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Topic: Bobov (Hasidic dynasty)


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In the News (Thu 24 Dec 09)

  
  Bobov (Hasidic dynasty) Information
Rabbi Zvi Hirsh Rabinowitz, Bobover Ruv of Monsey; son-in-law of Rabbi Yehoshua Rubin.
Mitzvah Tantz (with the Choson) in Bobov, of Rabbi Mordche Duvid Unger
Sheva Broches (with the Ruv, Rabbi Yehoshua Rubin) in Bobov, of Rabbi Mordche Duvid Unger
www.bookrags.com /wiki/Bobov_(Hasidic_dynasty)   (2387 words)

  
  Hasidic Judaism - WikiKamusi   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Elimelech -a Lezhinsk affirmed imani bi Tzaddikism kama a kanuni fundisho -a Hasidism.
Hasidic falsafa (Chassidus) hozi kama a kiini imani amba allah -rishai chote bamba dhamira bi asili, jumla chote hai huluki.
Hasidic mabibi -vaa kivazi -a kasa halafa dutu kama amba -a -ake -a kiume mapacha, bali amba maitikio fika leo kanuni -a tzeniut (nyenyekevu gauni bi leo akili -a -a kiyahudi haki).
sw.wikigadugi.org /wiki/Hasidic_Judaism   (4814 words)

  
 SingaporeMoms - Parenting Encyclopedia - Bobov (Hasidic dynasty)
Bobov is a Hasidic group within Judaism with its headquarters in the neighborhood of Borough Park in Brooklyn, New York.
Bobov originated with Rabbi Solomon Halberstam in the Galician village of Bobowa, where the bulk of his Hasidim were originally followers of his grandfather, Rabbi Chaim Halberstam, known as the Rabbi of Sanz, or by the name of his books the Divrei Chaim.
It has been noted that his date of death was on the same date of Aaron the Cohen, mentioned in the Torah, which his son Rabbi Benzion Halberstam explained due to their similar character of loving peace.
www.singaporemoms.com /parenting/Bobov   (456 words)

  
 Bobov (Hasidic dynasty) Biography on DanceAge
Bobov, (or Bobover Hasidism) (חסידות באבוב) is a Hasidic group within Haredi Judaism originating in Bobowa, Galicia in Southern Poland and now headquartered in the neighborhood of Borough Park in Brooklyn, New York.
Bobov originated with Rabbi Shlomo Halberstam in the Galician village of Bobowa, where the bulk of his Hasidim were originally followers of his grandfather, Rabbi Chaim of Sanz (the author of Divrei Chaim).
In World War II the Bobov Hasidic movement was destroyed, and the Second Rebbe himself perished in the Holocaust together with thousands of his followers.
music.musictnt.com /biography/sdmc_Bobov   (1779 words)

  
 Bobov (Hasidic dynasty) - Biocrawler   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Bobov is a Hasidic group within Judaism with its headquarters in the neighborhood of Borough Park in Brooklyn, New York.
Bobov originated with Rabbi Solomon Halberstam in the Galician village of Bobowa, where the bulk of his Hasidim were originally followers of his grandfather, Rabbi Chaim Halberstam, known as the Rabbi of Sanz, or by the name of his books the Divrei Chaim.
It has been noted that his date of death was on the same date of Aaron the Cohen, mentioned in the Torah, which his son Rabbi Benzion Halberstam interpreted as being due to their similar characteristic of "loving peace".
www.biocrawler.com /encyclopedia/Bobov   (584 words)

  
 Bobov (Hasidic dynasty) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mitzvah Tantz (with the Choson) in Bobov, of Rabbi Mordche Duvid Unger
Sheva Broches in Bobov, of Rabbi Mordche Duvid Unger
Sheva Broches (with the Ruv, Rabbi Yehoshua Rubin) in Bobov, of Rabbi Mordche Duvid Unger
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Bobov_(Hasidic_dynasty)   (1974 words)

  
 Hasidic Judaism and Lutheran Pietism by The Rev. Mark Isaacs, ELCM Pastor.
Hasidism also stresses the idea that all men are equal before God (we would say “the priesthood of all believers”), and that sincere prayerful devotion (a revolution in prayer life) is preferable to traditional Talmudic study.
Again, Hasidism was a dynamic counter-cultural and enthusiastic folk movement that enriched the lives of the Jew people as a group separating them from their Christian neighbors by language, culture, religion, and civil status.
Thus, in the U.S. the Bobov came the town of Bobova in Poland (Galicia); the Satmar from Satu Mar in present-day Hungary; the Belz from Poland; and the Lubavitch from Russia.
www.elcm.org /theology/hasidicrelattoPietististicLutheran.html   (6585 words)

  
 Fancy Mag
A Hasidic person is instantly recognized by his or her style of dress.
At the age of 3 all Hasidic boys get their first haircut; where it is cut back to the skull (opsheren or upsherinish), expect for the side locks, payees.
Bobover wear a stern tichl, which is like a turban worn with a brooch gathering in the front, adding an air of elegance.
www.fancymag.com /hasidic.html   (3146 words)

  
 New Page 1
In the beginning, some in the community were very suspicious of having a Hasidic Rav, but the new Rav was very keen in dealing with those people in a very subtle and accommodating way, as he strategically won their hearts over.
Bobov is named after the little Polish town where the original Bobov Rebbe, Rav Shlomo Halbershtam founded the sect.
Bobov'e chassdim are known to be very neat and "bapitzt" at all times and the Rebbe acted as an adviser on a personal level, not so much as a spiritual leader.
www.nyc-architecture.com /WBG/wbg-jewish.htm   (4672 words)

  
 Rebbe - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography
A rebbe is distinct from a 'rav' (a word usually translated as Rabbi, who is a leader of an Orthodox Jewish community, either Hasidic or non-Hasidic) in that a rebbe need have no scholarly attainments, and as such is not necessarily qualified to pasken halakha (decide points of Jewish law).
It is not uncommon for a Hasidic Jew to have a rebbe and to go to a rav for a ruling on an issue of religious law.
In Israel, some of the best known Hasidic groups are the Ger, Nadvorna, Vizhnitz and Belz Hasidim, each having their own rebbes.
www.arikah.net /encyclopedia/Rebbe   (2119 words)

  
 math lessons - Bobov (Hasidic dynasty)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Chassidic youth in Poland flocked to Bobov have the opportunity to speak with Rabbi Halberstam in private.
With his passing, his son Rabbi Benzion Halberstam took the lead as the Bobover Rebbe, and by creating over 60 Yeshivas throughout Poland, he gained popularity among the youth, which in turn gained him many thousands of followers.
It has been noted that his date of death was on the same date of Aaron the Cohen, mentioned in the Torah, which his son Rabbi Benzion Halberstam explained due to their similar character of loving peace.
www.mathdaily.com /lessons/Bobov   (463 words)

  
 Informat.io on Borough Park
The closest area in Brooklyn in population growth was in Williamsburg, the center of the Satmar Hasidic community, which reported 3,839 births.
The Hasidic community was not pleased by the prospect of a new public school and protested the decision.
In 2005, the Bobover Rebbe, Rabbi Naftali Zvi Halberstam died, and his followers split between his half-brother Rabbi Ben Zion Aryeh Leibish Halberstam and his son-in-law, Rabbi Mordechai David Unger, who both claim to be the legitimate Grand Rabbi ("Rebbe") of Bobov.
www.informat.io /?title=borough-park   (1633 words)

  
 Sanz (Hasidic dynasty) - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography
The Sanz Hasidic dynasty was founded by Rabbi Chaim Halberstam (1793-1876) Rabbi of Nowy Sącz (Sanz), author of Divrei Chaim and a son-in-law of Rabbi Boruch Frankel Thumim (1760-1828), Rabbi of Lipník nad Bečvou (Yiddish: Leipnik), author of Boruch Taam.
The main Hasidic works revered by the Sanz Dynasty are Divrei Chaim, by Rabbi Chaim Halberstam of Tzanz and Divrei Yechezkel by his son, Rabbi Yechezkel Halberstam of Shineva.
Sanz (Hasidic dynasty), Books of the Sanz movement, See also, External link, Hasidic dynasties, Hasidic Judaism in Europe, Hasidic Judaism in Israel, Hasidic Judaism in the United States and Sanz Hasidism.
www.arikah.net /encyclopedia/Sanz   (200 words)

  
 Religious Movements Homepage: Hasidism
Hasidism would have continued to be a force in contemporary life had it not been for Nazism
Despite opposition to Hasidism, Hasidic teachings were carried to communities throughout Eastern and Central Europe by Hasidic disciples who had witnessed the new ways and the new miracles at first hand at the court of Dov Ber and later at the Courts of other Rebbes
Martin Buber was a philosopher, storyteller, and scholar of Hasidism.
religiousmovements.lib.virginia.edu /nrms/hasid.html   (4180 words)

  
 Reference.com/Encyclopedia/Bobov (Hasidic dynasty)
In Israel Bobov has branches in Jerusalem, Bnei Brak, Ashdod, Betar Illit and an enclave Kiryath Bobov in Bat Yam.
During World War II the Bobov Hasidic movement was destroyed, the Second Rebbe himself perishing in the Holocaust together with thousands of his followers.
Over the more than fifty years that Rabbi Shlomo was Rebbe of Bobov; he founded and built a vast network of synagogues, chasidic schools for boys and girls (yeshivas), High schools (Mesivtas) and post high school houses of learning.
www.reference.com /browse/wiki/Bobov_(Hasidic_dynasty)   (687 words)

  
 HasidicNews.com - Hasidic community and culture.
The role of a Rebbe was more spiritual and followers usually had hundred's of stories about miracles performed by the "Rebbe" as well as instances where the "Rebbe" was inspired by "Ruach Hakodesh" (Holy Spirit) to know one's personal life or the future, and accordingly advise his followers.
The Belz'e dynasty, like most other Hasidic dynasties in the nineteenth century, was inherited, unlike the original Hasidic communities whose leaders did not pass over leadership to their offspring but to the most qualified disciple.
He is widely believed to be among the last of the old-generation holy Hasidic Rebbe's.
hasidicnews.com /Belz.shtml   (810 words)

  
 Hasidic Judaism - ikiW
Hasidic Judaism (also Chassidic, etc., from the Hebrew: Chasidut חסידות, meaning "piety", from the Hebrew root word chesed חסד meaning "loving kindness") is a Haredi Jewish religious movement.
Some refer to Hasidic Judaism as Hasidism, and the adjective Chasidic/Hasidic (or in Yiddish Chasidish חסידיש) applies.
In its initial stages, Hasidism met with opposition from several contemporary leaders, most notably the Vilna Gaon, leader of the Lithuanian Jews, united as the misnagdim—literally meaning "those who oppose".
hasidic-judaism.ikiw.net /en/Hasidic_Judaism   (171 words)

  
 Informat.io on Ben Zion Halberstam
Ben Zion Halberstam (pronounced Ben Tzion) (1874–1941) was the leader of the Bobover Hasidim.
At the age of thirty-one he succeeded his father, Rabbi Shlomo Halberstam (1847–1905) as the Rebbe ("grand rabbi") of Bobov thus being crowned as the spiritual leader of thousands of Hasidim.
Rabbi Ben Zion was murdered by the Nazis in 1941, and was succeeded by his son Rabbi Shlomo Halberstam (1907–2000), who brought the Bobover dynasty to the United States.
www.informat.io /?title=ben-zion-halberstam   (394 words)

  
 JBooks.com - Non-Fiction: The Man Who Forbade Sadness
There is no Breslover-centralized neighborhood comparable to Satmar or Bobov, in which one is expected to live, and no reigning Rebbe around whom that community adheres and to which one pays homage—one becomes a Breslover by studying and practicing the 200-year-old precepts of Rebbe Nachman.
Unlike other Hasidic groups, there is also no dress code that marks membership—some Breslovers dress in traditional garb, but many, especially recent affiliates, wear clothes that would be more at home in hippy San Francisco of the 1960’s than Hasidic Galicia of the 1860’s.
Rebbe Nachman was born in 1772 in the Ukrainian town of Medzoboz, the cradle of the Hasidism.
www.jbooks.com /nonfiction/index/NF_Halberstam_Nachman.htm   (1177 words)

  
 Satmar (Hasidic dynasty)
The dynasty traces its roots to Rabbi Moshe Teitelbaum (1759-1841), Rabbi of Sátoraljaújhely in Hungary.
Schisms in the Hasidic dynastic succession are not a recent development, although there has been a growing number of them in the past ten to fifteen years as many of the previous pre-war or immediately post-war generations, particularly leaders, have died.
This can also be linked to a growing tendency of some Hasidic groups, such as Vizhnitz, Biala, Rachmastrivka, and Spinka to divide their territories and followers between relatives, in part in order to lower friction, particularly when they are significantly separated by geography.
music.musictnt.com /biography/sdmc_Satmar_(Hasidic_dynasty)   (5681 words)

  
 Ask Us A Question   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
It is home to many inter-connected Jewish Orthodox communities with the largest being the Hasidic community of Bobov, as well as large numbers of Hasidic Jews connected to: Belz; Satmar; Stolin; Vizhnitz; Munkacz; Spinka; Burshtin; Puppa, Chust and many others.
The neighborhoods in which the Hasidic and Haredi communities live are connected by an Eruv which enables those who accept it to carry items outside of their homes on the Shabbat, an activity which is Halakhically forbidden, without an Eruv.
The Hasidic community has developed a network of residents to handle emergencies in the neighborhood.
www.healdsburgcaus.com /profile/Borough_Park,_Brooklyn   (1671 words)

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