Yaakov Ben Zion Mendelson

Summary

Yaakov Ben Zion Mendelsohn (Hebrew: יעקב בן ציון הכהן מענדעלסאן) (October 12–14, 1875 – August 5, 1941)[1][2][Note 1] was a renowned Russian-born Orthodox Jewish scholar, communal rabbi, Talmudist, Halachist, and rabbinical author (mechaber seforim).

Mendelson as a young man and as a senior rabbi.

Early life edit

Mendelson was born Yaakov Ben Zion Morein in 1875, in Kreitzburg,[1] part of the Vitebsk district of what was then Russia, to his parents Menachem (Yiddish: Mendel) and Beila Rochel Morein. (The town later changed to Latvian hands, and the German name became Latvian Krustpils. In 1962, it was also united with the town of Jēkabpils, across the Daugava River.from it, and are now known together as Jēkabpils).

His rigorous Talmudic education started at age 7,[2] and culminated with semicha ordination from the Rabbi Yosef Rosen, the "Rogatchover Gaon," one of the rabbinic greats of the time. Morein met Rabbi Sholom Dovber Schneersohn ("Rashab") and his son, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn ("Rayatz"), the fifth and sixth Rebbes of Chabad-Lubavitch as a teenager. It was Rashab who recommended he study with Rosen. Under the influence of Rashab and the Rogatchover, he adopted some Chabad practices, but remained primarily a Lithuanian-oriented rabbi.

Shortly after his ordination, he was betrothed to a cousin, Feiga Skuy, but his marriage was postponed when he was drafted into the Russian Army. The army was very harsh for Jewish soldiers, and commanders were well known for trying to break the Jews from their religion. Morein deserted.[3]

After escaping Russia, he had several close calls evading Russian agents throughout Europe. He changed his surname to Mendelson ("Mendel's son,"), to make it harder for the government to track him.[3]

The British years edit

Eventually, Mendelson emigrated to London, England. At age 22, he found a position as Rabbi and Dayan of Leeds, and of the ‘Chevras Torah’ shul there. He sent for his cousin Feiga, and they married in Leeds.[4]

In 1905, he took a new position as rabbi of Gateshead, and later, as rabbi of Glasgow, Scotland. In Glasgow, Mendelson demonstrated his community leadership and concern for its well-being countless times. In two instances, he thwarted cartels controlling certain commercial aspects of ritual, to keep prices stable. (See details in Communal advocacy and disputes.)

Chief Rabbi of Newark edit

When war broke out, Mendelson's son Chaim was old enough to be drafted. After Mendelson's experience with the Russian Army, he wanted to avoid that, and relocated to the United States in 1915.[1] He would spend the rest of his life, personally and professionally, in Newark, New Jersey. In 1917, he was appointed Rabbi of Congregation Adath Y'Israel Mishnayes, a synagogue on Price Street.[5] He moved to Congregation Tifereth Israel of Brisk d’Lita in 1919.[6] In 1921 he was appointed as Chief Rabbi of Newark, with primary jurisdiction over matters of Shechita and Kashrus; he held the position until his death.

Mendelson changed synagogue positions several times, leading Congregation Adas Yisroel, then Chevra B'nai Jacob Anshe Galicia, and finally founding his own shul, Congregation Beis Hamedrash Hagadol.[6] To do so, he bought the defunct synagogue building formerly run by Rabbi Meyer Isserman.[6] He opened an expanded building next door on August 14, 1934, in a large ceremony[7] attended by hundreds of locals along with rabbis from Passaic, West New York, the Bronx, Brooklyn, and Philadelphia, and members of the New York press.[7][8][9] The new congregation was commonly known as the Bergen Street Shul.[6]

Distinguished for his scholarship and devotion to the Jewish community, Mendelson was a member of Knesseth ha-Rabbanim (the Assembly of Hebrew Orthodox Rabbis of America and Canada),[10] where he was considered an expert in kashruth. He became a leader of the organization,[11] and was featured at or presided over many of its conventions:

  • 11th convention, addressing issues of cooperation among Orthodox rabbis, improving education, marital law, religious courts, and kosher meat,[10][12][13]
  • 13th convention, he gave the keynote address (10 February 1930), focusing on unity across rabbinic organizations, Sabbath observance, Palestine, kashruth, Prohibition, and alien registration.[14]
  • 15th convention, presided,[15] and elected vice president of the organization[16]
  • At the September 10, 1940 convention session, he made an impassioned plea, to all of American Jewry, for the support of war refugees.[17]
 

Because of his close relationship with Rashab and Rayatz, Mendelson was a director and vice-president of their American organization, the Association of Chabad Hasidim Nusach Ari of the United States and Canada.[18] His name appeared on their letterthead in two places.

Legacy edit

Mendelson died in 1941, leaving a widow, five sons, four daughters and twelve grandchildren. Another son, Shmuel Dov, died in a scalding accident in Gateshead in 1905. Interment is at North Arlington Jewish Cemetery, whose Newark Orthodox section was purchased and organized under his aegis.

His synagogue, Beis Hamedrash Hagadol, continued to function, until an eminent domain seizure for the construction Interstate 78. Both the synagogue and Mendelson's house, one block east at 349 Chadwick Avenue, were condemned.[19]

He was the personal Talmud teacher to a young Gedalia Dov Schwartz,[20] who became a leading American rabbi in New York and Chicago.[21]

Mendelson was an author of Talmudic and Rabbinic works. He wrote six volumes of scholarship:[22]

  • Sha’arei Tzion (Leeds, 1903) - on the Talmud (with approbation from Rabbi Shlomo HaKohen, Dayan of Vilna)
  • Sefer Hatzid (Leeds, 1904) - laws relating to ritual slaughter
  • Midrash Yaavetz (Glasgow, 1911) - Halacha and Aggadah on the Book of Genesis[Note 2]
  • Mishnas Yaavetz on Chagiga (Leeds, 1903) a summary of the final rulings of this volume of Talmud Bavli
  • Mishnas Yaavetz (1928) an anthology of three previously unpublished books by the author

Many of Mendelson's children and grandchildren took leadership positions in national Jewish organizations and local Jewish communities; see Relatives, below.

One of his grandchildren claims to have a collection of zemiros, Sabbath meal devotional songs, composed by his grandfather.

Relatives edit

Mendelson's son Harry and his descendants reverted to the original family surname of Morein, though other family members continued to use Mendelson. Harry Morein was a founder of the Young Israel of Newark, and an early advocate[23] to change New Jersey's Sunday blue laws, forbidding commerce on Sunday.

Today, he has many descendants involved in communal life at the national and local levels, including kashruth administration at the Orthodox Union, and the teaching faculty of Yeshiva University's Manhattan Talmudical Academy High School and cantorial leadership.

He arranged for a cousin, Rabbi Dovid Menachem Morein, to come to Gateshead as the town's first Melamed. Morein's son Wolf was rabbi of the North London Shul, while his daughter Bluma married Rabbi Gedalia Schneider, Rosh Yeshiva of London's Yeshiva Toras Emes ("Schneider's Yeshiva"). It was the only Yeshiva in London of the classic Lithuanian mold, and many of its top students moved on to Gateshead, Bluma's hometown, to become early members of the Gateshead kollel in the 1940s.

Mendelson's son, Cantor Nechemya "Chemmy" (Nathan) Mendelson was a founding member and president (1951-1954) of the Cantors Assembly.[24] He served as Chazzan of Montreal's Congregation Shaar Hashomayim from 1938 to 1973.[25] Nathan's son, David Mendelson, continued as an assistant cantor at the synagogue for many years..

Two brothers Jacob "Jackie" Mendelson and Solomon, or Sol, "Tucky" Mendelson are grandchildren. Both have been presidents of the Cantors Assembly, with Jackie serving in 2003-2004, and Sol serving as in multiple roles including President (1987-1989), Programming Chair, Journal Editorial Board member, journal article author, and leading many events on behalf of the organization, including:[26][27][28][24]

In addition to Rabbi Mendelson's descendants, several other close relatives by marriage had significant impact on the Newark kehila, mostly originating with his support.

Louis Skui (later Sky) was Mendelson's brother-in-law and chief shochet of Newark. Upon Mendelson's death, due to the previous dispute with Rabbi Konvitz, Sky was unable to work as a shochet. He opened Sky Hebrew Books (later SkyBook), a large supplier of books and etrogs to congregations across the United States for over 50 years.

Joseph Gross was president of Mendelson's Bergen Street Shul, administrator of the Mendelson-lead Vaad Hakashruth, and later mechutan to the Mendelsons, after the marriage of children Samuel Gross and Leesa Mendelson. In turn, Samuel was later a president of the shul, in the 1940s and 1950s.

Communal advocacy and disputes edit

In Glasgow, Mendelson defied business interests to bring down communal costs for Passover Matzah and Mikvah use. At one point, to prevent price gouging, he rented the production facilities of Consolidated Biscuit, kashered it, and ran Matzah production, causing the prior bakery cartel to lose all business for the year.

In Newark, he published a controversial ruling regarding the permissibility, under certain conditions, of using a Shochet who is not Sabbath-observant. The opinion is cited and argued against by Rabbi Shimon Shkop.

In 1921, he succeeded Rabbi Dov Ber Halperin as the kashruth authority for Newark, on consensus of most local rabbis, ritual slaughterers, lay leaders, and kashruth supervisors in the city.[22] The position included responsibility for Jewish slaughterhouses, butchers, and the kosher operations of Swift & Co., and effectively made him chief Orthodox rabbi of the city.[19] Around 1925, another rabbi, Joseph Konvitz, moved to the city and created a rival kosher supervision service.[29] He won the Swift & Co. kosher division's contract, displacing the incumbent city kashruth agency, and attempted to become the sole kashruth authority for Newark. Many other famous rabbis of the day were involved in this dispute, including Rabbis Abraham Kook, Moshe Mordechai Epstein, Avrohom Dov Ber Kahana, Joseph Rosen (the Rogotchaver Gaon), Moses Margolies (RAMAZ), and Velvele (Gavriel Zev) Margolis.[30][31]

The two main parties and their organizations brought allegations, rebuttals, and counterallegations against each other. Konvitz filed a lawsuit in religious court (Beth Din), while Mendelson got a consensus of leading rabbis to back his position. There resulted a permanent rift in the city over rabbinate, with competing Vaadei Kashruth,[30][31] lasting until Mendelson's death in 1941. Thereafter, Konvitz led the remaining kosher supervision in the city until his own death three years later.

Sources edit

General references edit

  • Semi-autobiographic introduction to Midrash Yaavetz (pages 8-9)
  • American Jewish Year Book Vol. 44 (1942–1943)
  • New York Times Archives
  • Memoirs of son Harry Morein and son-in-law Dr. Sam Gross.

Related materials (external links) edit

  • Midrash Yaavetz
  • Mishnas Yaavetz
    • Volume One
    • Volume Two
    • Volume Three (includes Divrei Rivos)

Noted references edit

  1. ^ a b c Alderman, Harry J. (1942). "Supplements to the Review of the Year: American Jewish Bibliography, July 1941-June 1942" (PDF). American Jewish Year Book: 342. OCLC 828734983.
  2. ^ a b Mendelson, Yaakov (1911). "Introduction". Midrash Ya'avetz (Homilies of Y. B. Z. H.). Glasgow: דפוס יוסף פארטאן (Joseph Porton Publishers, Leeds). pp. 8–9 (PDF version). OCLC 233305311.
  3. ^ a b Harry Morein. 99 44/100 Years: A Memoir. Self-published.
  4. ^ "City of Leeds, Municipal Records, Marriage Entry".
  5. ^ "Congregation Adath Y'Israel Mishnayes". newarkreligion.com. Retrieved 2020-11-16.
  6. ^ a b c d "Old Newark Houses of Worship (1920, 1925, 1930, and 1935)". Old Newark. Archived from the original on 2013-03-18.
  7. ^ a b "New Temple Dedicated (with picture above)". New York Daily News. 1934-03-12. p. 18. Retrieved 2020-08-02 – via Newspaper.com  .
  8. ^ "News Brief". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. March 12, 1934. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  9. ^ "Newark Jews Dedicate Orthodox Synagogue". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. August 14, 1934. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  10. ^ a b "Rabbis Ask Hindenburg to Continue Protection for Jews". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. August 19, 1932. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  11. ^ "11th Annual Convention of K'nesseth Ha'rabonim". Jewish Daily Bulletin. Jewish Telegraphic Agency. May 12, 1926. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  12. ^ "Two Rabbinic Bodies in Joint Session Consider Problems of Orthodoxy". Jewish Daily Bulletin. Jewish Telegraphic Agency. June 20, 1928. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  13. ^ "Demand Creation of Supreme Religious Body for Orthodox Jewry". Jewish Daily Bulletin. Jewish Telegraphic Agency. June 21, 1928. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  14. ^ "Rabbis Throughout Nation Flock to Meet in Boro Urges Unity Among Rabbis to Aid Jewry. Newark Leader Stresses Need for Co-operation in Solving Problems". The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. 1930-02-11. p. 12. Retrieved 2017-08-03 – via Newspapers.com  .
  15. ^ "50 Rabbis Meet". The Ottawa Journal. 1932-08-16. p. 4. Retrieved 2017-08-03 – via Newspapers.com  .
  16. ^ "Rabbis Ask Hindenburg to Continue Protection for Jews". The Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle. 1932-08-26. p. 4. Retrieved 2017-08-03 – via Newspapers.com  .
  17. ^ "Orthodox Rabbis Plan to Waive Exemption from Military Service". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. September 11, 1940. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  18. ^ Simpson, David (1927-07-07). "Letter to Felix Warburg requesting intercession in the imprisonment of Lubavitcher Rebbe Rabbi Yosef Yotzchok Schneerson".
  19. ^ a b "Rabbi Mendelson (obituary)". The Paterson Evening News. North Jersey / The News (Gannett). 6 August 1941. p. 44. Retrieved 2020-07-31 – via Newspapers.com  .
  20. ^ Yeshiva University -- RIETS Chag HaSemikhah 2014. 2014-03-25. Event occurs at 1:44:30. Retrieved 2016-12-14. (Remarks by Rabbi Gedalia Dov Schwartz. describing childhood preparation for RIETS:) I never went to Yeshiva before... in Newark, NJ, there was no such thing as a day school, or a post-high school, or anything of that sort. But I was fortunate to have a great Rav, a mechaber of seforim (Rabbi and author), Rav Mendelson, ZL, who was my personal teacher for years. So I was a bit prepared to enter the Yeshiva.
  21. ^ "Multi-Honors for Rabbi Schwartz". Chicago Jewish News. October 12, 2007. Archived from the original on September 27, 2011. Retrieved January 6, 2011.
  22. ^ a b Mendelson, Jacob Ben-Zion. Mishnas Yaavetz [Teachings of Y. B. Z [Yaakov Ben-Zion]] (in Hebrew). Vol. 3. Newark, NJ. Title page, page 74. Retrieved 2013-08-27. Translated excerpt: ...volume 3... Yaakov Ben-Zion (the Cohen) Mendelson ... author of 'Shaarei Tzion [Gates of Zion],' 'Sefer Hatzayid [Book of the Capture],' 'Midrash Yaavetz [Homilies of J. B. Z.],' 'Mishnas Yaavetz (on Chagiga) [Teachings of Y. B. Z. on Chagiga],' and now an additional book of the same name.
  23. ^ "Morein v Weldon".
  24. ^ a b Austerklein, Matthew (2022-01-01). Cantors Assembly 75th Anniversary Journal.
  25. ^ "Previous Cantors". Congregation Shaar Shomayim.
  26. ^ "History of CA 1973-98". The Cantors Assembly. Retrieved 27 August 2013.
  27. ^ "Clergy". Temple Israel Center. Retrieved 27 August 2013.
  28. ^ Levine, Joseph A. (March 2016). "In Memoriam - Celebrating the Life of Solomon Mendelson (1933-2016)" (PDF). Journal of Synagogue Music. 41 (1): i–ii.
  29. ^ "Weiss Rebukes Rabbi Konvitz over Kashruth". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. May 1, 1934. Retrieved 27 August 2013.
  30. ^ a b "HebrewBooks.org Sefer Detail: משנת יעב"ץ - חלק ג -- מנדלסון, יעקב בנציון". hebrewbooks.org. Retrieved 2024-03-28.
  31. ^ a b "Rav Kook's Mission to America". Rav Kook Torah. Retrieved 2024-03-28.

Notes edit

  1. ^ The AJC Year Book gives a birth date of 12 October 1875. Mendelson's autobiography states that he was born on the first day of Sukoth 5736, which corresponds to 14 October 1875 (or late evening of 13 October).
  2. ^ Midrash Yaavetz had approbations from Rabbi Nosson Halevi Bamberger of Würzburg; Rabbi Menachem Dovber Dagutski of Manchester; Rabbi Refoel Zilberman of Tzfas; Rabbi Eliyahu Posek of Alapolia in Russia; Rabbi Eliezer Dan Yachai of Lutzin and Rabbi Shlomo Yaakov Koton of Leshenov, and with a warm letter from Rabbi Akiva HaCohen Matlon of Heina in Minsk province, at the time part of Russia.