Isser Yehuda Unterman
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Isser Yehuda Unterman ( he, איסר יהודה אונטרמן, 19 April 1886 – 26 January 1976) was the Ashkenazi Jews, Ashkenazi Chief Rabbinate of Israel, Chief Rabbi of Israel from 1964 until 1972.Isser Yehuda Unterman (1886 - 1976) biography
referenced t
The Department for Jewish Zionist Education


Biography

Isser Yehuda Unterman was born in Brest-Litovsk, now Belarus. He studied at the Etz Chaim Yeshiva in Maltsch under Rabbi Shimon Shkop.


Rabbinic career

Returning to Lithuania to complete his studies, Unterman was Semicha, ordained as a rabbi by Rabbi Refael Shapiro, and by Rabbi Simcha Zelig Reguer, the Dayan of Brisk. He founded his own yeshiva in the town of Vishnyeva around 1910. Unterman served a variety of roles in the Lithuanian Jews, Lithuanian Jewish community until 1924, when he was selected to become the head rabbi of Liverpool, England, Liverpool. Unterman served in Liverpool for 22 years, becoming an important figure in the English Zionist movement and working to relieve the suffering of refugees in England during the World War II, Second World War. In 1946, Unterman became the Chief Rabbi of Tel Aviv, Israel, Tel Aviv, a position he held for twenty years before being appointed Chief Rabbi of Israel. As Chief Rabbi, Unterman worked to reform the rabbinic court system and Outreach, reach out to secular Israelis. He also wrote opinions on a variety of religious issues relevant to the young Jewish state, such as Ger tzedek, religious conversion and Jewish view of marriage, marriage law. He founded two advanced Talmudical academies (kollels), one in Tel Aviv and one in Jerusalem, designed to prepare select students for the rabbinate and educational positions, with an emphasis on systematic study of Talmud and practical halakhah. Rabbi Unterman died on January 26, 1976, in Jerusalem.


Halachic Decisions

A woman once extended her hand to Rabbi Unterman and he immediately shook it. He later explained, “Don’t think that I am lax on not touching women. I am stringent on respect for all humanity.” As rabbi of Liverpool, Rabbi Unterman had required converts to Judaism to fully accept Torah observance. But in 1972, he wrote that the rabbinic establishment needed to be more lenient with the anticipated Russian Aliyah, given the circumstances of their lives in the Soviet Union. While a convert's sincere intention to accept mitzvot is a necessary condition for conversion, the rabbi advocated a lenient approach when dealing with the conversion of non-Jewish spouses.


Writings

* ''Shevet mi-Yehudah'' (1952) - on issues in halakhah


See also

*Reva Unterman


References


External links

) 1886 births 1976 deaths Ashkenazi Jews in Mandatory Palestine Ashkenazi rabbis in Ottoman Palestine Israeli Ashkenazi Jews 20th-century Lithuanian rabbis Chief rabbis of Israel Chief rabbis of Tel Aviv Burials at the Jewish cemetery on the Mount of Olives Rabbis from Brest, Belarus Belarusian Orthodox Jews Israeli people of Belarusian-Jewish descent 20th-century English rabbis Clergy from Liverpool 20th-century Israeli rabbis {{Israel-rabbi-stub