Chona Menachem Mendel (Mendel) Weinbach (September 24, 1933 – December 11, 2012)[3] was an OrthodoxJewishrabbi, educator, author, and speaker. As the co-founder and dean of Ohr Somayach Institutions, a Jerusalem-based yeshiva for newly-observant Jewish men, he was considered one of the fathers of the modern-day baal teshuva movement.
In 1960[3][4] he married Sylvie (Sheindel) Lamm (b. 1941), a Belgian war orphan who had come to New York at the age of 5. She and her parents, Abraham Israel and Rachel Lamm, had been interned in the Mechelen transit camp in 1942. She had been liberated on 13 January 1944 and sent to a Jewish orphanage; her parents were deported to Auschwitz two days later. She was raised by her uncle and aunt in New York City.[10] In 1962 the couple decided to settle in Israel, becoming one of the first American Orthodox Jewish families to do so.[4] They were one of the first families to settle in the new neighborhood of Kiryat Mattersdorf in northern Jerusalem, where they raised 12 children.[4]
Teaching career
In his early years in Israel, Weinbach studied in the Mir yeshiva and opened a kollel. He also established yeshivas in Givat Ada and Netanya, and became involved with American P'eylim, which was opening yeshivas and Talmud Torahs for new immigrants.[4] He was a member of a group of avreichim (married Torah students) from the Mir, Brisk, Hebron and other yeshivas who volunteered to study with new immigrants who did not fit into regular Israeli yeshivas.[3] Around 1965 Weinbach decided to open a yeshiva for baalei teshuva together with Rabbi Meir Schuster. Rabbis in the yeshiva, located in the Talpiot neighborhood of Jerusalem, included Rabbi Shimshon Dovid Pincus and Rabbi Yoel Schwartz. The yeshiva was forced to close due to the Six-Day War in 1967.[4]
Yeshivas Ohr Somayach
In 1972[6] Weinbach and Rabbis Nota Schiller, Noah Weinberg, and Yaakov Rosenberg established Shema Yisrael Yeshiva to attract young, English-speaking Jewish men with little or no background in Jewish studies.[11][12] After a few years, Weinberg left the yeshiva over a difference in philosophy and founded Aish HaTorah in 1974.[12] Shema Yisrael subsequently changed its name to Ohr Somayach (after the commentary on the Mishneh Torah written by Rabbi Meir Simcha of Dvinsk), in response to critics who contended that the name Shema Yisrael belonged to the entire Jewish people rather than a single institution.[13] Weinbach and Schiller continued on as rosh yeshivas, developing the program into a Talmud study program with the goal of facilitating the adoption of Orthodox practices among formerly secular Jewish students integrate into Orthodox Jewish communities.[4][9] Other Torah scholars invited to serve as rosh yeshivas over the years included Rabbi Dov Schwartzman[4] and Rabbi Aharon Feldman.[6]
Weinbach oversaw the growth of Ohr Somayach into different branches, beginning with the 1984 establishment of its Israeli division.[9] Later branches were established in the United States, Canada, England, South Africa and Ukraine.[4] Weinbach also oversaw the development of several successful kiruv initiatives, including the Jewish Learning Exchange (JLE), a summer learning course for young men from overseas; the Ohr Lagolah teacher-training program; and the Mentors Mission, which brings American Jews to Israeli for kiruv activities.[3]
Weinberg taught at Ohr Somayach from its founding in 1970 until his death in 2012.[4][14]
Other activities
Weinbach delivered a shiur every Tisha B'Av that lasted two to three hours.[6] He also spoke at women's events such as the annual Shmiras Halashon Rally, and at the Mercaz Bais Yaakov high school and seminary in Geula, which he co-founded with Rabbi Yeshaya Lieberman.[4]
In his last years, Weinbach taught a daily Daf Yomi shiur in Kiryat Mattersdorf.[4]
Weinbach was diagnosed with cancer in 2007 but continued to teach, lecture and write as he underwent medical treatment.[6] His health deteriorated several months before his death.[6] On December 11, 2012, the same day that a prayer gathering was to be held at Yeshivas Ohr Somayach on his behalf, he died.[1] He was eulogized in the main synagogue in Kiryat Mattersdorf and at Yeshivas Ohr Somayach.[4] He was buried on Har HaMenuchot in Jerusalem.[1]
^ abcdefgHeimowitz, Rabbi Yehuda. "The Long Short Road: How Rav Mendel Weinbach ztz"l led thousands on the journey of a lifetime". Mishpacha, December 19, 2012.
^ abcdWolpin, Nisson. "Memories from a Boyhood Chaburah". Hamodia Israel News, January 3, 2013, p. 21.