The Jerusalem Post

Rabbis Edelstein, Kanievsky postpone yeshiva semester

Called on mothers to dedicate a room for sons to study

- • By JEREMY SHARON

Following a divergence of opinion between the two leading rabbis of the ultra-orthodox world, the summer semester for yeshivas and schools in the sector has begun from home and not from the educationa­l institutio­ns themselves.

last week it was revealed that rabbi Chaim Kanievsky had sent a letter to the Yated Neeman daily ultra-orthodox newspaper with instructio­ns to open schools and yeshivas despite the coronaviru­s epidemic – and despite the fact that the government has yet to permit the resumption of schools.

The paper’s senior management turned however to rabbi Gershon edelstein regarding Kanievsky’s letter and he told them not to publish it.

on sunday, a letter written by edelstein and signed by Kanievsky stated that the semester should now begin with pupils remaining at home, conducting study partnershi­ps and listening to lessons via the telephone.

The rabbis in their letter also requested that the teachers, educators and rabbis of the various schools and yeshivas should speak with their pupils at least once a week to ensure that they have a study partner and are able to study.

They also appealed to mothers and called on them to dedicate a room at home so that their sons could study appropriat­ely.

in Kanievsky’s ultimately unpublishe­d letter, he wrote that, “if God forbid Torah institutio­ns do not open [for the new semester] the danger and damage this would cause is impossible to describe or estimate,” adding “there is a holy duty to open all the Torah institutio­ns immediatel­y.”

Kanievsky also refused to countenanc­e closing schools and yeshivas before the end of the winter semester just before passover, despite government orders to shut down the education system, which was never enforced in the ultra-orthodox sector.

edelstein did however close down before passover the ponevezh yeshiva which he heads, and reportedly several other institutio­ns, and has been more strident in his insistence that the ultra-orthodox community adhere to social-distancing orders in order to stop the epidemic.

The seeming split between Kanievsky and edelstein is thought to be due to advisers and politicos around Kanievsky who have resisted the social-distancing orders.

Kanievsky himself said he was unaware of the global pandemic as late as march 19.

on sunday night, edelstein made a live-streamed address to yeshiva students and the broader ultra-orthodox public, saying that, “Torah without yeshiva increases life, Torah with yeshiva increases wisdom.”

Continued the rabbi: “But through merits, such as prayer and studying [Torah] over the telephone as far as possible, we can merit that there will be yeshiva.”

 ?? (Nati Shohat/Flash90) ?? HAREDI MEN pray outside a synagogue in Beitar Illit last week. Rabbi Edelstein, against opening yeshivas now, said that through prayer and telephone Torah study, ‘we can merit that there will be yeshiva.’
(Nati Shohat/Flash90) HAREDI MEN pray outside a synagogue in Beitar Illit last week. Rabbi Edelstein, against opening yeshivas now, said that through prayer and telephone Torah study, ‘we can merit that there will be yeshiva.’

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