Baruch Epstein | |
Rabbi | |
Synagogueposition: | Menahel |
Birth Date: | 1860 |
Birth Place: | Bobruisk, Russian Empire |
Death Place: | Pinsk, Reichskommissariat Ukraine |
Nationality: | Lithuanian |
Profession: | Bookkeeper |
Baruch Epstein or Baruch ha-Levi Epstein (1860 - 1941) (Hebrew: ברוך הלוי אפשטיין) was a Ashkenazi Jewish rabbi, best known for his Torah Temimah commentary on the Torah. He was the son of Rabbi Yechiel Michel Epstein, rabbi of Novarodok and author of the work Arukh HaShulkhan.
Epstein grew up in Novarodok, where his father was the communal rabbi, but moved to the city of Pinsk after his marriage to the daughter of Rabbi Elazar Moshe Horowitz, and lived there until his death, apart from a period from 1923 to 1926, which he spent in the United States looking (unsuccessfully) for a rabbinic position. During this period he served as the first menahel (director) of Ezras Torah from around 1924 until he was succeeded by Rav Henkin around the year 1925.
Although Epstein was a bookkeeper by profession, he had been a student at the Volozhin Yeshiva under his uncle Rabbi Naftali Zvi Yehuda Berlin (who became his brother-in-law after being widowed and remarrying Epstein's sister). Epstein authored a number of popular and scholarly works which are still used widely.
Epstein died of natural causes in the Jewish hospital when Pinsk was under Nazi occupation.[1]