On the 29th of Av, 1909, Rabbi Shmuel Salant, Jerusalem’s Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi, for almost 70 years, passed away.
Rabbi Shmuel was born in 1816 in Bialystok, then part of Czarist Russia. His formal Jewish education took place in Vilna, and then at the famed Yeshiva of Volozhin. When he married the eldest daughter of Rabbi Yosef Zundel of Salant (1781-1866), he began using his father-in-law’s last name. Rabbi Zundel was the inspiration for several famed students including Rabbi Israel Lipkin (Salanter) (no relation to Rabbi Shmuel Salant), recognized as the founder of the 19th century Mussar Movement. Rabbi Israel referred to Rabbi Zundel as the “light of the whole world.”
Due to suffering from damaged lungs, Rabbi Shmuel was advised to seek out a warmer climate. So, in 1840, Rabbi Shmuel, his wife and their son Binyomin Beinish, journeyed across Europe, destined for Jerusalem. While in Constantinople, Rabbi Shmuel happened upon the famed philanthropist Sir Moses Montefiore, who was on his way to Damascus to defend Jews who were falsely accused in the Damascus Blood Libel. Rabbi Shmuel’s friendship with Sir Moses would become helpful in building up western Jerusalem.
Upon his arrival in Jerusalem in 1841, Rabbi Shmuel was immediately appointed rabbi of the Ashkenazi community. In 1848, Rabbi Shmuel was dispatched to the Eastern European Jewish communities to raise funds for the Yishuv (Jewish settlement in Palestine). Rabbi Shmuel would regularly bring back contributions from European Jewish communities and distribute them to both the Ashkenazi community he represented and to the Sephardic community as well. Despite access to communal funds, Rabbi Shmuel was renowned for living a very austere life. Rabbi Shmuel brought aboard another sage who had moved to Jerusalem, Rabbi Meir Auerbach, to serve with him in the Jerusalem Chief Rabbinate and to take over for him while he was abroad collecting. Rabbi Shmuel preferred to defer to Rabbi Auerbach in formal rabbinic duties, but tragically, Rabbi Auerbach died in 1878, at the relatively young age of 63. Subsequently, Rabbi Shmuel assumed the sole helm of Jerusalem’s Ashkenazi Chief Rabbinate until his death in 1909, at age 93.
In 1860, Rabbi Shmuel founded the Rabbi Meir Ba’al Ha’nes Salant charity to provide for all of the Yishuv’s impoverished members. Rabbi Shmuel also helped found the Etz Chaim Yeshiva in Jerusalem and the Bikur Cholim Hospital, two of the most important Yishuv institutions. He also encouraged Jews to move into newly established communities outside of Jerusalem’s Old City, where most of Jerusalem’s Jews were living at that time. This campaign was also done out of necessity, as Jerusalem’s population grew from 5,000 to 30,000 during his tenure as Chief Rabbi.
Rabbi Shmuel’s eyesight began failing him in 1888, which resulted in total blindness a few years later. In 1900, Rabbi Eliyahu David Rabinowitz – Teomim, known by the acronym, Aderet, was appointed as Rabbi Shmuel’s assistant and heir apparent. Unfortunately, the Aderet pre-deceased his mentor in 1905. (The Aderet was the father–in-law of future Chief Rabbi of Palestine, Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook.)
Rabbi Shmuel Salant’s name is still pronounced with reverence throughout Jerusalem. May his memory be a blessing.
Rabbi Shmuel Salant’s yahrzeit is next Monday, September 2nd, corresponding to the 29th of Av.
Copyright © 2024 NJOP. All rights reserved.
If you like what you’ve read here, signup to get notifications about new treats.
Related Posts
Judah, Son of Jacob
When Judah, the fourth son of Leah and Jacob was born, Leah said, “This time let me…
0 Comments3 Minutes
Taking Responsibility
Study Judah’s actions vis-a-vis Tamar to appreciate the true meaning of taking…
0 Comments1 Minute
The Story of Degania
Since many of the early settlers in pre-state Palestine identified with the socialist…
0 Comments3 Minutes