Joseph Weinreb Explained

Honorific-Prefix:Rabbi
Joseph (Yosef) Weinreb
Rabbi
Synagogueposition:Rabbi
Organisation:Shomrai Shabbos congregation
Organisationposition:Chief Rabbi
Began:1900
Ended:1942
Successor:Gedalia Felder
Birth Name:Yosef Weinreb
Birth Date:1869
Birth Place:Busk, Galicia
Death Date:1942
Death Place:Toronto
Buried:Jones Avenue Cemetery, Toronto
Nationality:Canadian
Denomination:Orthodox

Joseph (Yosef) Weinreb (1869 - 1943), also known as the "Galitzianer Rav," was the first chief rabbi of Toronto, Canada.

Biography

Joseph Weinreb was born in Busk, Galicia, son of Rabbi Baruch Shlomo Weinreb and his wife Soore Ratze.

Rabbinic career

He worked as a rabbi in Iași, Romania after receiving his smicha (rabbinical ordination) from the Brejaner Rebbe. Around the year 1900, he received an invitation at the suggestion of his brother-in-law, Binyamin Kurtz, who was living in Toronto at that time, to serve as the rabbi of Toronto's Shomrai Shabbos congregation.[1] The congregation had just purchased a building on Chestnut Street.[2] Weinreb moved to Toronto with his two daughters, Malka and Lil, after his wife, Ethel, died in childbirth. In Toronto, he married his niece, Freyda, with whom he had three more children, Soore Ratze, Sol and Ruth. The rabbi purchased a home on Henry Street across from the Poilishe Shul, and continued to head the congregation for more than 40 years.[3] [4] [5] After an ideological split in the congregation, a new synagogue was built on Terauley Street, on land donated by Zelig Shapira.[6]

Weinreb died on October 15, 1943, in Toronto.[4] His successor was Rabbi Gedalia Felder.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.cjnews.com/node/86656 Shomrai Shabbos celebrates 120 years
  2. Web site: Shul History, A Brief History of Our Shul and Kehilah, Shomrai Shabbos-Chevrah Mishanyos Congregation . 2014-11-10 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120619183549/http://www.sscm.ca/shul/history . 2012-06-19 . dead .
  3. http://www.billgladstone.ca/?p=2633 Genealogy as a labour of love
  4. http://www.geni.com/people/Yosef-Weinreb/6000000010974024691 Yosef Weinreb (1869 - 1942)
  5. Yahrzeit Memoir - 'One Hundred Years'. Shomrei Shabbas Mahzikei Hadas - The Trolley Street Shul. By Sara Edell Schafler Kelman
  6. http://www.billgladstone.ca/?p=7013 Shapira family held key to Terauley Street synagogue