Yechiel Michel Pines Explained

Honorific-Prefix:Rabbi
Yechiel Michel Pines
Birth Date:1824 9, df=y
Birth Place:Ruzhinoy, Grodno Governorate, Russian Empire
Death Place:Jerusalem, Mutasarrifate of Jerusalem, Ottoman Empire

Yechiel Michel Pines [1] (; 18 September 1824 – 15 March 1913) was a Russian-born religious Zionist rabbi, writer, and community leader in the Old Yishuv.

Yechiel Michel Pines was born at Ruzhinoy, near Grodno. He was the son of Noah Pines and the son-in-law of Shemariah Luria, rabbi of Mogilev. He received both a religious and secular Jewish education, and was mentored by Rabbi Mordechai Gimpel Jaffe, an early leader of Ḥovevei Zion.[2]

He later became a merchant, giving lectures at the same time in the yeshiva of his native town. He was elected delegate to a conference held in London by the association Mazkereth Moshe, for the establishment of charitable institutions in Palestine in commemoration of the name of Sir Moses Montefiore. In 1878 he settled in Jerusalem, at the home of his relative Yosef Rivlin, to establish and organize such institutions.[3]

At the end of his life, Pines was an instructor in Talmud at the Hebrew Teachers' Seminary in Jerusalem.[4]

Legacy

There is a street named after Pines near Davidka Square in Jerusalem,[5] as well as streets in Rehovot, Ra'anana and Petah Tikvah. The Israeli religious moshav Kfar Pines is named after him.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sharon. Udasin. Week's end absurdities. 18 February 2011. 10 January 2021. The Jewish Week. New York. en-US.
  2. Book: Valakh, Shalom Me'ir ben Mordekhai. The Seraph of Brisk: The Life of the Holy Gaon Rabbi Yehoshua Leib Diskin. 2004. Feldheim Publishers. 978-1-58330-708-3. 552–553.
  3. Web site: Yehiel Michael Pines. Jewish Virtual Library. AICE. 6 April 2019.
  4. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20071217170007/http://www.mizrachi.org/elearning/View_history.asp?id=123. Rav Yehiel Michael Pines (1824–1912). 1 July 2014. 6 April 2019. World Mizrahi Movement. 17 December 2007.
  5. Web site: Peggy. Cidor. This Week In Jerusalem. 12 March 2010. 10 January 2021. The Jerusalem Post. en-US.