Yosef Greenwald | |
Pupa Rebbe, the Vaychi Yosef | |
Began: | Adar, 1941 |
Ended: | 13 Av, 1984 |
Birth Name: | Joseph Grunwald |
Main Work: | Vaychi Yosef |
Predecessor: | Yaakov Yechezkiya Greenwald (I) |
Successor: | Yaakov Yechezkiya Greenwald (II) |
Spouse: | Chana Greenwald, Miriam Weber |
Children: | 10 children, including Yaakov Yehezkiya Greenwald |
Dynasty: | Pupa |
Father: | Yaakov Yechezkiya Greenwald (I) |
Mother: | Sara Rivkah Brown |
Birth Date: | 16 September 1903 |
Birth Place: | Brezovica, Slovakia |
Death Date: | 11 August 1984 |
Death Place: | Westchester Medical Center, Westchester County, New York |
Yahrtzeit: | 13 Av |
Date Of Burial: | 12 Aug, 1984 |
Place Of Burial: | Kiryas Pupa Cemetery in Ossining, New York |
Yosef Greenwald (Hebrew: יוסף גרינוואלד 1903 – Brooklyn 1984) was the second Rebbe of the Pupa Hasidic dynasty. Before World War II he was a rabbi and rosh yeshiva in Pápa, Hungary.
Greenwald was the son of Yaakov Yechezkiah Greenwald of Pupa and the grandson of Moshe Greenwald.
Greenwald was a Belzer Hasid. After the war he moved to Williamsburg, Brooklyn, and established the contemporary Pupa Hasidic movement.[1]
Greenwald was born on 16 September 1903 (24 Elul 5663) in Brezovica, Hungary,[2] and studied in his father's yeshiva in Pápa, Hungary.
In 1925 he married his grandfather's niece Chana. She had been raised by her uncle Eliezer David Greenwald, whom Yosef Greenwald succeeded as the head of the Keren Ledovid Yeshiva.[3]
After his father's death in 1941, Greenwald moved to Papa, Hungary, and began to serve as rabbi and Rosh Yeshivah. He brought additional students from Satmar to study in the yeshiva, and hid some sixty young men who fled from Slovakia and Poland.[3]
On 11 May 1944, Greenwald was sent to an Arbeitslager (Nazi labor camp), where his mother was murdered. Toward the end of World War II he hid in the Glass House in Budapest. His wife and ten children were murdered in the Holocaust. After the war he returned to Pápa and re-established the yeshiva.
He was remarried after the war to Miriam Weber (b. 12 October 1918 in Soltvadkert). He moved with the yeshiva, at that time numbering approximately 60 young men, to Szombathely, Hungary. Later they moved to Antwerp, Belgium[3] where Greenwald lived for several years.
In 1950 Greenwald emigrated to the United States, settling in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn with several students, where he founded the congregation "Kehilath Yaacov - Pupa", and continued as Admor of the Pupa Chassidut.
He became president of the Central Rabbinical Congress of the United States and Canada c. 1980.
Greenwald died on August 11, 1984, after a stroke, and was succeeded by his son Yaakov Yechezkia Greenwald II.[4]
His students included Gavriel Zinner and Yaakov Yitzhak Neumann.