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Great Leaders of our People
Rav
Yoel Teitelbaum - The Satmarer Rebbe
(1887 – 1979)
Rabbi Yoel Teitelbaum began his rabbinic
career in Krooly, a small town in Hungary. In 1929, the Rav of the Orthodox
community in Satmar, a larger and more prestigious community, passed away,
and Rabbi Teitelbaum was invited for a Shabbos “tryout.” The Rav displayed
exceptional knowledge of Talmud, far above the prevailing image of a
Chassidic rabbi, who was expected to be more of an expert in Kabbalah and
prayer. He was retained by the community, which prospered under his
leadership, and began attracting students to its yeshiva from all over
Hungary.
As the War approached, the Satmarer Rav was smuggled out of harm’s way,
first into Switzerland, where he remained throughout the War, and afterwards
in 1946, into Israel. On a fund-raising mission to the United States, he met
many people from his former community who urged him to stay in America and
help them recover from the trauma of the War. Rabbi Teitelbaum’s decision to
stay in America was historic, in that it set in place the foundation for the
growth of the Satmar community. After only a short time, the transplanted
“Yetiv Lev” Congregation emerged upon American soil, with Rabbi Yoel
Teitelbaum at the helm.
Although he was not the only Jewish leader to oppose the
establishment of the State of Israel, he drew, in 1948, worldwide attention when he became the only Jewish leader
to denounce the newly founded Jewish state. He based his anti-Zionist
position on a gemara in Kesuvos 111a, that derives from the triple mention
in Shir HaShirim of the verse, “I have bound you in oath, O daughters of
Jerusalem,” that HaShem bound the Jewish People and the nations of the world
with three oaths:
1. “shelo yaalu bachoma” – that the Jews should not forcibly “breach the
wall,” and enter Eretz Yisrael
2. that the Jews should not rebel against the nations of the world
3. that the nations of the world should not oppress the Jewish People
excessively during the Exile
The gemara concludes with the threat that if the Jews would violate these
oaths, HaShem would bring upon them great harm and physical destruction.
Rabbi Teitelbaum claimed that the Zionist movement had brought the Holocaust
upon the Jewish People by violating the oaths incumbent upon them.
(Two of the arguments raised against the above are that by the Balfour
Declaration the nations of the world gave permission to the Jews to return
to Israel. Another is that the oaths would apply to the Jewish People only
if the nations of the world did not excessively mistreat them during the
Galut. Centuries of massacre and pogrom certainly testify otherwise as to
the behavior of the nations of the world. If the nations have violated their
oath, the oaths upon the Jewish People are null and void.)
In the 1950’s, the Satmar community continued to blossom. Williamsburg
became the scene of many inspiring Chassidic gatherings and public tefilos,
such as would occur annually on Hoshanah Rabbah, when the Satmar synagogue
was a sea of lulavim and esrogim.
By the 1960’s, the Satmar community in Brooklyn had grown rapidly and the
rebbe had gained many new adherents from immigration to the United States,
and his opinions and blessings were sought by thousands.
In the 1970’s, the rebbe bought land in Monroe, NY, and founded Kiryas Yoel,
where a large branch of the Satmar community now lives.
Tens of thousands of his Chassidim attended his funeral in Kiryat Yoel. None
of his children survived him, as all three of his daughters passed away
during his lifetime. The Satmar community grieved at the tremendous loss of
their rebbe, who had led his followers according to uncompromising
principles, in which he deeply believed.
Biographies
Index
The above graphic includes photographs that were provided by VERAfilm archives.

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