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Menashe Klein

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Name
  
Menashe Klein


Died
  
2011

Menashe Klein httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Rav Menashe Klein -- Most Extreme Writer On Jewish Law


Menashe Klein (1924–2011) (Hebrew: ר' מנשה קליין), also known as the Ungvarer Rav (Yiddish: אונגווארער רב), was a Hasidic Rebbe and posek (arbiter of Jewish law). He authored 18 volumes of responsa, spanning over 50 years, entitled Mishneh Halachos. Additionally, he authored some 25 other seforim, including a commentary on Rabbi Simeon Kayyara's BeHag. Toward the end of his life, he relocated from Brooklyn, New York to Jerusalem.

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Menashe Klein New York Ungvarer Rebbe Rabbi Menashe Klein Ztl The

Rabbi menashe klein ungvarer rov candle lighting


Biography

Menashe Klein New York Nobel Laureate Eli Wiesel Talks About His Friendship With

Menashe Klein was born in 1924 in the town of Orlova (now known as Irlyava) near the city of Ungvar, Czechoslovakia (currently located in Ukraine). He studied in the yeshiva of the Rav of Ungvar, Rabbi Yosef Elimelech Kahane.

Menashe Klein On the Main Line A gift to Eisenhower

During World War II, he was incarcerated in Auschwitz-Birkenau, Auschwitz-Buna, and finally in Buchenwald. At Buchenwald, he was sent out to "Stein," a Nazi satellite camp at Eschershausen, but was listed in camp records as returned to Buchenwald, where he was liberated and where he completed a postwar military interview.

Menashe Klein Rabbi Menashe Klein Ungvarer Rov Candle Lighting YouTube

On June 2, 1945, he was evacuated by train with 427 other former Buchenwald inmates ages 7 to 17 – among them Yisrael Meir Lau, Naphtali Lau-Lavie, and Elie Wiesel – to France, where they boarded at a sanitarium in Écouis. He was transferred to Ambloy together with about 100 other boys who desired kosher facilities and a higher level of religious observance. This group was under the supervision of social worker Judith Hemmendinger, who attempted to re-acclimate the boys to normal living. The group was transferred to Taverny after Yom Kippur 1945. Klein immigrated to the United States in 1947.

Menashe Klein HaRav Menashe Klein Ztl Lecturing Baalei Teshuva

After World War II, he served as Rav in the "Chevrah Liyadi" shul, (which was located in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn) and Principal of Yeshivas Shearis Hapleitah, under the direction of Rabbi Yekusiel Yehudah Halberstam, Klausenberger Rebbe. In 1964, he founded Yeshiva Beis Shearim in Borough Park, Brooklyn, where he served as rosh yeshiva.

In 1983, he established Kiryat Ungvar in the Ramot section of Jerusalem in memory of his hometown. Today, it is a thriving neighborhood with hundreds of inhabitants.

The Ungvarer Rov was active until old age. He had thousands of disciples.

In 2009, he stirred controversy. He published a responsa which, in part, denoted Chabad messianists as "apikoras" (heretics). At the time, he referred to them and was quoted; "This sect of crazies, which falsify the Torah and our sages' words, to say the Moshiach is dead but is really alive... these are things against our holy Torah." Referring to the fringe movement, Chabad messianism, within Chabad that has adopted the late Rebbe, Menachem Mendel Schneerson as the Jewish Redeemer, or Jewish messiah.

He died on the last day of Elul (September 28) 2011, and was buried in Tzfas, near the grave of the Arizal, the Alshich Hakadosh and Beis Yosef.

References

Menashe Klein Wikipedia