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Chaim Elazar Spira - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chaim Elazar Spira

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chaim Elazar Spira
Munkaczer Rebbe
Image:Munkatcher Rebbe, The Minchas Eliezer2.jpg
Term 19??–1937
Full name Chaim Elazar Spira
Main work Minchas Elozor
Born December 17, 1871
Stryzow, Austria-Hungary
Died May 12, 1937
Mukachevo
Buried Mukachevo, Czechoslovakia
Dynasty Munkacz
Predecessor Tzvi Hirsch Spira
Successor Baruch Yehoshua Yerachmiel Rabinovich
Father Tzvi Hirsch Spira of Munkacz
Mother Esther, daughter of Rabbi Chanina Horowitz of Ulanow
Wife Rochel Perl, daughter of Yakov Moshe Safrin of Komarno
Issue Frime Chaye Rifka Spira

Rabbi Chaim Elazar Spira (December 17, 1871May 13, 1937) was one of the rebbes of the Hasidic movement Munkacz (or Munkatsh). His father, Rabbi Tzvi Hersh Spira was a scion of the illustrious Spira family which had held rabbinical positions in Munkács dating back to the first Hasidic Rabbi in Munkács, Rabbi Tzvi Elimelech Spira who served as Chief Rabbi between the years 1828 and 1832. Rabbi Chaim Elazar assumed the position as Chief Justice of the Rabbinical Court in Munkács in the year 1903, where he served alongside his father until Rabbi Tzvi Hersh’s passing in 1913. Rabbi Chaim Elazar then succeeded his father as Chief Rabbi of Munkács and the surrounding communities.

He born in Stryzow, Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, Austria-Hungary, now part of Poland. He died in Mukachevo, Carpathian Ruthenia region, Czechoslovakia, now part of Ukraine since 1945.

[edit] Biography

From a very young age Rabbi Chaim Elazar proved to have a prodigious mind. At the young age of eleven he began writing his first book on Jewish Law. Over the course of his life, Rabbi Chaim Elazar wrote and published over twenty books on the Jewish Law, Torah, Hasidism, and religious philosophy and customs. His most notable work which made him world famous was the scholarly work Minchas Elazar which contains six volumes. He was the most outspoken voice of religious anti-Zionism.

Rabbi Chaim Elazar led his community with unsurpassed dignity and drew worldwide respect and honor for Munkács. His keen understanding and vast knowledge in Jewish as well as worldly matters drew thousands of people to his home where they sought his advice and blessings. Under his leadership, the Munkács Jewish community grew by leaps and bounds and at the time of his death in 1937 over half of the town’s inhabitants were Jewish.


One of the most memorable events in Munkács was the wedding of Rabbi Chaim Elazar’s only daughter Frima which took place in March 1933. Over 15,000 guests attended the wedding. Hungary, Poland, and Czechoslovakia opened their borders and no visa was necessary for people who wished to attend the wedding. International filming companies came to Munkács from all over Europe and America to document the historic event.

Rabbi Chaim Elazar championed the causes of his needy brethren in Munkács and established a vast network of charitable institutions to ease their burden. He established schools where children were taught under his constant guidance. His yeshiva (rabbinical college) in Munkács attracted hundreds of students from all corners of the globe who flocked to Munkács to study under his wing, many of them growing to become the next generation's rabbis, community leaders, etc.

He was respected not only by the international Jewish community, but as well by the gentile world. He was visited by world leaders such as Czechoslovakian President Edvard Beneš as well as Tomáš Masaryk, Queen Wilhelmina of Holland and many others who sought his sagely advice and blessings. He was known as a “wonder rabbi” and “miracle worker”.

Upon his untimely death in 1937, after fighting a grave illness, he was succeeded as Chief Rabbi by his son-in-law Rabbi Baruch Yehoshua Yerachmiel Rabinowicz who was husband to Rabbi Spira’s only daughter Frima. Rabbi Baruch served as chief rabbi until the Nazi occupation of Munkács in 1944. Rabbi Spira left an everlasting impression on Munkács and the entire world for generations to come.

Thousands of followers visit his gravesite in the Munkács Jewish Cemetery throughout the year, where they come to pray and bequest salvation, especially on the anniversary of his death in the month of May.

The Munkács Hasidic dynasty is now led by his grandson, Rabbi Moshe Leib Rabinovich who lives in Brooklyn.


[edit] See also


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