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Bygone Times*
(Events, Episodes, Personalities)

by Berl Cohen (New York)

Translated by Dorothy Anker and Ellen Rifkin

Editing and additional translations by Yocheved Klausner

Telshe was mentioned as a small village in historical documents as early as 1320. In 1529 it was already the most important town of the surrounding region (Valscius). The first church in Telshe was built in 1536.

When did Jews come there?

It is commonly accepted that Jews began settling in Telshe in the seventeenth century. Although the exact date is unknown, approximations can be made on the basis of related events.

We know that in 1623 Lithuania separated from the Polish Council of Four Lands. In the newly created Council of Lithuania Telshe became a part of the Kaydoner region. From this one can conclude that in that year, or a little later, Telshe already had a Jewish community; in other words, around the first quarter of the seventeenth century, a number of Jews were living in Telshe.

Telshe never had a very large Jewish community, in comparison with the large populations of Jews residing in many cities in Lithuania. Telshe also grew very slowly, such that in 1939 it had almost the same number of Jews as a hundred years earlier.

In 1847, 2,248 Jews lived in Telshe. The number almost doubled in 1864, to 4,204, but thirty years later, in 1897, it [had] decreased to 3,088. The specific factor in the loss was the emigration of Telshe Jews in the decade of the eighties and later. In 1885, for example, twenty Jewish families wandered off in a few days. In the following years, even during the spiritual/cultural flowering of Telshe between both world wars, the number of Jewish residents did not even reach the number of almost a hundred years before.

According to the census of 1923, 1,545 Jews lived in Telshe, and in 1939, 2800 lived there.

 

Two Blood– Libels

On the Zaraner road stood a watermill that belonged to Reb Hillel Tverer, a learned Jew, on whom it was said that he never let the Gemara [Talmud] out of his hand.

Around 1758, a servant of the priest in Purple (a village not far from Telshe) came to him to get wheat. Afterward he went to Leyzer the butcher to order a cow.

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On the way back from the priest, Leyzer noticed that the straw in the back of the wagon was somehow too high. He stopped the horse, lifted up the straw, and was shaken: a corpse lay there, the priest's servant, wrapped around with pieces of gold crosses. Just then Reb Hillel Tverer happened to come along, to whom Leyzer told the dreadful story. Both rode back at a gallop to Telshe, and after a deliberation of the members of the household, decided to take the gold and throw the dead man into the lake. They went out of the house, went over to the wagon and stood there petrified: The dead body was not in the wagon… Now they became even more frightened and didn't know what to do.

Early the next morning the priest from Purple came running, with the investigator from Telshe and a superintendent, and asked Leyzer: Where is the body? They beat him painfully, bloodied him, put him in chains, and drove him to Vilna.

The Telshe rabbi advised Reb Hillel to sell the gold, and for the money hire a good Christian lawyer, and that is what he did. Meanwhile the Gentile peasants spread a rumor that a Jew had murdered one of their own. The fear of a blood libel hung over the Jews of Telshe.

The lawyer succeeded in getting Leyzer out of jail for 5,000 rubles bail. This happened close to the High Holidays, and the rabbi told Leyzer to daven Musaf. Leyzer's prayer could have split apart the heavens.

Meanwhile the time of the trial arrived. The priest argued that Leyzer had earlier persuaded his servant to rob the gold from the church and afterward killed the servant. This created a very difficult situation, and the lawyer became quite pessimistic about the judgment.

All of a sudden something amazing occurred: The prosecutor himself stood up and said: “Leyzer is innocent!” He related how he went secretly to Telshe, investigated the Jewish beliefs and their holidays and came to the conclusion that a Jew could not have done such a thing.

Then Leyzer's defense attorney said to the priest: Call out the dead man with the strength of your religion, that he should give testimony. The priest answered: That is impossible. The defense attorney asked the same thing of the rabbi, and he also answered that it was impossible. At that, the defense attorney called out: In that case, I will call forth the dead person, and he turned to a frightening bandaged man in the last bench of the hall: Come here and bear witness! The priest became paralyzed with fear.

The “murdered one” told how the servants of the priest had attacked him in the stable, beat him continuously with murderous blows until he fell on the ground with no sign of life. They were certain he was already dead, but later, when he was lying in Leyzer's wagon, he gradually came to himself and went to his mother in Purple.

The priest was sentenced to life in prison, and his servant–beaters for twenty years, and the Jews of Telshe rejoiced.

The mother of the servant was at the sentencing and she acknowledged that the priest was really the father of her son, and he wanted in this way to rid himself of his bastard child[1].

* * *

In 1827 once again the dark cloud of a blood libel fell upon the Telshe Jews. This occurred before Pesach, the sad time of blood libels.

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In the vicinity of Telshe, in the village of the estate owner Dimsha, the seven year old son of the Gentile Petrovitch suddenly disappeared. The shepherd Zhokovsky was already prepared to testify that he had seen Jews tying up the boy and taking him away somewhere.

The police came and they swept through the whole neighborhood and the surroundings. Later they in fact found the dead body of the Gentile boy. The investigation, however, did not find any trace of evidence that Jews whould have carried out the murder.

The whole story was told by the sadly well–known enemy of the Jews Lutostansky – understandably in another tone and with clear insinuations about the Jewish murderers of the boy. At the end he told something that he himself had thought up: he said that before the investigation two Jews had confessed to having killed the boy. However the two were later found dead; he inferred that Jews killed the two, so that they wouldn't be able to give testimony[2].

 

Other afflictions

The Napoleonic War in Russia in 1812 was accompanied by epidemics, fires and atrocities. The Telshe region lost over 2,000 people. Telshe, the center of all the surrounding towns with a large percentage of Jews, probably suffered the most[3].

* * *

In 1831, in the time of the [Polish] uprising, a Reb Monish Lukniker was hung in Telshe. The authorities charged him with taking part in the uprising. The bride of the eminent scholar of Hebrew literature Schneur Zachs was in Telshe then and witnessed the hanging[4].

* * *

Telshe did not avoid the great hunger that was rampant for hundreds of miles during the last years of the sixties in the previous century.

Four persons were appointed in 1869 in the gubernatorial commission of the Telshe Jews: Dr. Mapu, Yehuda–Leyb Gordon, and the merchants Kantsel and Berman.

The commission was later expanded with more volunteers. A soup–kitchen was opened for about 300 Jews where people were given food twice a day. On Shabbath eve they were given candles and food for Shabbath. On Pesach close to 1,400 needy people received help. The governor sent 1,000 rubles, half of which went to surrounding towns.

Mostly, the wealthy people handled these charity projects: Reb Aizik Rabinovitch and his wife, Reb Yidl Gordon, Reb Yitzhak Eliyashev, Reb Leyb Kantsel, and the community workers Rabbi Chaim Rabinovitch and his son–in–law Broide, Rabbi Khazanovitsh, Reb Yeshiyeh Bay, Reb Shabtai Rosiansky, Reb Aaron Neimark and Reb Gershon Meirovitch[5].

* * *

In 1894 a cholera epidemic broke out in the city. The Telshe rabbi Reb Leyzer created a committee to help the poor with doctors and medicines. He was helped by Reb Mordechai Heilperin. The old doctor Bernstein was praised for treating the sick for no charge[6].

* * *

In 1908 the biggest fire in the history of Telshe broke out. The fire began on Tuesday morning in the shul alley. Two houses of study burned down, the synagogue, the yeshiva and 80 homes.

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Fire fighters from Plungyan helped to extinguish the fire in the evening.

Thursday morning a blaze again flared up, this time from the center of the city. Friday evening fire fighter commanders came to help from Mitave and Shavli.

Jewish organizations from various countries, and also from Russia proper, immediately offered help. The Berlin “Federation for the aid of the German Jews” sent in 5,000 marks for the “Telshe Committee for Those Who Lost Property from Fire.” 100,000 francs arrived from the Parisian Alliance Israelite.

The “Uprava” (City Administration) allowed the construction of temporary wooden cottages on the terrain where the businesses had been[7].

 

The new Beit Midrash [study house]

In 1860 the building of a new study house out of stone was begun. A large meeting was called, in which 800 rubles were raised, in addition to pledges to contribute windows, brick, boards, lamps, lights, etc. The residents who were not able to donate money or objects promised free labor, such as bringing stones from out of town, etc.

On the committee were the old Rabbi Reb Zev, the wealthy and respected Reb Joseph Luria, Reb David Naftalin, Reb Leyb Talpiot, Reb Shalom Bloch, Reb Eliezer Grushlavker (Rostovski?). The related correspondence was written by Avraham Simcha Mapu and Meir Shapiro, “school teachers in schools for Jewish children in Telshe”[8].

 

Rabbis and Torah Scholars

The Telsher Jewish community has a history of several hundred years, but with regard to rabbis, the existing literature includes mostly the rabbis of the town over the sixty to seventy years until the Holocaust. Since they are certainly mentioned in other articles in this memorial book, we will discuss here, only their characteristics and relate episodes about them, together with several additions about earlier rabbis.

There is a great puzzle about these earlier rabbis. Our information about the first rabbis in Telshe reaches back to the 70s and 80s of the eighteenth century. Even if we do not consider the time of Jewish settlement in Telshe from the first quarter of the seventeenth century, as we surmised above, but from the beginning of the second half of that century, there is still a big gap of at least a hundred years.

What happened during that time? It's unimaginable that a Jewish community, even the smallest one, should be without a rabbi for so many years, or even without a kosher butcher. It is a difficult question, for which we have no answer.

The great scholar Rabbi Yechezkel. Two hundred years ago, Rabbi Yekhezkel took over the Telshe rabbinical chair. We don't know details about him, except for the fact that the approbations of a 1787 book include the approbation of “Yechezkel the cantor and Torah Reader in Telshe and the Zamut region.” (Yehuda the Levite, of the Ish–Horovitz family).

On this basis, one can presume that Rabbi Yekhezkel was the town rabbi in Telshe in the 80s of the eighteenth century, and perhaps also before.

The great scholar Rabbi Avraham Shapira was the head of the rabbinical court of Telshe. His son Rabbi Shmuel inherited the Telshe rabbinate from his father. Reb Shmuel was formerly the rabbi of Droye and died in 1838. From this one can presume that Reb Avraham could have been the Telshe rabbi around the middle of the 90s of the eighteenth century, and his son from around the beginning of the nineteenth century. A second son of Reb Avraham's, Rabbi Shimon, was the head of the rabbinical court of Birzh[9].

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The great scholar Rabbi Yehuda Ziv occupied the post of rabbi in Krozh (Kražiai), Telshe and Plungyan (Plungė). It is difficult to determine the exact time he served in Telshe. He lived in the 18th century and the beginning of the 19th century. He could have been Rabbi in Telshe before R'Avraham Shapira, or after him[10].

The great scholar Rabbi Avraham Margaliot. He was Rav in Telshe around 1810–1830[11] and after him his son R'Yehuda Leib was Rav. R'Yehuda Leib was also rabbi in Drisa. Among the approbations of the “Slavita Talmud” (printed in the famous printing house in 1835) is included the signature of “Leib the son of Rav Avraham.” This could be the same R'Yehuda Leib Margaliot.

The great scholar Rabbi Zev–Wolf Lipkin, father of R'Israel Salanter. It is not well known that R'Zev Wolf was rabbi in Telshe, and that he was one of the few who occupied the post of Rabbi for a long time – over twenty years. In 1830, R'Zev Wolf was ordained in Goldingen (Kuldīga) and from about 1835 he was rabbi in Telshe, until his death in 1858. He is the author of the book Hanhagot Beit Arie, which contains commentaries on the Talmud, Alfassi, The Turim and RAMBAM (Maimonides) and he wrote an approbation on the Slavita Talmud (1835)[12]. His grandson, the rabbi and scholar R'Arie Leib Lipkin was rabbi in Kretinge.

The great scholar Rabbi Shaul–Tuvia son of R'Mordechai. In a list of rabbis from Lithuania (Meshulam–Shaul Erdman: Kuntres Hahashgacha Vehama'ase, Jerusalem 1825) the name of Rabbi Shaul–Tuvia is mentioned. In the book of Responsa Ateret Yitzhak by R'Yitzhak–Aizik, head of the rabbinic court in Shavli [Šiauliai] there are several responsa to R'Shaul–Tuvia. The questions came from Telshe, in the thirties of the 19th century. R'Yitzhak–Aizik calls him “my eminent friend in Telshe” and the proofreader adds “who later lived in Shavli [and was known as the great scholar R'Shaul–Tuvia.”

The appellation “my eminent friend” for a rabbi and scholar, without the customary rabbinic titles, sheds some doubt on R'Shaul–Tuvia's rabbinic status; but if this doubt is unfounded and he was indeed Rav in Telshe (others add: in Ponevezh as well) – and a clear chronological chart of the Telshe rabbis in the 19th century is not to be found – we may surmise that he was rabbi either before R'Zev–Wolf Lipkin or right after him.

The great scholar rabbi Yosef Rozin. He was one of the greatest Torah scholars of his generation. He authored a series of books, was head of the rabbinic court in Telshe 1864–1873 and later was Rav in Słonim. There he had a great dispute (machloket) with the Volozhyn Yeshiva about issuing their own “charity boxes:” R'Yosef argued that this was robbery, since it competed with the already existing boxes for the settlement of Eretz Israel. He even issued a ban on the Volozhyn Yeshiva boxes. He wrote approbations to Emuna Vehashgacha (collections from the Vilna Gaon) by Shmuel son of Avraham of Slutsk (Lick, 1864), Emunat Hahamim, arranged by Dov–Ber Torsh (Warsaw, 1885) and Divrei Shalom Ve'emet by Shalom son of R'Yehoshua, head of the rabbinic court in Yanishok (Joniškis). The scholar Rav Yitzhak–Yakov Reines was his son–in–law[13]. R'Yakov–Yeshaia son of R'Arie–Leib Rosenblum, head of the rabbinic court in Horodok, was his grandson.

The great scholar R'Yehoshua Heller. He was for many years preacher (maggid) in Grodno, later head of the rabbinic court in Plungyan and then rabbi in Telshe (1874–1878). From 1879 he was rabbi and judge in the rabbinic court in Vilna. He went to Telshe to pick up his wife and died there on 23 Sivan 5640 (1880)[14].

From 1879 Telshe was without a rabbi until 1882, when members of the Gordon and Bloch families began serving as rabbis. Their lives are described in detail

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in other articles in this Yizkor book. Here we shall devote several lines to the following:

The great scholar Rav Yosef–Leib Bloch.

Rav Meir Berlin, the well–known leader of the Mizrahi movement, rightly characterized this rabbi: “Indeed, at the first meeting with R'Yosef–Leib I had the impression that he belonged to the persons who knew their value and knew how to make others understand this. I saw before me a man, whose every movement displays leadership (…), his attitude toward his pupils was strict, but loving and respectful. Every word – whether in Torah matters or secular matters – was carefully weighed and measured. (…) His strength was impressive and caused his fellow men to see in him a leader”[15].

Various stories circulated about R'Yosef–Leib's punctuality. In Telshe people would say that they set their clocks by the daily walk of the rabbi. When a student was a few minutes late, Yosef–Leib would say “When I ask you to come at four o'clock, I mean not a minute before and not a minute after, but exactly at four”[16].

“The rabbi's house” has affected not only Telshe, but all of Lithuania. It was rightly called the “Mitnagdi Court.” Prosperity and power was sensed in and around the house. Not plain richness, but nobleness – refined and gracious wealth. This was important for all those who managed the rabbi's house: everyone could hold up his own ideas and opinions, and feel independent in his actions.

* * *

Among the judges in the rabbinic court in Telshe we shall mention: R'Yom–Tov son of Michael from Piotrkow (1832)[17]; R'Chaim son of Zvi Hirsch, who wrote an approbation for the Slavita Talmud (1835); R'Avraham–Aba son of R'Yakov Chayma. The latter wrote several articles from Telshe in the newspaper Hamaggid.

 

The Rav and great scholar R'Yosef–Chaim Bloch z”l
(son–in–law of R'Eliezer Gordon z”l)

 

Another judge in Rabbi Yosef Rosen's rabbinic court was Rabbi Avraham–Aba Werner.

Rabbi Avraham–Aba was born in Telshe in 1837. Prior to his position in Telshe he was rabbi in Veger (Vegeriai). After Telshe he was rabbi in Helsinki (1881–1891)[18]. In 1891 he became rabbi of the Machzikei Hadat Society in London, where he died in 1911.

In London, rabbi Avraham–Aba intended to establish an independent community, apart from the community of Rabbi Herman Adler. Many rabbis were involved in the affair, even the Kovno scholar R'Yitzhak–Elchanan Spector. All supported the community rabbi[19].

* * *

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Among the great Torah scholars in Telshe in those days was the well–known Rabbi Yehuda–Leib Hasid. By occupation he was a miller, but he corresponded and exchanged Responsa with several rabbis. R'Leib was a contemporary of the Vilna Gaon, during the second half of the 18th century. It was said, in the name of R'Avraham Rogoler, that he once came to the Gaon for some consultation, and he heard the Gaon say the prayer after meals in a different way. Immediately he took his wagon and horses and returned home, to warn his congregation about that.

R'Leib was brother–in–law of Aba Hasid from Krozh (Aba Aricha, R'Aba Rozina). About him it was said that the Vilna Gaon came to Krozh to learn Torah from him. The Vilna Gaon said about R'Leib that he was “a soul without a body.”[20].

Among the scholars who are descendants of the Hasid Rabbi Avraham Schwechsner, we shall mention R'Shmuel'ke Telsher. R'Avraham lived at the time of the scholar R'Zev–Wolf Lipkin, that is, in the first half of the 19th century.[21].

Nachum the son of Eliezer Sachs from Telshe is the author of Likutei Torah Amen, Vilna, 5667 (1907), with an approbation by R'Eliezer Gordon.

The Rav and great scholar R'Avraham–Eliahu Kaplan

R'Avraham–Eliahu was not an ordained rabbi nor a dayan (judge), but his spiritual influence on the orthodox Jewry in Lithuania and Germany was great. He was born in 1889 in Keidan (Kėdainiai) to his mother Fradl and his father Avraham–Eliahu. In 1901, Fradl married for the second time, in Telshe, with R'Yakov Rabinowitz, the father of Yankel, who is living now in Montreal.

Strange tragedies have befallen the Kaplan and Rabinovitz families: R'Avraham Eliahu's father died before his son was born, therefore the baby was named after him; Yankel's father died before his son's Brit (circumcision), and Yankel bears his father's name. R'Avraham Eliahu's father died at 33 years of age and R'Avraham Eliahu himself died at the age of 35, in Berlin, on 15 Iyar 5684 (1924).

R'Avraham Eliahu helped in the establishment of the Jewish orthodox education in Lithuania. He was elected, together with Dr. Leo Deutchlaender, to the Jewish National Council in Lithuania as the representative of the religious Jewish population. There he worked in the section of the Haredi (ultra–orthodox) education. In Telshe he established the Society of Jewish Women [Agudat Benot Israel]. He also wrote the poem Lador, the anthem of Tze'irei Israel (Jewish young people) Organization.

R'Avraham Eliahu had extraordinary talents. He was “a basket full of books” and nurtured an ambitious plan to write a commentary on the entire Talmud. When he was asked “And what about the well–known RASHI commentary?” he would reply “RASHI's commentary needs a new commentary.”

The scholar R'Isser–Zalman Meltzer writes in one of his letters that R'Avraham Eliahu moved people with the strength of his Torah and his personality, and thanks to him many young people from Germany came to study in the Telshe Yeshiva. R'Isser–Zalman and the scholar R'Yechezkel Sarna called him “the young giant” and his plan to write a new commentary of the Talmud “a holy venture.” The Chafetz–Chaim saw in him the leader who will “restore the situation to its former splendor”.[22]

He authored the following books, published after his death: Divrei Talmud, Jerusalem 5718–5730 (1958–1970, 2 volumes; Be'ikvot Hayir'ah, Divrei Machshava, Jerusalem 5729 (1960). He was

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co–editor of “Vom Sinn des Judentums”, Frankfurt A.M. 1924, a collection in honor of Nathan Birnbaum.

 

The Yeshiva
(Overview)

The Telshe yeshiva was a world–institution. Besides the Lithuanian young Jews, youths from all over the world streamed here. In order to illustrate the variety of countries, here is a small statistic from the year 1937: besides the youths from Lithuania, there were 30 from Germany; Hungary – 5; America – 4; England – 5; Latvia – 5; Africa –1; Switzerland – 2; Belgium – 2; Netherlands – 1 and France –1[23]

 

The Holy Yeshiva of Telshe (Telšiai)
Founded by the great scholar Rabbi Eliezer Gordon z”l

 

The yeshiva was founded in 1875 – founded, however not built. This happened twenty years later. The founders were R'Meir Atlas, later rabbi of Shavli, Yitzhak–Yakov Oppenheim, later rabbi in Kelm and Rabbi Shlomo–Zalman Abel, who will be discussed later.

Initially they assembled youths from Telshe and studied with them. This was the kernel of the yeshiva, which grew very quickly. However, the Telshe yeshiva as a concept that would spread widely beyond the borders of the town, began with the great scholar Rabbi Eliezer Gordon.

The yeshiva was illegal for many years, and for that reason there were many troubles. People tried to help out through bribing the authorities. The worst troubles occurred in the time of Popov, a malicious person, who wanted nothing less than to close the doors of the yeshiva. But a miracle happened (and maybe it wasn't a miracle…) and he was withdrawn from his position in Telshe[24].

The famous wealthy Muscovite Zelik Persitz donated 600 rubles to install gas lighting in and around the yeshiva. This was in 1904, a short time after the excitement of his son coming to study at the yeshiva after he completed high–school[25].

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This was not easily accepted in the Yeshiva. Ben–Zion Dinur, Hebrew historian and former minister of education in Israel, who studied at the Yeshiva for two years, relates that announcements were published at that time in the Hamelitz and Hatzefira newspapers to the effect that no person should be allowed to enroll in the Yeshiva without obtaining in advance the approval of the management. The Yeshiva was really strict in keeping that rule. It was said that the scholar R'Eliezer Gordon once remarked to the twelve–year–old Ben–Zion that “Those who wrote the recommendations for you are ignorant persons; we would not accept them even for the very first lesson”[26].

As much as we devote ourselves to the study of the Torah, still we are people and we are not always able to avoid disagreement – so arguments and disputes often developed at the Yeshiva. Sometimes it was a well–meaning dispute (lit. “a dispute for the sake of Heaven”), and sometimes the reason was personal disagreements or bias. The Hebrew writer A.A. Friedman in his memoirs reports such a dispute:

It happened in 1905. A dispute broke out in the Yeshiva, because Rabbi Hirschovitz, son–in–law of R'Eleizer Gordon, was appointed head of a class. The Hebrew press reported that there were fights and Yeshiva students were beaten and some were wounded. In A.A. Friedman's memoirs there are letters from R'Eleizer, in which he denies the reports about beatings and says that in fact only very few students were against Rabbi Hirschovitz's appointment and the others were just dragged along. However, there is also a fact that a watchman was hired, in order to avoid future window–breaking in the Yeshiva[27].

The Yeshiva excelled from year to year. Sadly and woefully, its growth in magnitude and in depth came to a bitter end in July 1940 – the most frightening day for the Yeshiva: the Bolshevik Power seized the building for the use of the Red Army. The day the Yeshiva was emptied the entire Jewish Telshe, religious or not, was shaken: all students, younger and older, rushed out of the building with Torah scrolls and books in their hands, and the weeping shook the Heavens.

The students went to the Batei Midrash and synagogues, where they continued their study. But soon another restriction followed, issued by the “evil kingdom:” it was forbidden to rent rooms to students who were residents of other towns.

The management decided to divide the Yeshiva into five parts, and relocate in various towns: one remained in Telshe, the others went to Trisk, Yelok, Popelian and Szydlow. The Rav and teachers traveled through these few towns, taught and lectured, and guided their students in their behavior through the terrible times. Most of all this was done secretly[28].

* * *

Many have written about the Telshe Yeshiva, some have studied there, some were researchers of Yeshivas in general or the Telshe Yeshiva in particular. In the Hebrew section of this Yizkor Book you will certainly find material about this Yeshiva. Here we shall add some lines about several other Yeshivas and show how they considered the Telshe method.

An author of a book about Volozhyn wrote: “The method of study in Telshe is different from that of Volozhyn: in Volozhyn there was free choice of the material studied – not so in Telshe. There all studied the same Tractate and had an examination every month. “Musar” (a special seminar focusing on personal morals) was an obligatory lesson, half an hour every day (…). The way the lessons were conducted was different as well: Rabbi Eliezer was brilliant in his interpretations, moved with ease from subject to subject, began with one Tractate and finished with a third. The study in Telshe is by Hevruta (two or three students studying together): the teacher opens, one student asks a question, the other answers, the third argues and presents another opinion etc.[29]. In fact, this was not only at the time of R'Eleizer; the same method continued to the end.

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Another source described the Telshe Yeshiva as following: “Clear thought, straightforward comprehension, religious philosophy, purity and chastity of character according to the particular ethics of Telshe” as well as “quick grasping of the subject” without resorting to excessive, hair–splitting discussions of verses and sayings.

The Yeshiva preached and practiced individual education, in accordance with the qualifications and talents of each young man: if one demonstrated diligence and perseverance, he was helped to become expert; another, who demonstrated profound philosophical thinking, was helped to excel in this direction; still another, who showed signs of social involvement, was helped to become socially active, perhaps a leader[30].

The great scholar Rabbi Shlomo–Zalman Abel

In newspapers, magazines and books we find articles about Heads of the Telshe Yeshiva. However, this cannot be said about one of the first rabbis in the Telshe Yeshiva, who, it seems, has not even been given the title “Head of the Yeshiva” – Rabbi Shlomo–Zalman Abel.

R'Shlomo–Zalman was born in 1857 in Neustadt–Sugind. He was one of the prodigies in his time, blessed with talents, and was called “the young genius.” He was not only extremely erudite in Talmud and Poskim [codifiers]; he was learned in languages and science as well. He published in Halevanon (year 11) a series of articles titled “History of the Life of Plants” and also wrote poems, published in the Hebrew press of the time.

R'Shlomo–Zalman was one of the founders of the Yeshiva, where, at the age of 18 or 19 he already gave lessons.

He died in the prime of his life at 29, in 1886. His father R'Kalman later published his son's book Beit Shlomo (Vilna 1893) – concerning commandments Bein Adam Lachavero [commandments between man and his fellow man].

R'Shlomo–Zalman was a grandson of R'Avraham, brother of the Vilna Gaon. In Hebrew he signed his name in abbreviation SZA [the letters shin, zayin, alef = Slomo Zalman Abel[31].

* * *

If one wishes to have an idea of the religious–spiritual influence of the Telshe Yeshiva on the Jewish life over the world, it is enough to glance at the following random list of rabbis, who studied there and later – most of them – spread the “Telshe spirit” throughout hundreds of Jewish communities over the world.

Rabbi Yosef–David Fine, Rabbi in a town near Mozir, Minsk Gubernia, later in Portland, America[32].

Rabbi Eliezer Popko, Rav in Byalowetz, Kolish, Welizsh, Philadelphia[33].

Rabbi Avraham Kalmanowitz, Rav in Rakow, Tiktin[34].

Rabbi Nechemia Robinson, Rav in the Chicago Beit Shalom Anshei Kroz, son–in–law of the great scholar R'Avraham Charif[35].

Rabbi Michael Higger, author of Otzar Habbraytot and publisher of a series of Talmud tractates from manuscripts, writes that Telshe and Slobodka have shaped his life.

Rabbi Moshe Shatzkes, Rav in Lipnishok, Ivye and Lomze, Rav and teacher at the New–York Yeshiva named after R'Yitzhak Elchanan.

Rabbi Shimon Grossbein, Rav in Brooklyn.

Rabbi Yitzhak Locks, Rav in the Bronx and Westchester.

Rabbi Yom–Tov Lipman Levin, Rav in Shakot (Lithuania), Molodetchne, and Brooklyn Agudat Achim Anshei New Lats[36].

Rabbi Avraham–Eliyahu Regensburg, Rav in various communities in Poland and Lithuania, later in Chicago[37].

[Page 44]

Rabbi Moshe–Shimon Zivitz, Rav in Pikeln, Baltimore, Pittsburgh; author of many books; born in Tzitevian, 1855, died in Pittsburgh, 1936[38].

Rabbi Yitzhak Aizik Friedman, from 1914 Rav in Korshan, from 1928 in Towrik. Married in Telshe the daughter of Meir Halperin. Died in 1944, buried in Nachlat Yitzhak, Israel[39].

Rabbi Eliezer Pshedmeski, from 1923 Rav in Bronx, for many years[40].

Rabbi Baruch Rabinowitz, Rav in Zurowitz, Vitebsk and from 1926 in Chicago[41].

Rabbi Israel Lev, Rav in Ponievezh and Trenton (America).

Rabbi Naftali Zvi Hirsch Trop, 25 years Rav and teacher at the Yeshiva of the Chafetz–Chaim, died in 1929.

Rabbi Moshe–Zev Cohen, 1911 Rav in Plotel, then in Abel, Breslau, Liewenhof, and from 1924 in the great Beit HamidrashTif'eret Zion” in Chicago.

Rabbi Dov Revell, one of the leading founders of the Yitzhak Elchanan Yeshiva in New York, was also teacher there.

Rabbi Chaim Schachnowitz, born 1907 in Telshe. Rav in Breshice, from 1933 Rav and teacher in Dvinsk. From 1943 in Chicago.

Rabbi Moshe–Mordechai Hakohen Shkop, Rav and teacher at the Grodno Yeshiva, later rabbi in America.

Rabbi Moshe–Baruch Feivelsohn, Rav in Beisegole, from 1945 Rav in Shevet Achim Anshei Homsk[42].

Rabbi Eliezer–Meir Preill, Rav in London, Rav and teacher at the Yitzhak Elchanan Yeshiva in New York.

Rabbi Aharon–David Burak, from 1917 Rav in Brooklyn.

Rabbi Eliyahu–David Rabinowitz, Rav in Ponievezh[43].

Rabbi Hillel son of R'Israel Berman, from Telshe. Rav in Palonge[44].

Rabbi Avraham–Nachman Schwarz, Rav and teacher in Krok, Nowy–Odess and Baltimore[45].

Rabbi Dov–Zvi Chaimann, Rav in Minneapolis (America), Rav and teacher in the Baltimore Yeshiva Etz–Chayim.

Rabbi Aharon–Shlomo–Zalman Zalmanowitz, Rav in Sapizhishak, Doshkitz, Montreal[46].

Rabbi Yosef Goldin, the last rabbi in Shaki.

Rabbi Avraham–Leib Schor, Rav in Shaki, Krilov, from 1929 in Chicago[47].

Rabbi Zev Sissermann, Rav in Levkiew (Volhyn)[48].

R'Moshe–Chaim Mirvis, Rav in Cape Town, South Africa[49].

Rabbi Moshe Rosenstein, Mashgiach [supervisor] in the Lomz Yeshiva, author of Yisurei Hada'at[50].

Rabbi ElchananWasserman, well known scholar, Rav and teacher in various Yeshivas. Author of several books.

Rabbi Yitzhak Kossovski, Rav in Ivye.

Rabbi Kalman son of R'Eliezer Maggid, Rav in Armiansk (1912).

Rabbi Baruch–Yitzhak Chadash, Rav in Landverova (1888)[51].

Rabbi Shlomo–Zalman Rabinowitz, Rav in Sapizhishok, Dokshitz[52].

Rabbi Yakov–David Gordon, Rav in Norfolk, Virginia and neighborhood (America).

Rabbi Avraham–Yakov Neumark, Rav in Pren (1905).

Rabbi Mordechai–Zev Silberman, Rav in Motele.

Rabbi Aizik–Leib Stolyar, Rav in Rotzk.

Rabbi Zvi–Yehuda Ollschwang, rav in Driya, 25 years in Chicago. 1946–1949 Mashgiach (supervisor) at the Telshe Yeshiva in Cleveland[53].

 

Schools, Societies, Parties

That Telshe had Hadarim [Torah classes for young children] is well known. The interesting fact is, that as early as 1866 a modern school for girls was opened in Telshe.

[Page 45]

The founder of the school, its principal and one of the teachers was the famous poet Yehuda–Leib Gordon, who lived in Telshe from 1865 to 1872 and was Inspector of the government–managed “Yevreiskaye Utchilitche” [Jewish School].

However, the government support was not enough, so the parents had to pay tuition[54].

Some of the Jewish boys went to the public (government) school. The inspector of the regional public school tried to obtain support for the needy Jewish pupils – concerning tuition, as well as acquiring books. The inspector of the Jewish public school was Mr. Chazanowitz[55].

In 1879, a vocational school for girls was founded. The wealthy woman, Feige–Lorie, daughter of the Trishker Rav R'Kalman–Yerachmiel, and some of her friends supervised the school. Feige supplied a house for this purpose[56].

* * *

In 1927, the Tif'eret Bachurim Study Society was founded. In 1929 the Society included 50 members; in 1930 they began taking their Se'uda Shelishit [the “third Sabbath meal”] together. The rabbis R'Elchanan Wiener and R'Zalman Dobtzanski were their spiritual leaders. They received important support from Rabbi Israel Karaimer (later killed tragically on a New–York street) and also from L. Shochat, Rabbi S. Scher and Rabbi Rose.

The regional committee of Tif'eret Bachurim included: Sachs, Mordechai Kloff, Shimon Osher, Shmuel Marek. The latter two were the official rabbis of the Society.

The founding and first committee included: Moshe Litwak, Yitzhak Shmulewitz, Yosef Pogramanski, Moshe Helfon.

Among the first active members were: Israel Ketz, Pesach Cohen, Mechl Cohen (my brother), the brothers Leich, Elchanan Klotz, Mendel Tzwick, Berl Wein[57].

* * *

We had in Telshe two main parties: Agudat Israel and Zionists. Telshe was the stronghold of Agudat Israel – its organizational and ideological center.

The opposition to the settlement of Eretz Israel by Jewish organizations began with Hibat Zion. The preacher [maggid] Chaim–Yosef Jaffe from Wekshne tells us that Hovevei Zion would send out groups throughout Lithuania to propagate their ideas. When Chaim–Yosef came to Telshe to deliver his sermon, the rabbi R'Eliezer did not allow him to speak in the Beit Midrash. He summoned Chaim–Yosef to his house and they had a terrible argument – it was said that R'Eliezer's son, Motke, threw him out of the house[58].

The well–known “Mizrahi” leader Yitzhak Nissenbaum relates about a discussion he had with R'Eleizer in 1904 about Zionism. The Telshe rabbi told him that he was not against Zionism; in fact – he said – Zionism does possess some positive traits, similar to the ritual “red heifer” in the Temple of Jerusalem: it purifies the unclean and it profanes the pure. It was especially that second part that he didn't like, he added[59].

At first R'Eliezer actually was sympathetic toward the Hibat Zion movement. However, at the Hovevei Zion Katowitz Conference, when they elected Dr. I. L. Pinsker as chairman of the movement and not Rabbi Shmuel Mohliver, he left them.

In 1889, the Telshe Hibat Zion Society was acknowledged by the authorities. Telshe was one of the few towns that were asked to participate in the Odessa Conference, [Page 46]

where the first central executive committee of Hovevei Zion was elected[60].

In 1910, a delegate represented Telshe at the Zionist Conference from the Kovno and Suwalk Gubernias[61].

We shall mention here one of the first, enthusiastic members of the Hovevei Zion movement, the Telshe born R'Yosef–Hillel Berman. From 1888 he was Rabbi (appointed by the authorities) in Palonga, from 1898 in Friederichstadt, Kurland and from 1907 in Rostov on the Don. He remained in the USSR and probably died there[62].

May years before Hovevei Zion, Telshe was indeed connected to Eretz Israel, albeit accidentally, through several individuals – all from Telshe – whose names we find on tombstones in an old cemetery in Jerusalem:

Here is buried

Chana wife of R'Aizik, 5622 (1862) (p.45)
Leib son of R'Yakov, 5623 (1863) (p.46)
R'Yakov son of R'Binyamin–Zev, 5628 (1868) (p. 13)
R'Aizik Nagar, 5626 (1866) (p. 46)
Eta–Gisha wife of Moshe–Yehoshua son of R'Yechiel, 5636 (1876) (p. 9)
Zlata daughter of Moshe, 5650 (1890) (p. 3)
Sheine daughter of R'Yakov Mendlis, 5651 (1891) p. 19)[63].

In time, the Zionist movement established itself in Telshe, even had its own library. However, the dominant Jewish authority in town remained, up to the last days, the Agudat Israel. In no other town in Lithuania has the Aguda so expanded and strengthened its positions: the rabbi's house, the Yeshiva and its preparatory classes, the elementary school, the high–school for girls, the two Teachers Colleges, the Kolel [Torah study classes] – all this completely dominated the Jewish life in Telshe.

* * *

After First World War, the Bundists tried to establish a group in Telshe. They have even applied to the authorities with a request to open an elementary school in the framework of the “Culture League” organization. The leaders of this endeavor were two teachers – I remember the name of one of them: Rivka Reivid. However, the influence of the Bund was limited to a small corner of the town, and it soon disintegrated.

 

“Prenumeranten” and Correspondents in Telshe

A widespread custom among Jewish writers, especially of Rabbinic books, was to sell their books in advance to chosen readers, thus enabling the writer to meet the printing and other related expenses. Usually the author would first take the manuscript to his rabbi and consult him, and if the rabbi found that the manuscript was a worthy one he would suggest a number of respected, scholarly and well–to–do persons whom the author should show his manuscript and ask them to “subscribe”. These advance subscribers were called Prenumeranten. Sometimes the author found his prenumeranten in his own town, sometimes he had to travel to far places with his manuscript. The names of the subscribers were then made public – the list was printed at the beginning or at the end of the book.

We found prenumeranten from Telshe listed in the following books:

Even Shmuel, Arie Leib Frumkin, Vilna 5634 (1874) – 1.

[Page 47]

Avnei Zikaron, Avraham Firkowitz, Vilna 5632 (1872) – 1.
Imrei Yaakov, A.Yakov Fralgever, Bilgoriya 5674 (1914) – 11.
Hilchot Rav Alfas, Vilna 5599 (1839) – 6.
Merir Yom, Chaim Herzman, Vilna 5674 (1914) – 1.
Mishkan Betzalel, A. Alexandrov, Vilna 5683 (1923) – 11.
Ateret Shaul, Shaul Luria, Vilna 5602 (1842) – 22.
Hanitzanim, Avraham Ber Gottlober, Vilna 5611 (1851) – 1.
Arei Yehuda, Yehuda Leib from Serhiya, Vilna 5625 (1865) – 10 + 1.
Tzioni, Aharon Zelig Tzioni, Vilna, 5634–5635 (1874–1875) – 2.
Karnei Tzvi 2, Tzvi Zev Wyernik, Warsaw 5648 (1888) – 1.
Teomei Tzviya, Tzvi Hirsch Bloch, Koenigsberg 5621 (1861) – 7.
Tif'eret Shaul, 2, 3, Shaul Yedidya Schachet, Piotrkov 5659 (1899) – 13.

The names of the subscribers are listed in the aforementioned books[64].

* * *

The Hebrew press in the second half of the 19th century contains reporters from Telshe. We have found the following names – the list is certainly not complete:

Avigdor Diemant (Hamelitz).
Avraham–Yitzhak Perlman (Yagdil Tora 1909).
Avraham Simcha Mapu (HaCarmel), was teacher at Y.L. Gordon's school.
Eidel Gordon (Hamaggid).
Y.L. Abel (Hamelitz, Hatzefira).
Eliezer Binyamin Dobkin (Hatzefira, Hamaggid), wrote articles as well.
Baruch Margaliot (Hatzefira).
Zev Holzberg (Hamelitz).
Chaim Aharonson (Hatzefira), was a watchmaker, later lived in Petersburg.
Chana Levine (Hamelitz).
Yehoshua Heshel Margaliot (Kevod HaLevanon), also wrote commentaries on the Torah.
Yehoshua Heshel Kalman (Hamelitz, Hamaggid, HaCarmel), also wrote commentaries on the Torah.
Yitzhak Marcus (Hamaggid).
Meir Brik (Hamaggid, HaIsraeli).
Meir–Eliyahu Shapira (HaCarmel).
S. Zak (Hed Hazman).
Shlomo Friedman (Hamelitz).

 

Community activists and Philanthropists

Avigdor Margaliot – left for Jerusalem, where he died in 1882. His children remained in Telshe.
Avraham Margaliot – died in 1886.
Avraham Rubinstein – son–in–law of the Rav R'Shimon Zarchi. Died 1891.
Dov–Ber Reivid.
David Rostovski[65].
Tuvia–Gershon Sachs.
Yosef Kaplanski – was rich and respected.
Yechezkel Berman – his two sons, high–school students, were shot by robbers[66].
Yakov Cohen – was from Telshe, lived in Petersburg.
Yakov Rabinowitz – treasurer of the hospital that was built around 1892 and in 1898 its budget was 10,000 (?) Rubles.
Yitzhak–Aizik Rabinowitz – a great philanthropist and donor, left for Bikur Cholim a percentage of the worth of his house, founded the Yeshiva Pri–Yitzhak

[Page 48]

in Jerusalem and in Telshe and a synagogue was named after him (1881). Died in 1898[67].
Israel– Mechl Troib (Traub) – born in 1858, lived most of his life in Telshe.
Meir ben Kalman Schoensohn.
Michael Krosskal (Mechl Vorner) – died 1888[68].
Mordechai Natansohn – born in Vilna in 1793, died in Telshe in 1868. Wrote research papers in Pirchei Tzafon and Dvir (Vilna 1864). The well–known work Aviezer by M.A. Ginsburg is dedicated to him[69].
Moshe Zvi–Hirsch Ordman – published the Responsa Ateret Yitzhak by Yitzhak Aizik, head of the rabbinic court in Shavli.
Nachum ben R'Eliezer Sachs.
Nechemia Shabtailsohn (Shabtailboim?).
Tzale Naftulin.
Zvi ben R'Menachem Naftulin.
Zvi Schlez.
Kalman Halevi Abel[70].
Shmuel Lieberman – treasurer of the hospital.

In a list of a Society for the support of building Eretz Israel we find several names from Telshe: Aizik Friedman, Fishel Katz, Shmuel Lieberman, Avraham–Yitzhak Naftulin, Rabbi Shimon Berman, Dr. Broide, Dr. Ziv, Dr. Bernstein[71].

In the Telshe branch of Beit Yaakov we find the following active members: Mrs. Kimchi, Mrs. Scheinkman, Mrs. Shoshana Shochat, Miss Gertzovits, Miss Hirschovitz, Miss Chasia Bloch, Miss Sofer, Miss Krawitz[72].

 

Personalities

R'Moshe Perlman

R'Moshe Perlman was one of the finest Balebatim [respected persons, lit. home–owners] in Telshe and one of its first scholars. He was not seen much around town and was not much heard of – he was a real Yoshev Ohel [studious learner, lit. sitting in his tent], working on his book, which was later published under the title Midrash Harefu'ah [Study of healing] (Tel Aviv, 1926–1934, three parts).

R'Moshe collected from the Talmudic literature all articles dealing with medicine and hygiene. In the opinion of knowledgeable scholars it is one of the best research works in this field.

The poet Chaim Nachman Byalik encouraged him in this enterprise and Dr. I. L. Katzenelsohn, an expert in Talmudic medicine, praised Perlman's work and added notes.

In part III the author expresses his thanks to his wife Sarah Hinde, daughter of Rabbi Dov–Ber Broida (died 5676 – 1916 in Jerusalem) for enabling him to devote “my time and strength to my spiritual work.”

R'Moshe was born in 1862 in Telshe, Grodno Gubernia, and died in 1935 in Kovno. His father, the scholar R'Yerucham–Leib, was known as “the great Minsker.”

R' Moshe'l Friedman

This is the way he was called, in his youth as well as in his old days, by the name Moshe'l, as an endearment. He was my first rabbi (teacher). In the tens of years that I knew him I never remember him being late, and I never remember him without a smile on his lips.

R'Moshel was very learned in TANA”CH (Bible) and had a great love for the “Twenty Four” (books of the Bible). Yet, he was not known as belonging to the ultra–orthodox circles in town.

He strictly kept all Torah commandments – no question about that. A Jewish writer relates in his Memoirs, that R'Eleizer Gordon entrusted him with the education of his grandchildren.

[Page 49]

R'Moshe'l was the step brother of Naftali Friedman, who was a delegate in the Duma[73].

Itzhak Rabinovitz

He wrote poems in Hebrew and novels in Yiddish. He was not a Telshe native, but lived in Telshe from 1867 about twenty years. He was a friend of Yehuda Leib Gordon and was inspired by him to write poems. In 1893 he immigrated to America, where he died in 1900.

In the Hebrew press of those times one can find his many articles and reports from Telshe.

Yitzhak Rabinowitz was born in Kovno and always added to his name: the man from Kovno.

Dr. Mapu

The famous Hebrew writer and novelist from Lithuania, Avraham Mapu, had a son, who did not follow in his father's path. He became a military doctor and was stationed in the Telshe ultra–orthodox neighborhood. His name was Yitzhak–Leib Mapu.

Another well–known poet from Lithuania, who wrote many poems about his native land, wrote a poem about Avraham Mapu's son, not mentioning him by name:

The strict military doctor
From the garrison in the near–by town,
The son of a famous father,
The innocent from Ahavat Zion,
Who saw, in the mirror of the Neman River
The waters of the Jordan and the See of Gallilee,
And in the Alexot Hill a picture of the Hermon Mountain.
Tall, with a non–Jewish appearance in his uniform
With golden epaulettes on his shoulders,
With red stripes on his tight trousers,
With side–whiskers and a smooth chin
He came all dressed up in his uniform,
Filled the room and breathed the entire air.
With one move flung his ornamented cap
And gently put away his sword with the guilded handle.

….His mother spoke to him in Yiddish and he replied in Russian, with the sharp R's and a full mouth…[74].

He answered only to his Russian name: Lev Abramowitch Mapu. He could not read even one line of Hebrew. A news item in the newspaper HaCarmel related that after the attempt to assassinate Alexander II failed, Dr. Mapu demanded that the Jewish community in Telshe build a church, as a token of thanks to God…[75].

Israel Leib Popps

He came from Noveran, where he was born on 15 Cheshvan 5644 (15 November 1883). He had excellent talents. At the age of six he studied Talmud, at 9 he was brought to Telshe to study, at 11 he was a student at the Yeshiva – but at 15 he abandoned the religious studies.

By the name of Ben–Israel he became a Hebrew writer, joined the best Hebrew Journal of the times Hashaliach [“The Messenger”], as well as the prestigious Vilna newspapers Hazman [The Time] and Hed Hazman [Echo of the times].

He raised many hopes in the field of Hebrew Literature. The most famous Odessa writers supported him. He went to study at Heidelberg, began suffering from depression and shortly after that committed suicide by drowning (22 Iyar 5672 – 9 May 1912)[76].

[Page 50]

In his articles, Ben–Israel fought against assimilation, conversion and illiteracy, arguing that these three things endanger the existence of the Jewish people.

One of Israel Leib's brothers was Nissan Popps, who was an extraordinarily talented speaker and became a well–known communist leader in Lithuania.

 

Bibliography
  1. “Yidishe Stimme” [Jewish Voice], Kovno, 1938, No. 5959 [Y]. Return
  2. J. J. Ljutostanski: Jüdische Ritual–Mords in Russland. Return
  3. Shaul Ginsburg, Historishe Werk [Historical Works – Y], II 1, N.Y. 1937, p. 17. Return
  4. D. M. Lippman, Letoldot Hayehudim BeLita [History of the Jews in Lithuania (H)], Zamot, Keidan 1934. P. 53. Return
  5. Hamaggid 1869. No. 15. Return
  6. Hamelitz 1894, No. 32. Return
  7. Hed Hazman Vilna 1908, No. 156, 174, 183. Return
  8. HaCarmel Vilna, 1860, No. 1. Return
  9. M. Markowitz, Lekorot Ir Keidan Verabaneha [History of the Keidan and its rabbis (H)], Warsaw 5673–1913, p. 6. Return
  10. Jewish Encyclopedia, N.Y. 1901, Vol. 1, p. 50. Return
  11. S. Gottlieb, Oholei Shem, Pinsk, 5672–1912, p. 39. Return
  12. Levi Ovtzinski, Toldot Yeshivat HaYehudim BeKurland [History of the Jews in Kurland (H)], p. 56. Return
  13. Ch. Braverman, Anshei Shem, I, Warsaw 5652–1992, p. 37. Return
  14. Beit Haknesset” Tel–Aviv 1948, 25–27. Return
  15. Meir Berlin, From Volozhin to Jerusalem (Y), II, N.Y. 1933, p. 203 Return
  16. “Torah Institutions in Europe” (H), S Mirski Ed., N.Y. 1956, p. 169. Return
  17. D. Maggid, “The town Vilna” (H), Vilna 1900, p. 30. Return
  18. Leo Jung, Gardians (sic) of our Heritage, N.Y. 1958, p. 310. Return
  19. S. Gottlieb, Oholei Shem, Pinsk, 5672–1912, p. 454. Return
  20. Yehoshua–Heshel Levin, Aliyot Eliyahu, Warsaw 1914, p. 36. Return
  21. A.L. Froumkin, Toldot Eliyahu, Vilna 1900, p.13. Return
  22. “Jewish Wisdom in Eastern Europe” (H), S. Mirski Ed., N.Y. pp. 324–337. Return
  23. “Today's News” (Y), Kovno 1937, No. 716 Return
  24. Yakov Mark, “Great People of our Times” (Y), N.Y. 1927. Return
  25. HaPeles, 5663 (1903) No. 35. Return
  26. Ben–Zion Dinur, “In a Sinking World” (H), Jerusalem 1958, pp. 62–79. Return
  27. A.A. Friedman, “Book of Memories” (H), Tel–Aviv 1926, p. 107. Return
  28. “These I shall Remember” (H), Vol. 1, N.Y. 1957, p. 26. Return
  29. Yitzhak Arigur, Ilan Venofo (H), Jerusalem 1952, p. 50. Return
  30. “These I shall Remember” (H), Vol. 1, N.Y. 1957, p. 26. Return
  31. Halevanon, 1875, No. 18–27; Ha'asif, 1887, No. 65; I.D. Eisenstein, Otzar Israel I, N.Y. 1907. Return
  32. A. Rand, Toldot Anshei Shem (H – The history of famous people), N.Y. 1950, p. 93. Return
  33. Ibid. p. 96. Return
  34. Ibid. p. 117. Return
  35. Ibid. p. 123. Return
  36. Ibid. p. 93. Return
  37. Ibid. p. 127. Return
  38. Ibid. p. 48. Return
  39. The Encyclopedia of Religious Zionism (H), Tel–Aviv, 1958, p. 32. Return
  40. A. Rand, Toldot Anshei Shem (H – The history of famous people), p. 91. Return
  41. Ibid. p. 120. Return
  42. Ibid. p. 98. Return
  43. Ibid. p. 59. Return
  44. Hamelitz, 1888, No. 149. Return
  45. A. Rand, Toldot Anshei Shem (H – The history of famous people), p. 133. Return
  46. Ibid. p. 46. Return
  47. Ibid. p. 135. Return
  48. S. Gottlieb, Oholei Shem, Pinsk, 1912, p. 111. Return
  49. Ibid. p. 511. Return
  50. Beit Hakneset, Tel–Aviv 1947, booklet 7. Return
  51. S. Gottlieb, Oholei Shem, Pinsk, 1912, p. 302. Return
  52. A. Rand, Toldot Anshei Shem, p. 46. Return
  53. Ibid. p. 3. Return
  54. I.L. Rosenthal, Toldot hevrat marbei hahaskala beIsrael (H), booklet 2, Peterburg 5650 (1890), p. 187; Kohelet (a collection), by Tzederboim, Peterburg 1881, p. 19. Return
  55. I.L. Rosenthal, Tel–Aviv, pp. 137, 151. Return
  56. Hamelitz, 1879, No. 8. Return
  57. Youth (Y), Slobodka Sept. 1928; To the youth (Y), Telshe (?), 1930, No. 8. Return
  58. I. Appel, “The Beginning of Rebirth” (H), Tel–Aviv, 1936, p. 61. Return
  59. I. Nissenboim, Alei Heldi, Warsaw 1929, p. 179. Return
  60. M.L. Lilienblum, “The road of the exiles” (H), Warsaw 1899, p. 158. Return
  61. Ha'olam (H – The World), No. 34–35. Return
  62. The Encyclopedia of Religious Zionism (H), Jerusalem 1958, p. 416. Return
  63. Asher Leib Brisk, Helkat Mehokek, Jerusalem 1912 (booklet 8, no. 1; booklet 7, no. 1). Return
  64. Berl Cohen, The Book of Prenumeranten (H), N.Y. 1975, p. 123. Return
  65. Hatzefira, 1891, No. 3. Return
  66. Hamelitz, 1879, No. 28. Return
  67. I. Meisel, “R'Shaul Pinchas Rabinowitz,” Tel–Aviv 1943, p. 9, 65; Hatzefira, 1898, No. 27. Return
  68. Hatzefira, 1886, No. 199. Return
  69. S. I. Peen, Safa Lane'emanim, Vilna 1881, p. 160; Jewish Encyclopedia VII, p. 186. Return
  70. Hatzefira, 1883, No. 36. Return
  71. Hamelitz, 1899, No. 75. Return
  72. Beit Yaakov, Kaunas, March 1935. Return
  73. B. Abrahams, “My Seventy Years” (Y), Johannesburg 1953, p. 15. Return
  74. I. I. Schwarz, “Young Years” (Y), Mexico 1952, p. 33. Return
  75. S. Yudelewitz, Barkay, Johannesburg, No. 171; Hamaggid 1867, No. 41. Return
  76. Hashiloach, Vol. 26, 28; G. Karsel, “Hebrew Literature in Recent Generations” (H), Tel–Aviv 1967. Return


* Passages from an extensive work. Return


[Page 51]

Telshe[1]

by Rabbi Efraim Oshry

Translated by Professor Jonathan Boyarin

Telshe was the capital of Samogitia and, as it is told, its founder was Džiugas, for whom the “Dzshugener” mound was named.[2]

Telshe institutions included: a hospital, a section or branch of OZE,[3] a community bank, and a range of Zionist organizations.

Telshe was famous in the Jewish world for its great yeshiva, where youth from the entire [Jewish] world came to study; and the yeshiva – and, as a matter of fact, the whole city – was considered a fortress of Torah.

The Telshe yeshiva was founded by the Gaon[4] Rav Eliezer Gordon, zt”l,[5] who in addition to being the rabbi and the Rosh-Yeshiva in Telshe, was also the author of the book “T'shuves Rav Eliezer,” and before that had been the rabbi in Kelm.

These were the heads of the yeshiva of Telshe: The Gaon Rav Shimon Yehuda HaKoheyn Shkop, zt”l; the Gaon Rav Yosef Leyb Bloch, zt”l, a son-in-law of Rav Eliezer Gordon; [and] the Gaon Rav Khayim Rabinovitz, zt”l.

The last heads of the yeshiva who died as martyrs (they died sanctifying the Holy Name) were: Rabbi Avraham Yitzkhok Bloch, zt”l; Rabbi and Rosh Yeshiva Rabbi Azriel Rabinovitz, who was the son of the Gaon Rav Khayim Rabinovitz; the Rabbi Rav Zalman Bloch, hy”d,[6] who was the yeshiva's spiritual leader (minahel rukhni); and the Rabbi Rav Moshe Olshvang, who was the yeshiva's mashgiach.[7]

Telshe also had a kollel[8] for talented scholars who stayed to study even after they were married. There was also a yeshiva ketana [small yeshiva] of 150 boys, under the leadership of Rabbi Avner Oklanski and Rabbi Efraim Pinkos Helfand. And a “Yavneh” gymnazia [high school] for girls. In Telshe there was also a teachers' seminary, which produced –well-educated teachers of religious studies. A Hebrew weekly was also published there, HaNe'eman.[9]

The Telshe householders were learned Jews and great dignitaries, like Rabbi Chaim Helfand, Reb Leyb Gertsovits, Reb Avraham Krenits, and a number of others.

The horrifying destruction of Jewish Telshe began with the end of the yeshiva. The rule is: The greater the power of the holiness of a place, the greater is the power of the other side. Because Telshe was truly the center of Torah, of wisdom and knowledge, of thought and insight, it was so horrifyingly defiled until its soul was extinguished.

In the beginning of 1940, the yeshiva was liquidated by the Russians, and the students were sent out into the surrounding towns, but the teaching continued in secret.[10]

[Page 52]

When the German murderers entered Telshe, the Lithuanian fascists quickly found favor with their masters, and before the Germans even had time to establish their “system,” the Lithuanians had already murdered and robbed the Jewish population.

On Friday, on the evening of beginning of the Sabbath, the Lithuanians, under the direction of the Gestapo, drove the Jews out of their houses, and together with the Rav and the heads of the yeshivas, young and old, led them up to the lake, where all were condemned to a certain death.

But not so quickly did the murderers make short shrift of their victims. First, they had to amuse themselves a little, perpetrate the most bestial acts, which are entirely impossible to describe, and only after that were the martyrs permitted to die.

The German commander informed the Rav that women with small children could return home, and that all of the men would be sent away to a labor camp. It is easy to imagine the wailing that broke out then among the unfortunate. With great ruthlessness the families were torn apart, and the men dragged in lines into the Rainiai woods, behind [southeast of] the city.

But before the poor women and children had time to make sense of their situation, in the morning they were again driven out of their homes and dragged away into the forest, where the men were found held under guard. The sorrow only increased when they discerned from a distance how the men were being tormented in various ways, and the women were not permitted to join the men.

This lasted for eight days. Many perished in that short time, others were killed by the murderers, and the rest were released for the time being.

On the 19th of Tammuz 5701 [July 14, 1940], hundreds of young people were dragged together ostensibly to labor, but, in reality, they were killed down to the last one.

The next day, 20th of Tammuz, several hundred more Jews were rounded up, among them the Rav and Rosh Yeshiva, and the yeshiva community, and they were dragged to a place where graves had already been prepared for them.

But, as already said, the murderers didn't so quickly “oblige” their victims, and thereby permit them a quick and simple death. At first, they were made to do “rehearsals,” a kind of prelude that had to satisfy the butchers' passions, and then after, when the victims were already near death from exhaustion, they were treated with “mercy” and freed from their suffering.

Thus arrived that night, the last night, before the victims were murdered. An orgy began of the most horrific humiliating actions. Crawling on all fours, licking the ground, children having to beat their elders, and afterward they were made to dance for hours, so that many fell while dancing, and then they were forced to beat each other until they bled, and since they were already exhausted to death, they were stripped and led to their graves.

In the new Jewish history where the bloodiest chapter of our time will be described, certainly will be included the stirring example of Yitzhak Bloch,[11] who gave a remarkable speech on the eve of his assassination in front of the condemned victims of Telshe. The vehement emotion of that speech expressed the sharpest pain and sorrow of an entire destroyed people, which demands its due and will call for a just revenge.

[Page 53]

Adequate words cannot be found to describe what transpired in the mass executions. The living and the half-alive were thrown into the ditches and forced to lie atop each other, strewn together. Witnesses told how all night long they heard the victims' cries of “Shema Yisroel![12]

The military doctor of Telshe, [Jonas] Mikulskis, who had once played the role of a great friend of the Jews, speaking good Yiddish and befriending Jews – even his appearance with his beard [was familiar] – proved to be a disguised hooligan who organized and carried out the bloody destruction of Telshe's Jews.

Five hundred women were confined to Bathhouse Street, and afterward in a camp, and when they attempted to save themselves from death, they were chased down by the Lithuanian murderers and shot. This happened in winter of 1941. Mrs. Sarah Friedman, who survived in the Shavl [Šiauliai] ghetto, and afterward came to the Kovno [Kaunas] ghetto, told me all the facts I have described here.[13]

This is the horrible and tragic end of the chapter of Jewish Telshe.

 

The second graduation class of the annual teachers' seminar “Yavneh” 1931

 

Editor's footnotes:
  1. This article appears on page 51 of the 1984 Telshe yizkor book. A footnote to the title of the article translates as, “Khurbn Lita, published by Avraham Barkai, New York.” The assertion in the 1984 yizkor book that the 1951 book was published by Avraham Barkai cannot be confirmed. Rabbi Oshry's 1951 book Khurbn Lita (The Destruction of Lithuania) states only that it was published in 1951 by the “Modern Linotype Co.” in “Brooklyn, N.Y.” and does not mention Avraham Barkai as the publisher. Return
  2. The western portion of Lithuania was once the Duchy of Samogitia. It is close to the Baltic Sea. The Lithuanian word for Samogitia, Žemaitija, means “the low land.” In Yiddish, the corresponding terms were Zamet (זאַמעט) and Zamut (זאַמוט). Telshe (Lithuanian: Telšiai) was the capital of the Duchy. The town is situated on Lake Mastis and according to legend, a strong knight named Džiugas established the town, dug the lake, and created the Džiuginėnai hill fort to the west of the town. Return
  3. As noted earlier, “OZE” is an acronym for the original Russian name of the institution, Общетсво Здравоохранения Еврейиев, a Jewish health-care organization. Return
  4. The Hebrew word “ga'on” (plural, “ga'onim”) means “genius” and it refers to a Talmudic scholar who has been recognized for extraordinary knowledge and insight. Return
  5. This is the transliteration of the Hebrew acronym for the honorific phrase “may his righteous memory be for a blessing.” The phrase is accorded to a deceased religious scholar. Return
  6. This is the transliteration of the Hebrew acronym for the term, “may the Lord avenge his [or her] blood.” The term is generally used for an individual who was martyred through an act of anti-Semitism such as a pogrom or mass murder. Return
  7. In Lithuanian yeshivas, a mashgiach is a rabbi who is responsible for non-academic aspects of the students' lives. A mashgiach who was a menahel rukhani was analogous to school supervisor. Return
  8. A Kollel is an institute for advanced Talmudic study typically attended by married men. Return
  9. The Hebrew term for “the faithful one.” Return
  10. In October 1939, the Republic of Lithuania entered into an agreement with the Soviet Union under which the Vilna area, which the Soviets had seized in September 1939, would be transferred to Lithuania in return for Lithuania allowing the Soviets to station troops on Lithuanian territory. In mid-June 1940 the Soviets seized control of the country and rapidly transformed it into a Soviet “republic.” Among other things, all religious schools were closed, their buildings were confiscated, and all religious organizations were disbanded. Return
  11. Yitzchak Bloch was an activist in the Betar organization, which advocated that Jews not be passive in the face of anti-Semitism. Fellow Betar activist Shmaryahu Pustapetski (1913-2010) wrote in his memoirs that he had learned that just before Bloch was killed he said to the assembled condemned Jews and their captors, “Our blood will not be for nothing. You, the killers, will pay a high price.” HaDerekh MayLita LiSibir u'liEretz Yisroel: Zichronot MayHaGulag HaPriti Sheli (The Road from Lithuania to Siberia and to the Land of Israel: Memories From My Private Gulag). Return
  12. The Hebrew prayer that begins “Shema Yisro'el” (“Hear, O Israel”) is Judaism's central affirmation of God's oneness. It is recited daily in prayer services but is also recited by one who is near death. Return
  13. Some women managed to escape from the dilapidated section of Telshe in which the women and children were confined and approximately 64 survived to the end of the war. The testimonies of some of the survivors from Telshe, Rietava, and other nearby towns were recorded in the years immediately after the war. See, The Lithuanian Slaughter of its Jews: The Testimonies of 121 Jewish survivors of the Holocaust in Lithuania, Recorded by Leyb Koniuchowsky, in Displaced Persons' Camps (1946-48) (English translation, 2020), pp. 22-69. Return


[Page 54]

Telshe[a]

Translated by Hanna Grinberg

Telshe, the capital of Samogitia [Lithuanian: Žemaitija], was founded, according to the legend, by one Džiugas,[1]], in whose name there is the nearby Džugener Barg [Džugener Mountain, the hillfort known in Lithuania as the Džiuginėnų piliakalnis]. In the olden times, Telshe was the largest trade center in the area. Currently Telshe has a population of 8,000, of which 30-35 percent are Jews. There are 12 councilors in the city administration, of whom three are Jews. Telshe is quite a pretty town. In the summer, it has a lot of vegetation. Some streets make an impression of a garden city, where the houses stand like villas among trees, immersed in greenery. It also has several squares (gardens). Between the hills and valleys spreads the beautiful Lake Mastis. There is a legend about a witch, who apparently moved the lake over from another place to Telshe, and the lake is named after the witch.

It is worth mentioning that the famous Hebrew poet Yehuda Leib Gordon (YL”G) lived in Telshe. He was the director of the Kazioner Yiddisher Shul[2]] here. In his time, he already had to fight against fanaticism and the old Jewish way of life. Y. L. Gordon even wrote a song about it, “To Telshe.” The pious Jews hated him and even on Purim they took the liberty of painting on the pavement [an image of] his face, which they stomped upon with their feet while shouting “M'chak timchok at zecher Amalek” (“Erase the memory of the Amalekites”).

From Telshe came the Hebrew writer Y. Ben Israel, who drowned in the aforementioned lake. His brother is the well-known labor activist Nissan Popps.

Telshe has a Folksbank [People's Bank] with exactly 300 members, in addition to which there is the town's benevolent society, which has its own capital[ization] of 3,000 litas, and also Ezrat Poalim [Help for Workers], which is an old-fashioned craftsmen's association whose adherence to old-fashionedness did not allow it to unite with the local branch of the All Litvishn Fareiniktn Hantwerker-Farband [The All-Lithuanian United Craftsmen's Association]. All of them have their basic capital that was sent to them in dollars from America.

The “OZE” branch[3]] has a medical school clinic. The Jewish hospital was built with the funds of Nathan David Kroll of America, who gave 6,000 dollars towards it. It has 16 beds, central heating, plumbing, [and] hot and cold water in all rooms. For a year and a half, the hospital stood empty, until, as a result of the initiative and the tireless work of Dr. Minuchin,[4]] who was the head of the hospital and who had been working in it for 2 years without pay, a loan was obtained from the state in the amount of 12,000 litas. Only then was all of the equipment acquired, and the hospital began to function.

Original footnote:

  1. From the book Cities and Towns in Lithuania. Return

Editor's footnotes:

  1. In the original Yiddish text, this person is named Džiugastel. It is assumed that this spelling was a typographical error. Return
  2. Under Czar Nicholas I (born 1796, reigned 1825-1855), Russia adopted various policies to assimilate the Jews by familiarizing them with Russian secular society and separating them from their religion. One such policy was the establishment in the 1840s of a network of government-administered “Jewish schools.” Special taxes were imposed upon the Jews and the proceeds were paid out from the state treasury for the schools' operating costs. In Yiddish, such a school was known as a kazioner yiddisher shul. The term Yiddish term kazioner is derived from the Russian word kazna (казна), meaning the state treasury. At page 206 of his reference book Yidishe Shtet, Shtetlech un Dorfishe Yishuvim in Lite (Jewish Cities, Towns and Villages in Lithuania), Telshe native Berl Cohen (1911-1993), who was also known as Berl Kagan, refers to this school in Telshe as der Russish-Yiddisher Kronshul (the Russian Crown's Jewish School). Return
  3. “OZE” is an acronym for Общетсво Здравоохранения Еврейиев, a Jewish health-care organization. Return
  4. Most likely, this individual was Dr. Noach Minuchin (1884-1939). Return

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