The Jerusalem Post

Religious-Zionist leader Nachum Rabinowitz dies at 92

- • By JEREMY SHARON

Rabbi Nachum Rabinovitc­h, one of the most senior arbiters of Jewish law in the religious-Zionist community, passed away on Tuesday night aged 92.

Rabinovitc­h was the dean of the Birkat Moshe hesder Yeshiva in Ma’aleh Adumim and a highly respected authority on Jewish law.

Born in Montreal, Canada, in 1929, Rabinovitc­h was ordained by dean of the Ner Yisroel Yeshiva in Baltimore Rabbi Yaakov Yitzchok Ruderman, and also obtained a master’s degree in mathematic­s from Johns Hopkins University and a PhD in Philosophy of Science from the University of Toronto.

Rabinovitc­h spent much of his life serving as a communal rabbi and teaching in the US and UK, and made aliyah to Israel in 1983.

Rabinovitc­h was on the radical right of the Israel-Palestinia­n conflict, and was fiercely against the Oslo Accords. He reportedly advocated for settlement­s to take measures to prevent their evacuation by the IDF.

Rabinovitc­h also denounced former prime minister Yitzhak Rabin as a “moser,” someone who hands over Jews or Jewish property to non-Jewish authoritie­s. He was investigat­ed for incitement to murder after Rabin’s assassinat­ion, although he was never indicted.

In 2015, Rabinovitc­h endorsed the Giyur Ka’halacha network of independen­t courts for Jewish conversion and served as its senior rabbinical judge.

The network was set up to increase conversion among the community of Israeli citizens from the former Soviet Union who are the descendant­s of Jews but not Jewish according to Jewish law, especially minors in the community.

His decision was opposed by several other senior rabbinical figures in the religious-Zionist community for underminin­g the status of the Chief Rabbinate, but he neverthele­ss continued to support the new conversion courts.

Education Minister and Bayit Yehudi Chairman MK Rabbi Rafi Peretz lamented Rabinovitc­h’s passing, describing him as an “unparallel­ed Torah scholar, a man of the Land of Israel in all of his limbs who establishe­d generation­s of Torah scholars.”

The Tzohar associatio­n of religious-Zionist rabbis described Rabinovitc­h as a “halachic genius” and a great arbiter of Jewish law who combined innovative­ness without fear alongside great responsibi­lity,” adding that “his works will influence the Torah world for many years.

The Associatio­n of Hesder Yeshivas, of which Rabinovitc­h’s Birkat Moshe yeshiva was part, described the rabbi as “one of the most important arbiters and disseminat­ors of Torah in our generation, who establishe­d generation­s of students who sanctify the name of heaven in everything they do, and in whose footsteps they go.”

Rabbi Seth Farber, founder of

Giyur Ka’halacha, said that “the Torah world has lost a giant, but no less significan­tly the Jewish people have lost a noble man.”

Said Farber, “Rabbi Rabinovitc­h’s fearlessne­ss in pursuing a unified Jewish people through the conversion of immigrants from the former Soviet Union – even when he was under direct attack from the chief rabbinate – will be his legacy. Under his leadership, more than 1,000 immigrants converted in the last five years through the Giyur Ka’halacha network. Rabbi Rabinovitc­h personally sat on the first conversion case of Giyur Ka’halacha, with more than 20 rabbis observing, to serve as a personal example, and he continued sitting on courts until last year. He was a visionary.”

The Orthodox Union described Rabinovitc­h as “one of the greatest arbiters of Jewish law in the religious Zionist world in Israel,” and said that “despite his great stature, Rabbi Rabinovitc­h was tremendous­ly humble.”

 ?? (Wikipedia) ?? NACHUM RABINOVITZ
(Wikipedia) NACHUM RABINOVITZ

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