: Concerned individuals From: Rabbi Simcha Wasserman Re: Reaching out"[8] in which he encourages more outreach "to the entire Jewish community," adding that "Unless the public is Torah educated, the Yeshiva contributor will soon be supplanted by the philanthropist whose list of priorities does not even include Yeshivos."

He was not a fan of "new and improved" when it came to Judaism: "... the plastic potato. It looked like a potato, smelled like a potato, even tasted like a potato .. the only significant difference .. was that when you planted a plastic potato, it didn’t grow, it couldn’t reproduce, it was sterile."[5]: p.49 [9]

Works

While in Israel he facilitated the reprinting of his father's works; some of his own writings were printed in a booklet, Simchat Elazar.[10]

References

  1. ^ Names and authorities database of the National Library of Israel.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Mathis Chazanov (November 5, 1992). "Rabbi Wasserman, a Pioneer Educator, Dies". The Los Angeles Times.
  3. ^ "2 Cheshvan". Torah Umesorah.
  4. ^ Sorasky 2009, pp. 185–7.
  5. ^ a b "Rav Mendel Weinbach" (PDF). p. 13.
  6. ^ Akiva Tatz; Yaakov Branfman (1994). Reb Simcha Speaks: Rabbi Simcha Wasserman's Insights. ISBN 978-0899-06116-0.
  7. ^ Yochanan Gordon (October 27, 2013). "Something Positive For A Change". Five Towns Jewish Times.
  8. ^ Rabbi Simcha Wasserman (November 1970). "Memorandum To: Concerned individuals From: Rabbi Simcha Wasserman Re: Reaching out" (PDF). The Jewish Observer. pp. 3–5.
  9. ^ Zadok Shmuel Suchard (2005). Inspiring Insights Into the Parashah. p. 158. ISBN 1583308172. As Rabbi Simcha Wasserman ... a potato created in a laboratory may ...
  10. ^ "Letter from Rabbi Elazar Simcha Wasserman".

Sources