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Rabbinical Leaders
Rav Isacc Nissenbaum
1868-1942
Born in Bobruisk, Belorussia (White Russia) Isaac Nissenbaum became an active
Zionist at a very young age. While attending Volozhin he joined the yeshiva's
secret nationalistic association called 'Netzach Yisrael', set up when the
government forced the closure of the yeshiva. The society demanded that all
its members declare their allegiance to Eretz Yisrael. In 1889, he married
and moved to Minsk where he continued activities with 'Netzach Yisrael' in
secret and became known in public as one of the great 'darshanim' of the
time.
In 1893, Rabbi Nissenbaum was ordained and later
in the year attended a secret Hovevei Zion meeting, headed by Rabbi
Samuel Mohilever, where Mizrachi began as a religious section of
Hibbat Zion. These two individuals developed a close working relationship
and Nissenbaum moved to Bialystok in 1894 to become Mohilever's secretary,
a position he retained until Mohilever's death. It was during this
time that Nissenbaum became known as a central figure in the Zionist
movement. He used his oratorical abilities, traveling through Russia,
Poland, Latvia and Lithuania, becoming known as the 'traveling Zionist
preacher. He had a great influence on Orthodox Jewry as he spoke
in a medium that they understood, including in his speeches many
allusions and explanations of Midrashic and Zohar texts.
With the advent of Herzl, Rabbi Nissenbaum became
the basic link of communication between Herzl and the members of
Hovevei Zion. He was also among those who attended the First Zionist
Congress, and was elected afterwards as one of the World Zionist
Organization's representatives in Russia. For seven months he would
reside in Bialystok and for five months he would travel from place
to place in order to organize activities on behalf of the new yishuv
in Eretz Yisrael. In Warsaw, where he settled in 1901, he continued
with his Zionist activities, attending all Zionist functions.
When Mizrachi was founded in 1902, Rabbi Nissenbaum
served as secretary to their first congress. In 1905, during the
Sixth Zionist Congress which considered the Uganda proposal, he traveled
to Eretz Yisrael to fight against it and those who supported it in
Eretz Yisrael itself. He fought vehemently against the proposal.
After the Uganda proposal failed, he returned to Poland and continued
his Zionist activities, even though such activity was outlawed and
brought with it great personal danger. He also continued to speak
every Shabbat in the 'Moriah' Synagogue, a tradition he kept for
over thirty years. There he spoke one Shabbat a month in Hebrew and
thus became the first 'darshan' to speak in Hebrew in public.
At the Eleventh Zionist Congress, in 1913, Rabbi
Nissenbaum once again began to take an active role in Mizrachi affairs.
This coupled, with his being an executive of the Polish Zionist Organization
and one of the leaders of the Jewish National Fund, caused him to
become the backbone of the large Mizrachi following in Poland and
the surrounding countries. Among the most notable pamphlets that
he wrote was the first explanatory booklet of the ideals and goals
of the Jewish National Fund (J.N.F.).
Following World War I, Rabbi Nissenbaum became editor
of the weekly Mizrachi paper in Poland and in 1937 became head of
the Mizrachi movement there. As World War II began to engulf Europe,
Rabbi Nissenbaum refused to leave Poland and was murdered in the
Warsaw ghetto in 1942. He left behind works on Zionism and copies
of his speeches, including: Ha'dat Ve'ha'techiya H'leumit, Ha'yahadut
Ha'leumit and Imrei Derush. Kibbutz Be'erot Yitzchak, established
on January 26, 1943, was named in his memory.
From His Writings:
The Goal of Mizrachi
The objective of Mizrachi is the total revival of
our nation in all its aspects; to revive Judaism in our hearts and
to revive our hearts for Judaism; to revive the land for the nation
and to revive the nation on the fatness of the land. The objective
of Mizrachi is the total revival of Judaism in all its aspects through
its depth, width and height. It is a Judaism whose legislators redeem,
whose farmers are prophets, whose businessmen are sages. It is a
Judaism which creates spiritual and physical values, synthesizing
them into one unit, destroying the houses of bondage and building
huts of freedom.
Mizrachi flies the flag of nationalistic Judaism,
transforming a people into a holy nation, above all the nations of
the world. We are a nation whose empty and sinful children are filled
with mitzvot as a pomegranate is with seeds. The objective of Mizrachi
is to revive life itself…Mizrachi asks of its members a total spiritual
and ethical commitment to our renewal. To know the history of our
religion and mend our lives to the spirit of the Torah; this goal
can only be realized in its totality in Eretz Israel.
The basic ideas of our religion are not as those
of other religions. The Torah is a Torah of life. In contradistinction
to the basic religious goals in other religions, the basic religious
idea in Judaism is part and parcel of the nationality of the Jewish
nation in Eretz Israel and the whole religion is an intrinsic aspect
of the Jewish State.
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