Yaakov Galinsky

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Yaakov Galinsky

Rabbi Yaakov Yitzchak Galinsky (15 December 1920 - 23 January 2014)[1][2][3] was described as "a scion of Yeshivas Novardok in Bialystok, and one of the last maggidim[4] remaining in our generation."

Quick Facts Rabbi, Personal life ...
Rabbi
Yaakov Galinsky
Personal life
Born15 December 1920
Krynki, Poland
Died23 January 2014 (2014-01-24) (aged 93)
Bnei Brak, Israel
Parent
  • Avraham Tzvi (father)
Alma materNavordok Yeshiva
Religious life
ReligionJudaism
PositionMaggid
PositionRosh yeshiva
YeshivaYeshivas Chadera
Close

Galinsky, described as "diminutive in stature but towering in personality ... kept crowds enthralled"[5] was once told that since so many people are dreaming of the future, his job as Maggid (in his travels to "immigrant communities throughout Eretz Yisroel")[6] should not be to give them Mussar but rather to wake them up, and each will do his part.[3]

Biography

He was born "5681/1921 in Krinek, Poland"[7] to Devorah[1] and Rabbi Avraham Tzvi Galinsky.[3]

Galinsky's first yeshiva, Yeshivas Novardok in Bialystok, had only "a few shelves" of reference texts, so people waited in line and, while waiting, sharpened their understanding.[8]

In 1939, with others of the yeshiva, he fled but was captured by Russia and exiled to Siberia. Upon release he "traveled to Zambul, Kazakhstan, in Eastern Russia" and helped found a Jewish school in which he taught.[3]

He married Tzivia Brod,[1] a daughter of a Breslover Chassid;[9] in 1949, they came to Israel, where Galinsky helped found a yeshiva.

Upon his passing, 47 days after his 4 Teves/13 December 2013, his 93rd birthday, his survivors included "children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren and great-great grandchildren."[10]

Published works

References

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