Isamar Rosenbaum Explained

Nadvorna Rebbe
Began:1902
Ended:1973
Birth Name:Issamar Rosenbaum
Predecessor:Meyer Rosenbaum
Spouse:Malka Rubin
Children:Rabbi Chaim Mordechai Rosenbaum (1903-1976)[1]

Yesochor Ber Rosenbaum (1905-1981)

Rabbi Yitzchok Isaac Rosenbaum (1908-2000)[2]

Rabbi Meir Rosenbaum

Rabbi Asher Yeshaya Rosenbaum

Rebbetzin Isaacson (wife of Rabbi Meir Isaacson)

Rebbetzin Leifer (wife of Rabbi Avrohom Aba Leifer)

Rebbetzin Rachel Shapiro (1902 - June 30, 2007)

Dynasty:Nadvorna
Father:Meyer Rosenbaum
Birth Date:1886
Date Of Death:1973
Place Of Burial:Mount of Olives

Isamar Rosenbaum (1886–1973)[2] was a Hasidic rebbe of the Hasidic dynasties of Nadvorna and Kretshnif. He was the son of Rabbi Meyer Rosenbaum (1852 - June 29[1] 1908) of Kretshniff, who in turn was a son of Rabbi Mordechai of Nadvorna (1824–1894).[2]

Rosenbaum became a rebbe at the age of fifteen[2] and, at his father's behest, moved to Czernowitz where he served as a chasidic rebbe. In the Nadvorna dynasty, all children of the rebbes open their own chasidic courts, even during their fathers' lifetime. His wife, Malka, was the daughter of Rebbe Usher Yeshaya Rubin of Kolbuszowa, Galicia.

His family was the only chasidic family of grand rabbis known to have all survived the Nazi camps with the whole family intact.

His wife died in 1969 and was buried in Tveria. In 1970, three years before his death, he moved from the Washington Heights neighborhood of Manhattan to Yad Eliyahu in Tel Aviv, Israel.

At the time of his death, he was one of the longest living chassidic rebbes in history; he was known as the Admor Hazaken miNadvorna, or "Elder Rebbe of Nadvorna".

He died at the age of 86 in 1973 and was buried on the Mount of Olives.

All his sons and sons-in-law, were chasidic rebbes, with the sole exception of his son Rabbi Meyer Rosenbaum, who was the Chief Rabbi of Cuba and Mexico,[1] and a prolific author of scholarly works, including Torah LeOhr Hatekufah.

References

  1. Web site: Kechina Rebbetzin Is Niftar At 105. Tannenbaum. Rabbi Gershon. Jul 11, 2007. July 27, 2011. The Jewish Press.
  2. Web site: Tosher Chassunah. Tannenbaum. Rabbi Gershon. Mar 23, 2011. July 20, 2011. The Jewish Press. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110915152958/https://www.jewishpress.com/pageroute.do/47708/. September 15, 2011.