Revision as of 12:03, 1 January 2010 editSarah (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, IP block exemptions18,075 edits sorry but the blatant claim "he won the admiration and love of the entire Melbourne community" cannot stay there as a simple statement of fact without cites; article needs proper sourcing← Previous edit | Revision as of 17:23, 1 January 2010 edit undoZsero (talk | contribs)12,092 editsm moved Yehoshua Shneur Zalman Serebryanski to Zalman Serebryanski over redirect: this is what he was known asNext edit → |
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Rabbi Yehoshua Shneur Zalman Serebryanski, known familiarly as Reb Zalman, (Dec 1904-1991-06-15) was an Orthodox rabbi and Mashpia belonging to the Chabad-Lubavitch Hasidic movement. He was a follower of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn (1880-1950), the sixth Rebbe of the Chabad-Lubavitch Hasidic movement, known as Rebbe Rayatz, and Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneersohn, (1902-1994) the seventh Rebbe.
Born in Brahin, Belarus, he was educated there and at the Tomchei Temimim Yeshiva in Rostov-on-Don, and was then sent to organise underground yeshivos in various towns in the USSR. He eventually settled in Kharkov (now the city of Kharkiv, Ukraine), where he met and married Brocha Futerfas, the sister of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Futerfas and artist Hendel Lieberman. He was responsible for the upkeep of the underground yeshivah there.
He was conscripted into the Red Army, but because of his poor health he was assigned to the air defense unit protecting Kharkov. When the city fell to the Germans he made his way to Saratov, and from there to Samarkand, where his family had fled. In 1946, when Polish refugees were allowed to leave the USSR, he and most of his family obtained Polish papers and left for Poland, where he remained for about a year at the request of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn, to arrange for the smuggling of messages between him and the Lubavitcher hasidim who remained in the USSR. During this period he was also active in rescuing Jewish children from convents where they had been left by their parents during the war. With the consolidation of Communist power in Poland it was impossible to continue this work, and he moved on to Paris, where he founded the cheder that became the nucleus of the Chabad educational network in Paris.
In 1949, the newly-elected Menzies government relaxed Australia's immigration policies, and several Lubavitcher hasidim obtained visas for Australia. Reb Zalman asked Rabbi Joseph Isaac Schneersohn whether he should join them, and was told to go and start a yeshivah there. He landed at Melbourne on 1949-09-12, and the yeshivah began in Shepparton in October.
Serebryanski was one of the four pioneering founders of the Yeshivah community. Together with Rabbis Isser Kluwgant, Shmuel Betzalel Althaus, and Nochum Zalman Gurewicz, he laid the groundwork for what the Yeshivah educational facilities and community are today.
He founded the Yeshivah College High School, first in Shepparton, then in Burwood, and finally in East Saint Kilda. He also founded the Beth Rivkah Ladies College and the Yeshivah Gedolah Rabbinical College.
He is survived by his three children, and more than 100 grandchildren, great- and great-great-grandchildren.
References
- http://www.arts.monash.edu.au/jewish-civilisation/resources/talking/shimon-allen.html
- http://www.arts.monash.edu.au/jewish-civilisation/resources/talking/mendel-new.html
- http://www.arts.monash.edu.au/jewish-civilisation/resources/talking/nehama-werdiger.html
- Obituary by Laibel Wolf
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