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Rabbinical Leaders
Rav Moshe Avigdor Amiel
1883-1946
Born in Lita, Moshe Avigdor Amiel was first taught by his father at the Telz
yeshiva before proceeding to the Vilna yeshiva to study under the two greatest
Talmudic scholars of the time - Rabbi Chaim Soloveichik and Rabbi Chaim Ozer
Grodzinsky. He received his ordination at the age of eighteen and in 1905
was appointed Rabbi of Swieciany, where he founded a large yeshiva. In 1913,
he became Rabbi of Grajewo located on the border between Russia and Germany.
It was during this time that Rabbi Amiel was acknowledged as
a great public preacher and his oratorical qualities were said to affect the
most hardened hearts. He became one of the first Rabbis to publicly join the
Mizrachi movement and Zionist organization, applying his speaking and writing
abilities to the cause of Religious Zionism and national questions. In 1920
he was elected as one of the delegates to represent Mizrachi of Poland at the
Mizrachi World Convention in Amsterdam. There he made such an impression upon
the Jewish community that he was given the post of Rabbi of Antwerp, one of
the largest and richest Jewish communities of the time. He set up a system
of lower yeshivot for girls and boys by creating the Jewish Day School (as
it came to be known in America), as well as religious institutes of higher
learning.
Realizing that he must actively fulfill his Zionist ideals,
in 1936 Rabbi Amiel made aliyah in order to serve as Chief Rabbi of Tel Aviv.
This area had the largest concentration of Jewish population in the yishuv
and presented a great deal of challenges for Rabbi Amiel. Particularly hard
was the constant need to engender good relations between the religious and
non-religious segments of the community. During his leadership he set up a
yeshiva high school which taught religious subjects in the morning and secular
in the afternoon. This yeshiva, named Yeshiva Ha'Yishuv Ha'Chadash, was used
as the pattern for the B'nei Akiva yeshivot which were subsequently established.
After his death the yeshiva was renamed Yeshivat Ha'Rav Amiel.
He also continued his work on behalf of Mizrachi in Eretz Yisrael,
as well as running many Torah institutions in the country. He was an author
of renown who produced many works in the areas of halacha, aggada, machshava,
sermons and articles on Religious Zionism.
From His Writings:
Religions and Nationality; Song and Freedom
And when they ask why do we connect our nationalism with belief,
do not the Gentiles consider them to be two separate entities, and assuredly
one can be an atheist and still at the same time be a good Frenchman? The answer
is that Israel is not like other nations and that our redemption cannot become
manifest without the use of song! …For not only is our Holy City destroyed
and our Temple in ruins, but we live in exile, driven from our land. We have
been made to wander through the whole world and to be redeemed we must indeed
create something from nothing. This has never occurred before and it cannot
be brought about through diplomacy. It is true that all nations appoint their
own diplomats - but diplomats cannot create a country. The salvation of Israel
will not come through the use of diplomacy but rather through the use of songs
which extol and praise the Divine loving-kindness. Only through song will the
ruins of our nation and people be saved. It is not for naught that every Passover
we read the Song of Songs and the excerpt from the Torah of And then Sang Moses.
This is to teach us that the future Passover will arrive through song as well.
For song and freedom are not two separate entities but rather cause and effect.
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