Binyamin Zeilberger Explained

Honorific-Prefix:Rabbi
Binyamin Zeilberger
Yeshiva:Beth Hatalmud Rabbinical College
Yeshivaposition:Rosh yeshiva
Predecessor:Chaim Vysokier
Successor:Yehuda Zeilberger
Birth Date:March 14, 1921
Birth Place:Koenigshaufen, Germany
Death Date:October 10, 2005
Death Place:Brooklyn, New York
Yahrtzeit:7 Tishrei
Denomination:Orthodox Judaism
Father:• Yehudah [Julius] Zeilberger
Mother:• Chana [Johanna] Zeilberger née Reinhold
Spouse:Sara Rochel Zeilberger née Kaplan
Alma Mater:Mir Yeshiva (Belarus)

Rabbi Binyamin Zeilberger (sometimes pronounced Tzahlberger; Hebrew: רב בנימין צלברגר/ציילברגר) was the rosh yeshiva of Beth Hatalmud Rabbinical College in the second half of the twentieth century. He was an alumnus of the Mir Yeshiva in Europe.

Early life

Zeilberger was born in Koenigshaufen, Germany on March 14, 1921, to Yehuda (Julius) and Chana (Johanna) Zeilberger.[1] In 1935 he enrolled in the Mir Yeshiva in what is now Belarus,[2] where he shared a room in a boarding house with Aryeh Leib Malin, Yonah Minsker, and Michel Feinstein.[3]

When World War II broke out in 1939 the Mir Yeshiva (and many other yeshivas in Poland) fled to Lithuania.[4] Zeilberger remained with the yeshiva when it moved to Japan in 1941, then to Shanghai,[2] and then in 1947 to the United States where it was reëstablished in Brooklyn.

Zeilberger married Sara Rochel Kaplan.[2]

Beth Hatalmud Rabbinical College

Zeilberger soon joined the Beth Hatalmud Rabbinical College in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, [2] established in 1950 by older students from the Mir Yeshiva who had also escaped from Europe including Aryeh Leib Malin.[5] Zeilberger later became a rosh yeshiva there[2] [5] and was on the faculty for over fifty years.[2]

Death

Zeilberger died in Brooklyn on October 10, 2005, at the age of 84.[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rav Binyomin Zeilberger, Rabbi . geni.com . 14 March 1921 . . 15 June 2021.
  2. Noted in Sorrow . The Jewish Observer . November 2005 . XXXVIII . 9 . 6; 41 . July 12, 2020.
  3. Geberer . Yehuda . Safier . Dovi . FOR the record: The Yekke List . . March 23, 2021 . 854 . 176.
  4. Book: Wein . Berel . Berel Wein . Triumph of Survival . October 1990 . Shaar Press . Brooklyn, NY . 1-4226-1514-6 . 355 . First . Hitler's War Against the Jews.
  5. Geberer . Yehuda . Safier . Dovi . FOR the record: The Yekke List . . March 23, 2021 . 854 . 176.