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Baruch Epstein

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20th century Lithuanian rabbi & scholar
Baruch Epstein
TitleRabbi
Personal life
Born1860
Bobruisk, Russian Empire
Died1941 (aged 80–81)
Pinsk, Reichskommissariat Ukraine
NationalityLithuanian
ParentRabbi Yechiel Michel Epstein
Religious life
ReligionJudaism
ProfessionBookkeeper
Jewish leader
SuccessorRav Henkin

Baruch Epstein or Baruch ha-Levi Epstein (1860–1941) (Hebrew: ברוך הלוי אפשטיין) was an Ashkenazi Jewish rabbi, best known for his Torah Temimah commentary on the Torah. He was the son of Rabbi Yechiel Michel Epstein, rabbi of Novarodok and author of the work Arukh HaShulkhan.

Biography

Epstein grew up in Novarodok, where his father was the communal rabbi, but moved to the city of Pinsk after his marriage to the daughter of Rabbi Elazar Moshe Horowitz, and lived there until his death, apart from a period from 1923 to 1926, which he spent in the United States looking (unsuccessfully) for a rabbinic position. During this period he served as the first menahel (director) of Ezras Torah from around 1924 until he was succeeded by Rav Henkin around the year 1925.

Although Epstein was a bookkeeper by profession, he had been a student at the Volozhin Yeshiva under his uncle Rabbi Naftali Zvi Yehuda Berlin (who became his brother-in-law after being widowed and remarrying Epstein's sister). Epstein authored a number of popular and scholarly works which are still used widely.

Epstein died of natural causes in the Jewish hospital when Pinsk was under Nazi occupation.

Works

  • Torah Temimah ("The Perfect Torah", a reference to Psalms 19:8) - a commentary on the Torah and the Five Megillot citing all quotes of a particular verse in the Oral Torah (Talmud or Midrash), and giving textual explanations.
  • Baruch she-Amar ("Praised He Who Spoke", a reference to the opening paragraph of the Verses of Praise, daily morning prayers) - Multiple volumes, including a commentary on the siddur (Jewish prayerbook), Passover Haggadah and Pirkei Avot (Ethics of Our Fathers).
  • Mekor Baruch ("Source of Blessing") - autobiographical work with notes on life in the Volozhin yeshiva and his uncle. Selections were translated as "My Uncle the Netziv".
  • Mekor Baruch- on the Jerusalem Talmud
  • Tosefet Beracha ("Added Blessing") - novellae on the Torah

References

  1. Shohet, Azriel (2013). The Jews of Pinsk, 1881 to 1941. Stanford University Press. p. 726, n.7. ISBN 978-0-804-78502-0..

External links

Volozhin Yeshiva
Faculty
Naftali Zvi Yehuda Berlin
Eliezer Fried
Refael Shapiro
Yosef Dov Soloveitchik (Beis Halevi)
Chaim Soloveitchik
Chaim of Volozhin
Yitzchak Volozhin
Location
Valozhyn, Belarus
Alumni
Shmuel Alexandrov
Meir Bar-Ilan
Zelig Reuven Bengis
Micha Josef Berdyczewski
Naftali Zvi Yehuda Berlin
Hayim Nahman Bialik
David Cohen
Israel Davidson
Alter Asher Droyanov
Baruch Epstein
Moshe Mordechai Epstein
Chaim Ozer Grodzinski
Abraham Harkavy
Shmuel Yitzchak Hillman
Jacob Joseph
Nachum Kaplan
Chaim Mordechai Katz
Abraham Isaac Kook
Moyshe Kulbak
Moshe Landyski
Boruch Ber Leibowitz
Aryeh Levin
Isser Zalman Meltzer
Samuel Mohilever
Shlomo Polachek
Yitzhak Isaac Halevy Rabinowitz
Yitzchak Yaacov Reines
Mnachem Risikoff
Zundel Salant
Refael Shapiro
Shimon Shkop
Chaim Soloveitchik
Zalman Sorotzkin
Elchonon Wasserman
Kalman Zev Wissotzky
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