Avrohom Yeshaya Karelitz
Rabbi Avraham Yeshayahu Karelitz אברהם ישעיהו קרליץ | |
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Personal life | |
Born | |
Died | 24 October 1953 Bnei Brak, Israel | (aged 74)
Spouse | Bashe Bei |
Parents |
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Occupation | Rabbi |
Religious life | |
Religion | Judaism |
Buried | Bnei Brak |
Avraham Yeshayahu Karelitz (Hebrew: אברהם ישעיהו קרליץ; 7 November 1878 – 24 October 1953), also known as the Chazon Ish (Hebrew: החזון איש) after his magnum opus, was a Belarusian-born Orthodox rabbi who later became one of the leaders of Haredi Judaism in Israel, where he spent his final 20 years, from 1933 to 1953.
Biography
[edit]Youth
[edit]

Born in the town of Kosava in the Grodno Governorate of the Russian Empire (today in Belarus). His father, Rabbi Shmaryahu Yosef Karelitz, served as the town's rabbi. His mother, Rashe Leah, was the daughter of the previous town rabbi, Rabbi Shaul Katzenelnbogen, who left his position for the rabbinate of Kobrin.
Except for a short period in which he studied in the "kibbutz" of R' Chaim Ozer Grodzinski in Vilna,[1] Avraham Yeshayahu Karelitz did not study in a cheder or yeshiva, and apparently was never officially ordained as a rabbi. His Torah education was received from his father and a private melamed named R' Moshe Tuvia. The Chazon Ish quotes Torah teachings from this teacher in several places in his writings. According to David Frankel,[2] the Chazon Ish related that his father hired a private melamed to keep him away from the company of children his age and idle chatter. For most of his life, he was self-taught. His mother later told Rebbetzin Malka Finkel, wife of Rabbi Eliezer Yehuda Finkel, that even in childhood he studied with great diligence. According to her, he told her several times that he did not enjoy studying, but he studied out of the recognition that "this is a good thing," hoping that the sweetness would come later.[3] His brother, Rabbi Meir Karelitz, said in his eulogy that at his bar mitzvah he committed to devote all his strength to Torah. According to a common story, his talents were not noticeable in childhood, though some deny this detail.[4] Binyamin Brown accepts both versions and speculates that although he was indeed talented, he was regarded in his environment as average due to his different study method, which did not meet the accepted criteria of yeshiva-style scholarship.[5]
Nevertheless, Brown, a scholar of the Chazon Ish’s life and thought, claims that there is a noticeable influence of Jewish Enlightenment literature in his writings and also in a few surviving poems he wrote. This influence is expressed in his florid and stylistic writing, and in his strict use of Hebrew free of foreign words, unlike other rabbis of his time.[6] In contrast, Shlomo Havlin claimed that the evidence for this assumption is anachronistic, since rabbinic literature had always been written in Hebrew, whereas Yiddish literature was then in its heyday.[7]
The Chazon Ish was known from a young age as a quiet person. To one of his associates, Yitzhak Gerstenkorn, founder of the city Bnei Brak, he explained that in his teens he decided not to utter anything that wasn’t fully formed in his mind, but since he tends to write well-formed ideas, it is rare that he has anything to say aloud.[8]
In the year 5651 (1891), his grandfather, Rabbi Shimshon Karelitz, passed away. His son, Rabbi Shmaryahu Yosef Karelitz, was absent from the town that day, and the grandsons Meir and Avraham Yeshayahu, aged 16 and 12 respectively, prepared eulogies themselves, which the elder brother Meir read at the funeral.[9]
In his youth the Chazon Ish traveled to study in Brisk. Binyamin Brown also discusses the version that his journey was to Volozhin Yeshiva,[10] but this seems mistaken, in light of testimony by Rabbi Isser Yehuda Unterman that the Chazon Ish studied in Brisk,[11] but did not find his place there and returned home to Kosava. The reason for the trip was to study from Rabbi Yosef Dov HaLevi Soloveitchik of Brisk, who taught in Brisk after leaving Volozhin Yeshiva until his death in 5652 (1892).[12] Several speculations have been raised about his quick return home: from homesickness, to halachic issues (Chadash prohibition, which was treated leniently in Brisk based on the ruling of Rabbi Joel Sirkis, who once served as the local rabbi), and even poor spiritual environment in Brisk.[13][14]
In the year 5661 (1901), several responses under the name of the Chazon Ish were published in the journal "HaPeles", under the pen name "A.Ya.SH. from Kassava [=Kosava]". In one of them he defended the accepted calculation in the Hebrew calendar against a possible objection raised by another rabbi.[15] These were, as far as is known, his first printed words.
In the winter of 5665 (1905), the Chazon Ish stayed for an extended time in the city of Vilna and studied in the kibbutz of Rabbi Chaim Ozer Grodzinski there. He may have remained there due to travel disruptions caused by the 1905 Russian Revolution, which lasted the entire year.[16]
Period of Kvedarna
[edit]

In the winter of 5666 (end of 1905), at the age of 27, he became engaged to Batya (Basha), daughter of Mordechai Bay, a merchant from the town of Kvedarna (Yiddish: Kovidan) in western Lithuania, who was significantly older than him.Exact details about her year of birth, and thus about their age gap, are unknown. According to the author Chaim Grade,[17] her age was twice his; however, it may be that the fictional character “Machazeh Avraham”, undoubtedly based on the Chazon Ish, is not identical in all its details. The Karelitz family agreed to the match because she was considered an industrious and God-fearing woman, and also because their son Avraham Yeshayahu was known to be a heart patient and stringent in halacha, and was seeking a wife who would take on the burden of livelihood and allow him to study Torah.[18] After the "Tna'im” (conditions) were signed, it became clear that the father-in-law would not be able to meet his financial obligations and that the intended bride was older than thought; because of this, the family of the Chazon Ish sought to withdraw from the match, but he refused, arguing that one must not shame a daughter of Israel under any circumstance and once terms were agreed upon, one should not back out.[19]
The wedding took place three months after the engagement, on 11 Shevat 5666 (6 February 1906),[20] in Kovidan, and the couple made their home in that town. Batya opened a fabric shop there and supported the family, and the Chazon Ish devoted his time to Torah study. Rabbi Avraham Horowitz reports that Batya testified her husband sometimes helped her manage the household accounts,[21] but still, when the Chazon Ish needed something, he had to ask her for money.[22]
The Kovidan period is mentioned by the Chazon Ish's biographers as his "golden era", during which he studied Torah undisturbed. He studied in chavruta with the town’s rabbi, Rabbi Moshe Rozin, author of Nezer HaKodesh, and delivered Gemara lessons in the local synagogue. He would be in the beit midrash from early morning until night.[23] Rabbi Rozin held the Chazon Ish in high esteem and told Rabbi Chaim Ozer Grodzinski of him in Vilna. According to Brown, this was the point when the connection between the two men was formed.[24] Among his study companions in Kovidan were Rabbi Moshe Ilovitzky, Rabbi David Nachman Koloditzky,[25] and his future brother-in-law Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu Kahan, with whom the Chazon Ish studied Tractate Niddah for a time, and through this connection arranged a match between him and his sister Badana. In Kovidan, the Chazon Ish founded a yeshiva with the local rabbi.[26]
In the year 5671 (1911), the first book in the series "Chazon Ish" was published, on topics of "Orach Chayim", "Kodashim", and the laws of Niddah. The book was published anonymously and only the name of the publisher, his brother Rabbi Moshe Karelitz, appeared on the title page, with no approbations. His books were not particularly popular, likely due to the difficult and concise writing style and the interpretive method that differed from the analytic method common in the Lithuanian Torah world. According to Brown, the difficulty in understanding his words stems from the fact that the author assumes the reader has already studied the sugya with its commentaries and is aware of the difficulties it raises, which the Chazon Ish seeks to solve.[27] The Chazon Ish's nephew, Rabbi Eliezer Alpha, once asked him, comparing it to Rabbi Chanokh Eigesh’s Marcheshet, published at the same time: "Your book is hard, and his is easy. And if we're already making an effort, we may as well study the works of the Rashba!" It is told that the Chazon Ish replied: "Once one toils over the Rashba, there’s no need to toil over the Chazon Ish."[28]
Due to the blood libel against Mendel Beilis and the Beilis trial (1911–1913), during which the defense submitted to the Russian court expert testimony disproving the blood libel in both private and general terms, Rabbi Karelitz, then age 34, wrote a treatise published in his letters collection under the title "To a Foreign Minister".[29] In this treatise, of which only the initial parts survived, there are twenty-six short chapters,[30] in which he surveys the Jewish outlook regarding the sanctity of human life and seeks to prove that ritual murder contradicts the fundamental principles of Judaism. Brown speculates that the missing parts of the treatise were never written, as it eventually became clear to him that his words would not receive the court's attention.[31]
Period of World War I
[edit]Stoybtz
[edit]
During the course of Eastern Front (World War I), the Imperial German Army occupied large swaths of historical Lithuania, and many residents from battle areas fled their homes and became refugees. The Chazon Ish and his wife, like many Jews of Kovidan, also fled to Russian-controlled territory and settled in the town of Stoybtz (Stołpce). Batya Karelitz opened in Stoybtz a fabric shop as well,[32] and the Chazon Ish continued his studies.
Although the Chazon Ish opposed holding a rabbinic post all his life, when the town’s rabbi, Rabbi Yoel Sorotzkin, was forced to leave by Russian orders, the Chazon Ish unofficially replaced him at his request, until he returned.[33] According to another version,[34] the residents begged Rabbi Karelitz to take the position after Rabbi Sorotzkin left, but he refused. According to one source, the Chazon Ish declined to bear communal responsibility, except in one case, when he joined efforts to restore the local mikveh that burned down in a fire.[35] That fire is described in a rare heading to one of the Chazon Ish’s commentaries on Tractate Kelim:
Stoybtzi, where nearly the whole town burned on Monday, 25 Sivan, and all its residents under pressure and distress with no home to live in and no place to lodge.[36]
Rabbi Shmaryahu Greineman recounted that when a plague broke out in town and the members of the chevra kadisha feared burial due to contagion, the Chazon Ish took it upon himself to bury the dead out of respect for the deceased. As a provocative act, he took one of the corpses on his shoulders and carried it to the cemetery, which caused the chevra kadisha members to return to their role. He later explained that his rationale was that if the dead were not buried, the entire town would be in mortal danger.[37]
In Stoybtz, the Chazon Ish hosted a group of young Jewish refugees in his home, among them Mordechai Shulman, who later founded Slabodka Yeshiva (Bnei Brak) and was one of his close associates.[38] Among the exiles to Stoybtz were also students of the Mir Yeshiva, along with their mashgiach Rabbi Yerucham HaLevi Leibowitz, and a connection was formed between them.[39] There are recorded cases of students from the Stoybtz area who came there to converse in Torah with the Chazon Ish.[40]
Minsk
[edit]
The Chazon Ish and his wife lived in Stoybtz during the first four years of the war, but at some point moved to the city of Minsk. After the October Revolution in 1917, the Belarusian Democratic Republic was declared. This state, which lacked broad international recognition, lasted briefly, and in 1919 the Communists took over and turned it into the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic.
At first, the Chazon Ish moved alone to Minsk and lived in an apartment provided by Rabbi Zalman Sorotzkin, while Batya continued managing the fabric store in Stoybtz and traveled to Minsk for Sabbaths. His cousin Shaul Lieberman described those days in Minsk:
In those years he sat in his home in Minsk and studied all day and night. On Shabbat his wife came from Stoybtzi… I believe those were his best days, because he was still unknown… the public generally did not know of his existence, and he enjoyed that very much. He could seclude himself and study. Jews did not disturb him, and his mouth did not cease from learning. His wife would send him enough for sustenance, and he sufficed with little, from one Sabbath to the next.
— Shaul Lieberman, "In the Company of Rabbis"[41]
On 21 Iyar 5677 (1917), his father Rabbi Shmaryahu Yosef Karelitz died in Kosava, and was succeeded as town rabbi by his son-in-law, Rabbi Abba Swiatycki. The news of his father’s passing reached the Chazon Ish only four months later, on 29 Elul 5677,[42] via the Red Cross.[43] From then on, the Chazon Ish made a practice of studying the entire Tractate Chullin on his father’s yahrtzeit, as his father authored the work Beit Talmud on that tractate.[44]
The Chazon Ish’s seclusion for continuous Torah study during his time in Minsk was so complete that he did not go to prayers at the synagogue except on Shabbat and on Monday and Thursday, when there is Torah reading.[45] In those days, he wrote the commentaries later published on Tractate Eruvin and other topics in Orach Chayim and Yoreh De’ah. In Minsk, the Chazon Ish met leading Torah sages who were also staying there because of the war, including Rabbi Chaim Soloveitchik, Rabbi Nosson Tzvi Finkel, and Rabbi Yeruchom Levovitz.
Vilna Period
[edit]

After the war, the Karelitz family returned to Stoybtz, which was in Soviet territory, and later crossed the border into Lithuania intending to return to Kovidan. Upon arrival, they found the town had not yet recovered from its destruction, and they turned to the Chazon Ish’s siblings (two brothers and a sister) who were living in Vilna to arrange their relocation there. An apartment with two rooms was rented for the couple in the Vilna suburb of Zaretshe, one of which was dedicated to Batya’s fabric shop.[46]
In 1920, the Karelitz family settled in the city of Vilna (then the capital of the short-lived state of Central Lithuania; in 1922 it was annexed by the Second Polish Republic), where he became close to the city’s rabbi, Rabbi Chaim Ozer Grodzinski. According to assessments, his exposure to Vilna’s Torah greats, even though he was not yet central in public affairs, contributed to the leadership ability he would later demonstrate as a Gadol Hador in the Land of Israel after the war.[47]
In the mornings, the Chazon Ish would walk to another suburb called Paplaujos (Paplauja), where his brother-in-law, Rabbi Shmuel Greineman, gave him a room in his apartment, simply furnished with a bed, chair, table, and basic sefarim. In this room, he studied alone, as was his custom, until evening, sometimes until collapse, for a period of three years.[48] It was said that during this time he delved into a specific Mishnah in Tractate Mikvaot for three months, about 15 hours a day.[49] During the 13 years he lived in Vilna, three more volumes of Chazon Ish were published. His brother-in-law Rabbi Greineman and his brother Rabbi Moshe managed their printing.
Binyamin Brown writes that although the Chazon Ish secluded himself for learning, he was “pleasant in manner, very kind, loved people, smiling, optimistic, and even possessed a subtle sense of humor,” and loved to offer advice and help people. He attributes his withdrawal from social interaction to natural shyness.[50]
In 5683 (1923), the second volume of his work on Orach Chayim was published, including his comprehensive treatment of the laws of muktzeh, Kuntres HaMuktzeh. That summer, the Chazon Ish collapsed and was forced to take a break from his intensive study. He wrote to his friend Rabbi Moshe Ilovitzky: “I suffered from nervous weakness and stopped learning.”[51] During that time, Rabbi Yoel Kloft recounted in his name: “Idleness was difficult for me; I felt like I was wandering the streets of Vilna like a madman because I couldn’t study.”[52] After this breakdown, he abandoned his habit of solitary all-day study and began learning with young students as chavruta. In late summer 5683 (1923), he recuperated in the resort town of Valkenik near Vilna, where Rabbi Chaim Ozer Grodzinski also stayed. There he began learning with a young man named Shlomo Cohen, grandson of Rabbi Shlomo HaCohen, one of Vilna’s rabbis. Cohen became his close student and later headed the semi-official biography project of the Chazon Ish.[53] Their joint study continued until the Chazon Ish immigrated to Eretz Yisrael in 5693 (1933), nearly 10 years after their acquaintance began.
Later during his time in Vilna, Chaim Grade, who would become a prominent Yiddish author, also lived in his home. He too studied with the Chazon Ish in chavruta for about seven years.[54] Some speculate that the Chazon Ish preferred to study with young students because he saw them as a substitute for children he never had, or because he preferred to shape their learning style rather than study with those already “corrupted” by standard yeshiva methods.[55]
In Vilna, the Chazon Ish made one final attempt to persuade his wife Batya to accept a get (Jewish divorce), so he could marry a younger woman who could bear children. Batya later recounted this to her friend, the mother of Chaim Kolitz. According to her, it happened on their way home across the Vilnia River (Vilnia); she answered: “Alright, but on my way home from the beit din, I will jump from the bridge straight into the water.” The Chazon Ish ceased all attempts and accepted the situation. However, according to Kolitz’s account, he then practiced the halakhic Niddah restrictions with her, such as not handing objects directly into her hand.[56]
In the 1930s, the Torah monthly Knesset Yisrael was published in Vilna, edited by his brother Rabbi Moshe. The Chazon Ish published insights there under pseudonyms. In one instance, he used the name of his student “Shlomo Cohen” to publish a critique of novellae written by Rabbi Joseph Dov Soloveitchik of Boston (then a student at Humboldt University of Berlin). According to the Chazon Ish’s brother-in-law, Rabbi Yaakov Yisrael Kanievsky (“the Steipler”), the Chazon Ish believed that the novellae were not the young Soloveitchik’s work, but that of his father, Rabbi Moshe Soloveichik, then Rosh yeshiva at Yeshiva University. Nonetheless, he chose to attack them ideologically, due to their association with Religious Zionist and Mizrachi circles.[57] According to Rabbi Soloveitchik’s son, Prof. Haym Soloveitchik, the novellae were indeed his father’s, not his grandfather’s, and the Chazon Ish sought to refute them even with weak arguments “to show that there is no Torah in him or his kind.”[58]
At this stage, the Chazon Ish was involved in several heated public issues, including:
A. The rabbinate controversy in Vilna,[59] a struggle that developed over the spiritual leadership of the city. The Mizrachi faction in Vilna sought to appoint Rabbi Yitzchak Rubinstein, who until then had been the official "government rabbi", as chief rabbi of the city. The Agudat Yisrael faction opposed, claiming that Rabbi Chaim Ozer Grodzinski was the natural spiritual leader of the community. The Chazon Ish led, behind the scenes, the effort to block Rubinstein’s appointment. The campaign failed, and the Chazon Ish’s brother, Rabbi Meir Karelitz, who was openly involved in the effort, was forced to resign from his seat on the “Rabbinical Council” of Vilna.[60]
B. A dispute between the Novardok Yeshiva network and the Vaad HaYeshivot regarding the share of funding to which the network was entitled. The leadership of the network argued that the Vaad should calculate each of the network’s branches as an independent institution when allocating the overall budget. The Vaad, for its part, decided due to financial constraints to treat the network as a single entity. Rabbi Grodzinski, who served as president of the Vaad, recused himself from the matter and imposed upon the Chazon Ish, in the presence of several prominent rabbis from Lithuania and beyond,[note 1] to issue a ruling. After deliberation, the Chazon Ish was compelled to decide. He heard both sides and ruled that the Novardok Yeshiva network would be entitled to 10% of the Vaad’s total budget. He was unaccustomed to such a position and quickly exited the hall after delivering the ruling. It is told that Rabbi Grodzinski summed up the meeting with the words:
Do you not know who the Chazon Ish is? The Chazon Ish is “truth” – and in the face of truth, one must yield![61]
In the year 5691 (1931), Rabbi Moshe Blau, at the recommendation of Rabbi Grodzinski, proposed that the Chazon Ish be appointed his deputy and eventual successor to Rabbi Yosef Chaim Sonnenfeld, the leader of the Edah HaChareidis in Jerusalem, who was by then struggling to fulfill his role. The Chazon Ish declined, saying he had no objection to the title, but was unwilling to judge monetary cases – a central part of the proposed position – thereby disqualifying the candidacy. In 5692 (1932), after Rabbi Sonnenfeld’s passing, Rabbi Grodzinski wrote to Jacob Rosenheim[62] that the Chazon Ish was not among the "fearful of issuing rulings" regarding matters of kashrut laws, but in monetary matters he hesitated to rule “out of great righteousness.”[63]
In his final years in Vilna, he studied in the mornings in chavruta with his acquaintance from Stoybtz, Rabbi Mordechai Shulman, then the young son-in-law of Rabbi Yitzchak Isaac Sher and later head of the Slabodka Yeshiva (Bnei Brak).[64]
In the spring of 5693 (1933), following a theft of merchandise from his wife’s fabric store,[65] the Chazon Ish decided to immigrate to the Land of Israel. He informed Rabbi Grodzinski, who hurried to arrange an immigration certificate for him and his wife. He turned to Moshe Blau, a leader of Agudat Yisrael in Eretz Yisrael, requesting that he handle the matter. Blau hinted that the Chazon Ish’s agreement to serve in the Edah HaChareidis Rabbinate in Jerusalem might ease the certificate process. The Chazon Ish again refused, and the process was handed to the secretary of Agudat Yisrael in Jerusalem, Moshe Porush. Before even receiving the Chazon Ish’s reply, Porush approached the British Mandate authorities, stating that there was a possibility that the Chazon Ish would be appointed head of the rabbinical court of the Edah, and that Agudat Yisrael guaranteed he would not be a public burden. The certificate was quickly arranged and sent to Rabbi Grodzinski.[66] At Rabbi Grodzinski’s special request on behalf of the Chazon Ish, the Jerusalem activists arranged a special exemption for him from the quarantine then in force at ports to prevent disease transmission.[67]

The Chazon Ish and his wife left Vilna on Sunday, 8 Tammuz 5693, 2 July 1933. On Saturday night, they were accompanied to the train station by a small group, including Rabbi Chaim Ozer Grodzinski and Rabbi Chanokh Eigesh.[68]
The Karelitz family traveled by train to Warsaw, and from there to the port city of Constanța on the shores of the Black Sea in Romania. From the port of Constanța, they sailed to the Land of Israel aboard the ship USS Martha Washington.
In the Land of Israel
[edit]I contemplate... and reflect on that wondrous man... the ideal type of the halachic man, who drew his authority from his intellectual capability and his personality, and not from the position he held. It seems he is one of the only figures about whom it is impossible not to speak in superlatives—and this is indeed what lexicon and encyclopedia writers, usually restrained in tone, do.
— Chaim Be’er, Report from Another World[69]




On 16 Tammuz 5693 (10 July 1933), the Chazon Ish and his wife immigrated to the Land of Israel. At the Port of Jaffa, they were greeted by members of Agudat Yisrael, at the request of Rabbi Grodzinski. In their early days in the Land of Israel, they stayed at the home of Rabbi David Potaš in Tel Aviv. After some time, they rented a room on Geula Street in the city. Rabbi Mattityahu Stigl, who had founded Beit Yosef Novardok Yeshiva in the new settlement of Bnei Brak, visited him in his apartment and invited him to move there. The Chazon Ish replied that he would come after the Three Weeks.[note 2] When the couple eventually arrived, they settled on the hill of Har Shalom. The air there pleased the Chazon Ish,[70] and he decided to settle in the area. Rabbi Shmuel Halevi Wosner related that he told him on the matter:
Jerusalem is full of righteous and great Torah scholars, but in the new settlement I found a wilderness; I wanted to plant seeds of Torah in it—therefore I came to Bnei Brak. If I do not succeed in planting? Then I will go to Gehinnom with its inhabitants like one of them.[71]
At first, he rented a two-room apartment from Rabbi Nachman Shmuel Yaakov Miyodser, rabbi of Bnei Brak and later head of the settlement council. After a short time, he moved to another apartment in Givat Rokach, where the rent was cheaper. Near his home was the Beit Yosef Yeshiva, and from time to time, the Chazon Ish would deliver lessons to its students. A few years later, he moved into a house built for him in eastern Bnei Brak.[72] In this house also lived his sister Miriam and her husband, Rabbi Yaakov Yisrael Kanievsky.
Bnei Brak later became, to a large extent due to the Chazon Ish, one of the strongholds of Haredi Judaism in Israel. At first, he was joined in Bnei Brak by a small circle of members of Poalei Agudat Yisrael, who followed his halachic guidance on agricultural matters, mainly after Rabbi Chaim Ozer Grodzinski referred them to him. Later, he became widely known and became a halachic authority among broader circles in the country.
An attempt by Batya Karelitz to reopen a textile shop failed, and she had to close it. A wealthy man who offered monthly financial support, at the request of Rabbi Yechezkel Abramsky, was declined by the Chazon Ish,[73] who resolved to support himself through the sale of his books, even though this income was neither profitable nor steady; the Chazon Ish had not yet achieved national fame, and buyers came only gradually.
In 5694 (1934), Rabbi Grodzinski put forward the Chazon Ish as one of the candidates for the Council of Torah Sages of Agudat Yisrael in the Land of Israel. After consulting with the Chazon Ish, Rabbi Grodzinski wrote:
Rabbi A.Y. Karelitz does not want to accept any official title or responsibility, but is willing to be consulted.[74]
That summer, the Chazon Ish spent an extended period in Safed for health reasons. During that time, he primarily studied in the Beit Midrash of Rabbi Yosef Karo in the Old City.
In 5696 (1936), he worked to establish the “Torah Education Center in the Land of Israel,”[75] and he founded a kollel in the Zikhron Meir neighborhood in Bnei Brak. This kollel, one of the first in the New Yishuv, became a model for many other institutions.[76] After his passing, the institution was named "Kollel Chazon Ish".
In December 1936 (winter 5697), the Chazon Ish fell ill, apparently due to appendicitis, and required removal of the appendix (appendectomy).[77] Later that year, ahead of the upcoming Shmita year 5698 (1937–38), his brother-in-law Rabbi Shmuel Greineman printed for the first time in Jerusalem his book "Chazon Ish" on Tractate Shevi'it and the laws of shmita.
In the following years, several more volumes in the series were published, especially from Seder Taharot, which scholars had previously studied little due to the lack of both Babylonian Talmud and Jerusalem Talmud on it.
At the beginning of winter 5701, on 19 Cheshvan, his mother Rashe Leah passed away in Jerusalem. In her final years she had lived with her son Rabbi Meir Karelitz and was buried on the Mount of Olives. The Chazon Ish ascended to Jerusalem for the second time in his life; the first had been a year earlier, for the wedding of Shlomo Shimshon Karelitz, son of his older brother Rabbi Meir.
After the passing of the great rabbis of Eastern European Judaism, some of whom perished in the Holocaust, many saw him as their successor. During this time, his status as Gadol Hador began to take shape.[78]
In the years prior to the founding of the State, the Chazon Ish was involved in several public issues, most with a religious background. He helped establish new yeshivot following the destruction of European Jewry and its yeshivot, encouraged both ideologically and financially farmers who kept Shmita, and wrote letters requesting financial aid for Haredi educational institutions that were in crisis (1947).
Shmita and Heter Mechira
[edit]When the Chazon Ish arrived in the Land of Israel, nearly all farmers (except a few in the Petah Tikva area) relied during the Sabbatical year on the Heter Mechira. He worked to change this situation. In 5698, when the treasurer of the Haredi settlement of Machane Yisrael (Jezreel Valley) came to consult with him on the matter, the Chazon Ish ruled that they should refrain from relying on the heter. In accordance with his ruling, Kibbutz Hafetz Haim and other settlements of Poalei Agudat Yisrael also acted.[79]
To enable farmers to keep shmita without heter mechira, the Chazon Ish permitted certain labors aimed at preserving the fruit ("le-okmei peira"), and allowed marketing the produce via Otzer Beit Din.
The International Date Line Controversy
[edit]During World War II, when students of the Mir Yeshiva and others fled to East Asia, the "Shabbat controversy in Japan" arose, in which many halachic authorities debated the question of determining which day the Shabbat and festivals fall on in that region of the globe. On the eve of Yom Kippur 5702 (early October 1941), the issue intensified among the Jewish refugees in Japan. Until then, those who wished to be stringent avoided a decision by observing two consecutive days as Shabbat. However, a two-day fast was not a viable solution for most of the refugees, especially under wartime living conditions. The exiles sent telegrams to rabbis in the Land of Israel and elsewhere, asking how to proceed.
The Chazon Ish, who had already dealt with this issue in the past,[80] was also asked about the matter, and his response[81] was published in a well-known halachic ruling, which opposed the view of Jerusalem’s rabbis and rabbis affiliated with the Chief Rabbinate. According to his ruling, the Halachic date line passes west of Japan, and therefore Shabbat there falls on Sunday, contrary to the practice of the local Jewish community.
The Chazon Ish dictated his position on the date line to his student Rabbi Kalman Kahana on the night of Yom Kippur eve. On the morning of Yom Kippur eve, he sent Rabbi Kalman Kahana to Jerusalem to Rabbi Yitzchok Zev Soloveitchik to request that the two of them send a telegram to Japan instructing people to eat on Wednesday (according to their reckoning) and to fast on Thursday.
The Brisker Rav refused to send the telegram, arguing that it would arrive in Japan after Wednesday evening and some people would surely have already accepted the fast of Yom Kippur and would not want to interrupt it; seeing the telegram, they might fast again on Thursday and thus endanger themselves. He also added that the Av Beit Din of Brisk, Rabbi Simcha Zelig Riger, had already ruled, before their departure, that they should fast on Thursday.
Even before Rabbi Kalman Kahana returned from Jerusalem to Bnei Brak, the Chazon Ish sent a telegram to Japan instructing: "Eat on Wednesday and fast Yom Kippur on Thursday, and do not be concerned about anything."
Rabbi Yechezkel Levenstein, who was the spiritual authority among the Mir Yeshiva students at the time, ruled to follow the Chazon Ish’s opinion even against the majority of dissenters.
This position was printed in Kuntres Shemoneh Esreh Sha’ot (“Pamphlet of Eighteen Hours”), initially as a separate booklet,[82] and later included in his book on Orach Chayim.
The Holocaust and His Attitude Toward It
[edit]During the Holocaust, the rabbi did not imagine the extent of the disaster and refused to believe the reports arriving about the extermination of millions of Jews. Eventually, when the scope of the destruction became known, the rabbi lamented: "From Heaven, the calamity that befell the Jews of Europe was concealed from us—even prayer efforts to annul the harsh decree were lacking."[83]
Various reports circulated regarding his statements on the cause of the Holocaust, including: that it could not be explained, that it was a punishment for the sins of the generation and its secular leaders, or that it was due to the weakness of the generation after the passing of previous Gedolei Yisrael. He also claimed that despite everything, God’s punishment was given with abundant mercy. Aharon Surasky reports that he likened the period to the work of tailoring, in which the tailor must “cut the fabric into shreds… in preparation for sewing a new garment”—destruction as a precursor to creation.[84] In light of all this, it seems he avoided providing a structured and systematic theological doctrine.[85]
Before the establishment of the state, a proposal was made to institute a perpetual public fast day and a collective shiv'ah. The rabbi responded with a lengthy letter opposing additions to what the Sages already instituted, especially in a generation he viewed as spiritually diminished. He did not see the Holocaust as an exceptionally unique catastrophe compared to the disasters that befell the Jewish people throughout history. Binyamin Brown assesses that this response also reflects hidden anxieties about accusations toward the Haredi world, which was surprised and unprepared for the devastation.[86]
Blaming the rabbis for the destruction of European Jewry was, in his view, heresy—even if said by someone otherwise observant.[87]
The Establishment of the State of Israel and His Attitude Toward It
[edit]The rabbi instructed R’ Jacob Rosenheim, president of Agudat Yisrael Worldwide, to prevent the establishment of a Jewish state as much as possible.[88] Even after the state became a reality, he expressed reservation and hostility toward its ruling institutions and did not believe the state would last long.[89]
Upon the establishment of the State of Israel, he supported Agudat Yisrael’s participation in the United Religious Front for the elections to the Knesset, in contrast to the position of the Edah HaChareidis. He explained that such participation did not imply recognition of the state and likened it to a man facing a robber and reaching an agreement with him to avoid being killed; this is not recognition of “authority” but an acknowledgment of reality.[90]
He opposed Zionism and Religious Zionism, and insisted that Tachanun be recited in his study hall on Yom HaAtzmaut. In one case where he was sandek on that day, he publicly announced it to prevent misunderstanding.[91] Two years later, he ruled that even when a brit was held in his study hall, Tachanun should be said—so no one would mistakenly think it was omitted due to Yom HaAtzmaut.[92]
After the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, he addressed the halachic implications of its outcomes. In his book on Tractate Sanhedrin, he discusses regarding the olives taken from Arab trees that they abandoned and [then] left, and regarding the question of Arab land ownership in the Land of Israel, he proposed that since all foreign ownership in the Land of Israel after the exile derives its legal validity from the laws of "kinyan kibush", which halachically regulate a conqueror’s ownership of captured land, then when a new conqueror (Israel) arrives, the previous ownership expires on its own. This has important halachic implications for the obligation of terumot and ma’aserot on agricultural produce from captured territories.[93]
National Service Law Affair
[edit]In 1952, the issue of the conscription of religious women into national service arose. In the background of the controversy was an attempt to obligate women to serve military service, an obligation that even the vast majority of the Religious Zionist public opposed. Subsequently, due to this opposition, a clause was established in the law exempting women from military service for religious reasons, and in a second stage, an attempt was made to determine a national service alternative for women within the framework of the Security Service Law. The Chief Rabbinate and Haredi rabbis and others strongly opposed this, contrary to the position of the Religious Kibbutz Movement and the “Lamifneh” faction in HaPoel HaMizrachi, who supported the law. This issue was considered very essential in the eyes of the Chazon Ish. He wrote on the matter: “The stirring of my soul instructs and comes forth that it is a matter of ‘be killed and not transgress’, and perhaps also from the point of halacha it is so.”[94]
In this context, “Agudat Yisrael” left the coalition at the end of 1952.[95] Eventually, in 1953, the “National Service Law” was legislated, stipulating that any religious woman who received exemption from military service in Israel is obligated to national service. This law was passed with the agreement of the Chief Rabbinate and the support of the Mafdal representatives. Shlomo Zalman Shragai wrote that Minister Haim-Moshe Shapira and Deputy Minister Zerach Warhaftig received the Chazon Ish’s principled consent to their step.[96] However, due to the opposition, the law was not implemented in practice.
His Passing
[edit]
The Chazon Ish died of a heart attack on Friday night, the 15th of Cheshvan 5714, October 24, 1953, after midnight.[97] He died at 2:30 a.m., with his student Yechezkel Bartler at his side.[98]
The rumor of his death spread throughout Bnei Brak in the morning hours. By midday on Shabbat, the Chazon Ish’s room was closed due to the crowding. According to Rafael Halperin, thousands stood in the courtyard reciting Psalms. With the conclusion of Shabbat, the news of his death was broadcast on “Kol Yisrael”.[99] The municipalities of Bnei Brak and Ramat Gan declared a suspension of work during the funeral hours. At the opening of the government meeting on Sunday morning, Prime Minister Ben-Gurion delivered remarks in the rabbi’s memory.[100]
At the funeral procession, which was held on Sunday afternoon, tens of thousands of men, women, and children walked behind his bier. He was buried in the Shomrei Shabbat Cemetery in Bnei Brak.[101]
The Chazon Ish’s grave serves as a pilgrimage site throughout the year, especially on the anniversary of his death. Nearby, his brother-in-law Rabbi Shmuel Greineman purchased a special burial compound for members of the Chazon Ish’s family.
After his passing, his brother-in-law Rabbi Shmuel Greineman revealed the amounts of charity money the Chazon Ish distributed annually to the needy, from funds given to him by Jewish philanthropists from Israel and abroad. According to him, in the last year of his life, the Chazon Ish distributed over one hundred thousand Israeli lira. After his death, a charity fund was established in his name to continue this work.[102]
His thought and work
[edit]Halakha
[edit]His method of study, and his attitude toward the rulings of his predecessors
[edit]A central element in the teaching and halakhic rulings of the Chazon Ish was his attitude toward “dina degemara” — laws explicated in the Talmud — as those that may not be questioned, must not be deviated from even in the slightest, and must be fulfilled even if they were not mentioned by later halakhic authorities after the sealing of the Talmud: “A law that is clarified explicitly from the Gemara is, to me, the foundation of halakhic decision.”[103]
Even in some cases where the reality from which the Talmudic law was derived had changed over the generations, the Chazon Ish maintained that the law remained in force. His reason was that halakha for future generations was meant to be sealed according to the words of the sages of the “two thousand years of Torah,” which ended in the time of Chazal. Thus he wrote about the laws of terefot (non-kosher animals): “And behold, it was necessary that during the two thousand years of Torah, as it says in Avodah Zarah 9a and Bava Metzia 86a — Rabbi and R. Natan are the end of the Mishnah, Rav Ashi and Ravina are the end of the hora’ah — there should be a fixed determination of terefot. There is no new Torah after them. The terefot were determined by Divine Providence at that time, and even if medicine later develops cures for these conditions, they remain the terefot that the Torah forbade, both then and in future generations.”[104]
On the other hand, there were other Talmudic rulings, such as those relating to human terefot, that the Chazon Ish did not see as dependent on the conditions of Hazal’s time: “Indeed, regarding marrying off his wife, as long as there is a treatment in his time, we do not prevent him from doing so.”
Regarding later periods recognized in halakhic discourse, the Chazon Ish believed that although Torah scholars had accepted the authority of earlier generations, halakhic clarification must still derive from the original sources — i.e., the tradition of Hazal. Therefore, he maintained that someone who does not know how to derive halakhic conclusions from the Talmudic discussions may not issue rulings, even from works like the Shulchan Aruch, as he would be unable to match specific real-life cases to the abstract cases presented in halakhic literature.
As a result of this outlook, he shaped his study method to first derive halakhic conclusions from the Talmudic sugya (discussion), and only afterward to compare the conclusions to those in halakhic codes. Although in general he nullified his own opinion before that of the Rishonim (early authorities), he held that each person is required to exhaust his intellect in Torah study. Incorporating the greatness of the Rishonim into one’s own analytical process could hinder the understanding of the roots of halakha. Their words should be taken into account only when not understood, and in practical halakhic rulings — when it is clear that the Rishonim were addressing the same case.
He summed up this approach in a letter: “To take hold of the rope of Torah is a difficult matter, and manifold. I took upon myself to investigate the Gemara as much as possible, even if it contradicts the Rishonim — and to suffice with the knowledge that the words of our sages are fundamental, and we are ‘orphans of orphans.’ Nevertheless, not to refrain from clarifying and analyzing what we can in our smallness, and also to rule accordingly in cases where there is no explicit contrary ruling in halakha. Otherwise, I would lack the engagement of Torah.”[105]
Nevertheless, the Chazon Ish generally did not permit himself to rule against the Shulchan Aruch in cases where the opinion of the Rema was clear. Regarding the Vilna Gaon (Gra), he considered his status — especially in Lithuanian Jewry — to be like that of the Rishonim. This allowed accepting rulings from the Gra even when they contradicted the Shulchan Aruch.
In one of his letters, he placed the Gra in a row alongside Moses, Ezra the Scribe, Rabbi Yehuda HaNasi, Rav Ashi, and the Rambam: “We relate to the Gra in the same category as Moshe Rabbeinu, Ezra, Rabbeinu HaKadosh, Rav Ashi, the Rambam, and the Gra, through whom Torah was revealed as one sanctified for that purpose, who illuminated that which had not been illuminated before him and took his portion. He is counted as one of the Rishonim, and therefore disagrees with them in many places with great strength — even with the Rif and the Rambam. His stature in divine spirit, piety, wisdom, diligence, and mastery of the entire Torah cannot be fathomed. Therefore it is not surprising that he disagrees with the Shulchan Aruch — and the places where he does so are many.”[106]
Despite this, and according to his principle that one must “investigate the Gemara as much as possible, even if it contradicts the Rishonim,” he himself was eventually forced to interpret sugyot differently even from the revered Gra. Rabbi Shlomo Cohen recounted that in 1920, when the Chazon Ish was 41, he said that throughout his life he had tried to avoid disagreeing with the Gra, but had finally been compelled to interpret one grave sugya differently.[107]
A representative example of his approach — “to interpret and clarify what we can... and also to rule accordingly when there is no explicit contrary view” — that also highlights his social sensitivity, can be found in the case of an agunah that was brought before his nephew, Rabbi Shlomo Shimon Karelitz, head of the rabbinical court in Petah Tikva. The nephew struggled to find a solution to the dire situation and turned to his uncle. The Chazon Ish delved into the relevant sugyot and ruled leniently in that specific case. The judges accepted his opinion and signed a marriage permit for the woman. The nephew, still uneasy with the ruling, came to him the next morning and reiterated his strong objections. Under those circumstances, he argued, how could they allow it? The Chazon Ish reconsidered his arguments and then replied: “It is true that it is difficult to permit — but it is more difficult to forbid!”[108]
Precision in Halakha
[edit]“The Lithuanian genius, whose greatness at first glance is expressed in his intellectual achievements, [but in truth is revealed] as a great and multifaceted personality, full of imagination, emotion, and soul"[109]
One of the banners of the “Chazon Ish” worldview is the matter of meticulous adherence to the minutest detail in fulfilling halakha in all its details and refinements. The Chazon Ish viewed this exacting behavior as a guarantee of Yirat Shamayim (fear of Heaven) and dedicated to it the third section of his philosophical work "Emunah uVitachon", titled "Ethics and Halakha." His great independence as a halakhic authority led him to extreme precision even in the details of laws he deduced from halakhic discussion in the relevant Talmudic sugyot. These refinements became identified with him and his students. Most well-known are his stringencies, dating back to his time in Europe, especially in the following areas:
The laws of Eruvin:
Writing Torah scrolls, tefillin, and mezuzot – with special emphasis on the shape of the letters according to the ruling of the Beit Yosef. According to his approach, which contradicts the custom of the Ari, the right “leg” of the letter tzadi should be shaped like a regular yud (as in contemporary Hebrew fonts), not an inverted yud, as is customary among Sephardic and Hasidic Jews;[110]
Baking matzot – he insisted on baking them personally so he could supervise every step of the process in accordance with his stringencies;
The Four Species – into which he invested much money and effort to obtain them in their optimal halakhic form. It is told that once, in midsummer, he saw beautiful myrtle branches that met halakhic standards in a local non-Jew’s garden. He paid the man in advance to guard and care for them until Sukkot to add them to his lulav;[111]
Laws of mikvaot: the infusion of drawn water into rainwater (zeriah) to render it a valid mikveh – the Chazon Ish had his own unique position on this matter.[112]
Mitzvot between man and his fellow were also, in his view, included in halakhic precision, and he was very careful that one not come at the expense of the other. His close associate Rabbi Shlomo Cohen related that once the Chazon Ish instructed him not to say the usual verses before the shofar blowing but to blow without delay and finish prayers quickly. The reason for the haste became clear after prayers: the Chazon Ish had overheard a weak elderly man tell his son, who urged him to eat for health reasons: "No, I have never eaten before the shofar blowing." So that he would not be forced to prolong his fast, the Chazon Ish shortened the traditional ritual.[113]
The Chazon Ish instituted the reading of Megillat Esther in Bnei Brak also on Shushan Purim, out of doubt that the city might be considered "adjacent and visible" to the ancient city of Jaffa.[114]
Etrogim of the “Chazon Ish” strain:
A well-known case of the Chazon Ish’s halakhic stringency was his search for a native Israeli etrog variety that grew wild, to avoid the suspicion that etrogim might be grafted with another botanical species, which would render the etrog halakhically invalid for the Four Species. The etrog tree is prone to grafting due to its weakness. The etrogim he found were slightly lacking in aesthetic beauty and symmetry. In the Haredi public, his approach was widely accepted, and there is high demand for etrogim descended from trees whose fruits the Chazon Ish used. His method for identifying the ancient Israeli etrog was accepted by several researchers.[115]
Some etrogim come from a tree planted by Rabbi Michel Yehuda Lefkowitz in his yard, from seeds given to him by the Chazon Ish. These are called the "Lefkowitz strain," from which additional varieties have developed. There are also "Halperin etrogim of the Chazon Ish strain."
Land-dependent Commandments
[edit]The Chazon Ish especially acted to instill broad awareness for the observance of land-dependent commandments, particularly the commandment of Shemitah. He demanded of the kibbutzim of Poalei Agudat Yisrael to observe the Sabbatical year without relying on the heter mechirah (permitted sale of the land to a non-Jew) by the Chief Rabbinate, which he rejected. As part of his activity for the observance of land-dependent commandments, he went out to the field several times to conduct experiments and trial examinations of halakhic concepts.
The Chazon Ish also acted in matters of terumot and ma'aserot (tithes and offerings). He was meticulous to tithe at home even foods that had already been tithed, out of concern that they had not been tithed properly. He also innovated the matter of the perutah chamurah, which was not practiced before him; he encouraged and spurred the study of Seder Zera'im among Torah scholars, and answered many inquiries on these topics.
The Issue of Halakhic Measurements
[edit]The name of the Chazon Ish is also associated with a fundamental disagreement on the issue of "shiurim" (halakhic measures) mentioned in the Bible and the Talmud (cubit, span, fingerbreadth, olive-size, egg-size, etc.). Rabbi Avraham Chaim Naeh (the GaRa"Ch Naeh) published these measures in modern units (meters and grams), and according to his approach, a handbreadth is eight centimeters and a revi'it (liquid measure) is 86 cc. The Chazon Ish disagreed with this view, and claimed that the true measures are much greater — a handbreadth is about ten centimeters, and a revi'it is approximately 150 cc.
The main point of disagreement is whether to base the other measures on the volume of eggs or on the width of the thumb. Rabbis Naeh and Karelitz were not the first to differ on this point, they were preceded by great Acharonim, the Chatam Sofer and the Noda BiYehuda. Rabbi Naeh sought to preserve the custom of the Old Yishuv in Jerusalem, while the Chazon Ish held that the tradition he had received from his father’s home and the greats of Lithuania regarding measurements was accepted by Torah scholars with higher halakhic authority than that of popular custom. As part of this approach, the Chazon Ish relied on the measurement of the finger of his student Rabbi Kalman Kahana, whom he considered an average person for the purpose of measures and sizes.[116]
In practice, in the Lithuanian sector, the Chazon Ish’s method on this issue is the widespread norm. The spread of this practice began among graduates of Lithuanian yeshivas and from there extended to the broader sector. Even among the rest of the Haredi public, who follow their ancestral tradition with the smaller measure, some are stringent in Torah-level commandments according to the larger measurement due to concern for the opinions of the Chatam Sofer and the Chazon Ish, as recommended by the Mishnah Berurah.[117][118]
The Philosophy of Halakha
[edit]The Chazon Ish held that, beyond the essential obligation on every Jew to obey the Torah's directives as they are, their goal is to place a person in the position of a subject standing before his king and submitting to his authority. For this purpose, what is required on one hand is absolute submission and obedience to every detail; and on the other hand, the performance of mitzvot under all circumstances — even when it is clear to a person that he cannot precisely assess what is required of him for the full performance of the mitzvah. This is because the main thing is fulfilling the king’s command, and man’s limitations and assessments were taken into account with the command. Or in the words of the Chazon Ish: "The halakha was given to be calculated approximately, for the mitzvot were given only to purify the creatures, and to be precise in His commandments [i.e., God’s] to accept His sovereignty, and also to fulfill the wisdom of the Torah contained in all the laws of the commandment and its inner secret. And for all of these, nothing is lost if the fixing of boundary lines is approximate, so that even those of weak understanding can fulfill the practical commandments."[119]
His Influence on the Haredi Public
[edit]The Chazon Ish had a decisive contribution to shaping Judaism in the post-Holocaust generation. His contribution is directly reflected in the way the Haredi public conducts itself. He reinforced the sense of the importance of Torah study for the entirety of a person's life as an ideal, and is credited to some extent with the creation of a "society of learners" in Israel. As someone who was the “Gadol HaDor” (leading Torah sage of the generation) at the time of the post-war turning point, most of the yeshivas established during this period in the Land of Israel were founded with his blessing and advice—both regarding the very establishment of the yeshiva, and regarding the choice of location and staff; among them: Kfar Hasidim Yeshiva in Zikhron Ya'akov, the Sharon Yeshiva in Ramat HaSharon, and the Be'er Yaakov Yeshiva. For this reason, Haredi biographers attribute to him the title "Father of the Yeshivas in the Land of Israel."[120] Binyamin Brown, in a response article, claims this argument is flawed; according to him it is pure anachronism, as other rabbis of the time are also absent from the Haredi press.[121]
Through his students and associates, he also influenced yeshivas outside of this sector, such as Midreshet Noam in Pardes Hanna, which was founded with his blessing by his close disciple, Rabbi Yehoshua Yagel.
The Chazon Ish made an ideological contribution to establishing the status of yeshivas as a Torah territory and as the spiritual home port of Torah scholars, even when they go out to labor during the day. In his words, the yeshiva is a "fortress of might for raising students—Torah scholars destined to be great sages of the generation."[122] Practically as well, the Chazon Ish enlisted publicists and renowned Haredi educators to persuade on the one hand Jewish philanthropists to financially support institutions established in the 1940s and 1950s, and on the other hand, to convince young men to forgo possible career advancement and to choose a life of Torah study, despite the obvious financial consequences.
By virtue of his status, he became a prominent educational authority in Haredi society. Among his instructions, his opinion is well-known that students considered "wayward" should not be expelled, for fear that they might completely stray from the religious path.
Despite his great influence, the common analytical method in Lithuanian yeshivas is that of Rabbi Chaim of Brisk, which the Chazon Ish opposed. Also in halachic terms, some of his rulings were not accepted by the majority of the Lithuanian public. However, part of the Haredi-Lithuanian stream, called "Chazon Ish-niks," accepted his teachings in all areas. Within this group there are several subgroups centered around personalities among his students.[123] The main communal institutions in which members of this group concentrate are Kollel Chazon Ish and the Lederman Synagogue in the Chazon Ish neighborhood; the main yeshivas of this group are the Slabodka Yeshiva in Bnei Brak and Zichron Michael Yeshiva in Zikhron Ya'akov.
His Attitude Toward Rav Kook
[edit]The attitude of the Chazon Ish toward the Chief Rabbi of Israel at the time of his arrival in the Land of Israel, Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook, occupied thinkers from the Religious Zionist public in the final decades of the 20th century and the early decades of the 21st, and subsequently also Haredi elements who criticize Rav Kook's path. Some see the official Haredi position, which expresses varying degrees of reservation toward Rav Kook’s path, as a rewriting of the true and respectful opinion of the Chazon Ish, as expressed in his letters to Rav Kook and other sources.[124]
Shortly after his immigration to Israel, the Chazon Ish addressed two short letters to Rav Kook containing halachic questions on laws applicable in the Land of Israel but not in the Diaspora. In these letters he addressed Rav Kook with the title “His Honor, the esteemed Maran, may he live and be well,” a title he only used for Rabbis Isser Zalman Meltzer, Chaim Ozer Grodzinski, Yitzchok Zev Soloveitchik, and Elchonon Wasserman. Rabbi Menachem Yehuda Halevi Ushpizai testified that when he informed the Chazon Ish of Rav Kook’s grave illness, tears came to his eyes, and he sent a message that he intended to visit him. However, Rav Kook told the messenger he did not want to interrupt the Chazon Ish’s Torah study and that he should pray for him at home.[125]
The first mayor of Bnei Brak, Yitzhak Gerstenkorn, relates in his memoirs that when Rav Kook arrived in Bnei Brak, he sent word that he wished to visit the Chazon Ish. The Chazon Ish replied that he would not allow Rav Kook to trouble himself and that he would come to him. For the meeting, the Chazon Ish wore his Shabbat clothes. At the cornerstone laying for Yeshivat Beit Yosef in Bnei Brak, the Chazon Ish stood throughout Rav Kook’s congratulatory speech—an honor he did not show to other Torah scholars who spoke there. When asked why he didn’t sit, he replied: “The Torah is standing!”[126]
The subject became a controversy between Religious Zionists and Haredim, and treatises have been written on both sides.[127] Binyamin Brown offers a developmental view of the Chazon Ish’s attitude toward Rav Kook: a warm relationship that deteriorated over time[128] as their acquaintance deepened and the Chazon Ish was exposed to elements of Rav Kook’s halachic approach that conflicted with his own views. This offers a plausible resolution for the contradictory sources presented in polemic literature on this topic.
The most famous halachic disagreement between the two was the controversy over the “heter mechira” during the sabbatical year, as a possible solution to the problem of agricultural produce loss and other damages caused by abandoning the land. The Chazon Ish rejected the solution for various reasons, yet ruled leniently in other shemitah-related questions to enable observance of shemitah without relying on the heter. In doing so, he wrote at length refuting Rav Kook’s arguments in support of the heter and his rulings on shemitah laws in general.
His Attitude Toward the Mussar Movement
[edit]The Chazon Ish expressed a critical view toward the ideas of the Mussar Movement, though he held affection for its figures. He expressed this in a letter to the head of Hebron Yeshiva, Rabbi Simcha Zissel Broide, while still a young man: “I spent much time with the Saba of Slabodka z”l, and with the Saba of Mir z”l, and with their great students, and also with the greats of the Novardok school, and there was always boundless love between us. They were entirely devoted to me, and I never refrained from voicing sharp critique, and they delighted in it. For it is the nature of scholars to delight more in a 'meitivay' (a challenging question in the Talmud) than in a 'tena nami hachi' (a supporting text); and I delighted in them, especially the yeshivas rooted in Torah and awe of Heaven, without separation...”[129]
Unlike early 19th-century opponents of the Mussar Movement, who accused its leaders of ideological affinity with the Jewish Enlightenment, the Chazon Ish, writing in the early 20th century, did not doubt their intentions. However, he believed the movement’s claim—that refined character traits alone can equip a person to overcome natural inclinations and align with halacha—was flawed. In his view, in moments of crisis or value conflict, one reverts to natural instincts: “When he is confronted by conflict with his fellow, he will surely decide in line with his natural tendencies. Even if these are refined, they often do not align with the divine halacha.”[130]
Moreover, refined character traits and self-awareness might cause one who places his trust in Mussar study to rely on the power of his intellect, even in cases of error. Therefore, the Chazon Ish believed that a proper ethical system cannot be based on anything other than halacha itself: absolute commitment to the minutiae of the law. This commitment operates on two levels: first, a person’s day is filled with small tests to fulfill or neglect the law—tests that are easy to overcome and strengthen religious awareness; second, in cases requiring special effort, precision in law trains one to overcome "bad" traits like laziness and desire.[131]
His Attitude Toward the Hasidic Movement
[edit]The Chazon Ish did not explicitly address the Hasidic movement in writing. There are a number of passages in Emunah u’Bitachon that may have been aimed against Hasidism.[132] He opposed some customs practiced among Hasidim, such as writing the inverted tzadi in STaM and immersion in the mikveh on Shabbat, while praising others such as growing a beard, wearing a long coat, and marrying young. He encouraged Hasidim to travel to their Rebbe for Shabbat, but prevented young men from attending a Hasidic tish on Friday night, claiming that "on Friday night there is a lack of Torah in the world."[133] Biographies of his persona include testimonies that he ideologically opposed the Hasidic path, following his great admiration for the Vilna Gaon and his way.[134] Nevertheless, this view was not expressed in practice, because "today we have enough battles from outside."[135] He maintained friendly relations with Rebbes of his generation, and encouraged his close associates from Hasidic families to continue in their practice.[136][137]
On History and Hagiography
[edit]The Chazon Ish believed that studying the conduct of great sages is a practical necessity, and only by truly knowing and recognizing their character can one learn from their actions. There is no value in a stereotyped perception of all sages as a uniform brand of a certain kind of perfection. He gave expression to this view in his famous letter, which also contains a halakhic reference to the possible problem of such study due to the prohibition of lashon hara: “If it is permitted to speak lashon hara about a craftsman in his craft, to someone inquiring for practical need, then all the more so it is permitted to inform those who hold fast to the Torah and need to know. For knowing the sages of the generation, their heart and measure, is itself Torah. Nonetheless, great caution is required, lest one misstate the matter by even a hair’s breadth and thereby bring out a bad name on a Torah scholar.[138]
Nevertheless, the Chazon Ish expressed significant skepticism regarding the events of the times as described in books of history and biographies. In his view, they mix truth and falsehood side by side, and historical written information should not be relied upon without a probabilistic examination of the events described. He attributed this to the innovating tendency of historians and their uncritical reliance on earlier ones: “Chronicles and world events teach much to the wise man in his path, and the foundations of wisdom are laid upon the history of the past. Yet because man loves to innovate and to speak before an audience, many lies have accumulated in historical books. For man is not naturally repulsed by falsehood; many love it and delight in it with the pleasure of friendship. And the wise man must sift through the storytellers’ tales, to accept the truth and discard the lies. Here lies broad ground for imagination, for imagination by nature hurries to judge before reason has weighed the matter on the scales of justice. And imagination passes judgment instantly—what is true and what is false.[139]
Chazon Ish
[edit]A series of books of commentary, innovations, and halachic rulings on the Babylonian Talmud and the Jerusalem Talmud, on Maimonides' Mishneh Torah, and on the Shulchan Aruch. This is Rabbi Karelitz’s main book series, and he is referred to as the “Chazon Ish” after it.
The name of the book hints at the author's name in an acronym: Abraham Yeshayahu. And it corresponds with the opening of the Book of Isaiah: “The vision of Isaiah son of Amoz.” Due to his modesty, he did not sign his name on his books, but rather they are signed by their publishers: his first book is signed behind the title page by his brother Rabbi Moshe Karelitz; and his other books—by Rabbi Shmuel Greineman. Rabbi Greineman’s family continues to print the books to this day.
Booklets from the series, such as “Kuntres Shmoneh Esreh Shaot,” “Kuntres HaShiurim,” and “Kuntres HaMuktzeh,” were published as independent editions and even as annotated and elucidated editions.
Emunah U'Bitachon
[edit]This is an ideological essay that summarizes the foundations of the Chazon Ish’s thought in the realm of Jewish philosophy. The portions found and printed deal mainly with topics of faith, trust, ethics and halacha, character development, imagination and intellect, divine inspiration and prophecy. The essay was printed at the end of the “Taharos” volume in the Chazon Ish series, and in many editions as an independent book, and has become a classic in Orthodox Jewish thought.
Letters and Halachic Correspondence
[edit]- “Kuntres Igrot Chazon Ish“, a selection of his letters on various topics, in three volumes.
- “Kuntres Mikhtavim“: Not printed in the “Kuntres Igrot“, by the master author of Chazon Ish, with letters from Rabbi Y. Kanievsky and Rabbi E.M. Shach..., Bnei Brak, 1981.
- Rabbi Meir Greineman (ed.), “Teshuvot U’Ketavim“, from the master Chazon Ish, Bnei Brak, 1991.
- Avraham Yissachar Kinig (ed.), “Genzim U’She’elot U'Teshuvot Chazon Ish“, five volumes, 2011–2017.
Margins
[edit]The Chazon Ish used to write his notes in the margins of the books he used. From these margins, his comments on various books are occasionally published, in Torah journals and in new editions of the books he annotated. See for example:
- “Sefer Hagahot Chazon Ish“: includes notes on the Talmud and a collection on the commentary of the Maharsha and the Maharam… Jerusalem: A. Bloom, 1997.
- Chazon Ish's margins on the book “Yeshuat David“ by Rabbi David Poberesky: found in manuscript..., with a facsimile of the manuscript, Bnei Brak, 1990.
His notes on Rabbi Chaim Soloveitchik of Brisk’s book, “Chiddushei Rabbeinu Chaim HaLevi“, on Maimonides’ Mishneh Torah, were printed in a separate book titled “Chazon Ish – Notes on Chiddushei Rabbeinu Chaim HaLevi,” and in later editions of that book, as an appendix titled “Glosses of Chazon Ish.” After the publication of these notes, a book titled “The Flaming Sword Turning Every Way – To Guard the Way of the Tree of Life” was published in New York, the stated purpose of the author being to reconcile the Chazon Ish’s objections to Soloveitchik’s method.
Foundational books of Yeshiva-style Talmudic study, such as “Shev Shema'tata” by Rabbi Aryeh Leib Heller, were printed in special editions with the Chazon Ish’s notes.
Additionally, in many editions of popular halachic books, such as the “Mishnah Berurah” and “Kitzur Shulchan Aruch,” various versions of “Likutei Chazon Ish” and “Piskei Chazon Ish” were published. These compilations, based on quotations from his writings, usually focus on places where his halachic opinion contradicts the ruling of the Mishnah Berurah.
Collections
[edit]- Rabbi Meir Greineman, “Pamphlet of Rulings and Matters from Maran the Chazon Ish“, edited and compiled by a group of his students. Bnei Brak, 1974. Appendix to the book “Imrei Yosher“.
- “Collected Practices: In the Ways of Torah Study and Prayer, Attributes and Good Conducts“, compiled from the writings and letters of Maran the Chazon Ish. Bnei Brak, 1986.
- Rabbi Meir Greineman, “Collected Laws and Practices: Orach Chaim“, along with letters not printed in “Kovetz Igrot“, from Maran the Chazon Ish. Bnei Brak, 1988. The book is also referred to simply as: “Laws and Practices“.** Rabbi Meir Greineman, “Collected Laws and Practices – from Maran the Chazon Ish“, Bnei Brak, 1996.
- “A’aleh B’Tamar“, rulings and accounts from the Chazon Ish from Rabbi Aharon Leib Shteinman, with commentary by Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky.
- Rabbi Zundel Kroizer, “Paths of a Man: On Matters of Torah, Prayer, and Awe“. A collection from the writings of... the Chazon Ish. Jerusalem, 1989. Appendix to the Passover Haggadah "Or HaChamah".
- “Paths of a Man: Pearls and Treasures“, a collection of sayings... that illuminated... from the Chazon Ish. Bnei Brak, 1990.** “Paths of the Man – Pearls and Treasures“: Collection of sayings... that illuminated for us... from the Chazon Ish... with additions from his own handwriting, appearing in print for the first time. Jerusalem, 2011. Also cited by the alternate title “Paths of a Man“.
- Rabbi Yaakov Shulavitz (editor), “Words of Torah“, collected, arranged, and explained from the books of Maran the Chazon Ish... according to the order of the Torah portions. Bnei Brak, 1991.
- Rabbi Yaakov Shulavitz (editor), “Chapters of Faith, Philosophy and Conduct“, ... topics collected and arranged based on the books of Maran the Chazon Ish. Bnei Brak, 1991.
- Asher Bergman, Passover Haggadah “The Chazon Ish: Practical Deeds“, stories, conduct, and sayings arranged according to the order of the Haggadah, with additional practices and behaviors according to the rulings of Maran the Chazon Ish. Bnei Brak, 2004.
His Disciples
[edit]Many Torah scholars considered themselves his students and managed their lifestyles and institutions under his guidance. In addition, a group of young students gathered closely around him and later formed what became known as the “Chazon Ish Circle.”
- Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky (his nephew)
- Rabbi Dov Yaffe
- Rabbi Dov Landau
- Rabbi Michel Yehuda Lefkowitz
- Rabbi Kalman Kahana, Rabbi of Kibbutz Chafetz Chaim
- Rabbi Gedaliah Nadel
- Rabbi Nissim Karelitz (his nephew)
- Rabbi Meir Zvi Bergman
- Rabbi Avraham Chaim Brim
- Rabbi Avraham Yaakov Weiner
- Rabbi Eliezer Palczynski
- Rabbi Elazar Zadok Turchin
- Rabbi Aryeh Pomeranchik
- Rabbi Aryeh Abrams
- Rabbi Dov Tzvi Karlinsky
- Rabbi Chaim Shaul Greineman (his nephew)
- Rabbi Chaim Shaul Karelitz (his nephew)
- Rabbi Yehuda Boyar
- Rabbi Yehuda Shapira
- Rabbi Yechezkel Bartler
- Rabbi Yaakov Edelstein
- Rabbi Meir Greineman (his nephew)
- Rabbi Mordechai Shlomo Berman
- Rabbi Moshe Yehoshua Landau
- Rabbi Natan Fried, established the eruv in Bnei Brak
- Rabbi Natan Shulman, Rosh Yeshiva of Slabodka
- Rabbi Pinchas Schreiber
- Rabbi Shaul Barzam (married to his niece)
- Rabbi Shlomo Cohen
- Rabbi Shmaryahu Greineman (his nephew)
- Rabbi Shraga Feivel Steinberg, Rosh Yeshiva of Tiferet Zion
- Rabbi Sharia Deblitzki
- Rabbi Nachum Ragoznitsky, Rosh Yeshiva of Meorot HaTorah
Commemoration
[edit]The neighborhood of Beit Hazon, located in Kfar Haroeh, is named after the Chazon Ish. The neighborhood was established by immigrants from England, the United States, and South Africa.[140] In addition, the Hazon Ish neighborhood (Shkhunat Hazon Ish) in Bnei Brak is also named after him, where several of his prominent disciples reside. At the center of the neighborhood stands the Lederman Synagogue of the disciples of the Chazon Ish, originally named after him, "Hazon Ish Synagogue"; the synagogue's customs were established according to his rulings.[141] In Zichron Yaakov as well, one of the neighborhoods is called "Hazon Ish Neighborhood".
In 18 cities in Israel, streets are named after him. In Be'er Ya'akov, Beit Shemesh, Beitar Illit, Bnei Brak—where a central street is named after him on which he lived—Zichron Yaakov, Hadera in Giv'at Olga, Tiberias, and also in Jerusalem in the Ramat Shlomo neighborhood, Modi'in Illit, Netivot,Petah Tikva, Kiryat Sefer, Rehovot, Rishon LeZion, Ra'anana, Rosh HaAyin, Ramat Gan. In the past, a street was also named after him in Tel Aviv-Jaffa,[142] on historic Irshid Street in the Manshiya neighborhood.[143]

His name is commemorated in Kollel Chazon Ish, established under his guidance during his lifetime, and named after him following his passing. The kollel includes hundreds of married students (avrechim), and was headed by his nephew, Rabbi Nissim Karelitz. Many of the Hazon Ish’s disciples were formerly among its scholars. Adjacent to the kollel, Yaakov Halperin established in his memory an orphan girls’ home, “Institution for Girls Zichron Meir in memory of our master the Hazon Ish of blessed memory”.
His house, located at the center of Hazon Ish Street in Bnei Brak, was purchased about a year after his passing by a group of his disciples, and a Talmud Torah (elementary religious school) was established there in his memory, called Talmud Torah Tashbar in the House of our Master the Hazon Ish. It primarily serves students from the Litvak public and families of his disciples who follow his path.
In 2025, a comprehensive preservation project was completed in his home in Bnei Brak, and the "Hazon Ish Heritage Center" was opened at the site (also called “Vision for Generations”). The center was established with joint funding from the Ministry of Tourism, the Ministry of Heritage, the Ministry of Culture and Sports, and the Municipality of Bnei Brak, as part of a national plan to develop tourism infrastructure.[144] The historical rooms—the study room, the synagogue, and his living quarters—were restored under the guidance of preservation experts and architects, adapted to modern exhibition standards. Alongside the original displays, the visitors’ center incorporates multimedia features: a short documentary film produced especially for the tour presents his halakhic and public path, and an interactive presentation in the form of a “station train” leads the visitor through stations of his life from Lithuania to the Land of Israel.[145]
Further Reading
[edit]- Kalman Kahane, “HaIsh VeChazono (The Man and His Vision)“: Notes, Jerusalem: [n.p.], 1955; 2nd ed.: Tel Aviv: (Zohar Press), 1964.
- S. Y. Zevin, “The Hazon Ish,” in “Ishim uShitot (Figures and Approaches): A Series of Essays on Halachic Personalities and Their Methods in Torah“, new edition, Jerusalem: Kol Mevaser, 2006, pp. 290–341.
- Rabbi Yosef Kahaneman, “The Ark of God Is Captured,” Deglenu (Youth journal of Agudat Yisrael in Eretz Yisrael), issue 67, Cheshvan 5714 (1953).
- Deglenu, issue 68 – a special issue dedicated to eulogies following the death of the Hazon Ish, Kislev 5714 (1953).
- Yitzchak Gerstenkorn, “Hazon Ish: A Heritage for Bnei Brak“, Bnei Brak (Tel Aviv: D. Gutterman Press), 1953 – a short biography from the perspective of Bnei Brak’s founder. (Yiddish)
- David Tamar, “The Hidden Genius: On the Character of Rabbi Avraham Yeshayahu Karelitz, the Hazon Ish,” HaTzofe, 13 Nov. 1992, p. 6.
- Gila Mas, “LeOro (In His Light): Chapters of His Life, Vision, and Leadership of the Rabbi of Israel... the Hazon Ish“, Jerusalem: Tiferet, 2013.
- Lawrence Kaplan, “An Ethos of Submission, Unity with the Spirit of Torah, and Standing up to the Challenges of the Time: R. Avraham Yeshayahu Karelitz, the Hazon Ish,” in: Binyamin Brown and Nissim Leon (eds.), HaGdolim – Figures Who Shaped Haredi Judaism in Israel, Magnes Press, 2017.
- Studies on His Thought
- Eliezer Schlossberg, “Methods of Study in the Hazon Ish’s Igrot Collection,” HaMaayan, vol. 26, no. 3 (1986), pp. 10–25.
- David Tamar, “A Loaded Camel Meets a Loaded Camel: Ben-Gurion Meets the Hazon Ish – Each Man Stays True to His Faith,” in: At-Mol, vol. 22(2), p. 9, 1996.
- Neria Gutel, “On ‘Peshuto shel Mikra’ in the Teachings of the Hazon Ish,” HaMaayan, vol. 38, no. 1 (Tishrei 1997), pp. 19–33.** Yosef Ben-Arza, “On the Hazon Ish’s Approach to the Plain Meaning of Scripture,” HaMaayan, vol. 38, no. 3 (Nissan 1998), pp. 50–55.** Neria Gutel, “Between the Hazon Ish’s ‘Peshuto’ and His ‘Midrash,’” HaMaayan, vol. 38, no. 3 (Nissan 1998), pp. 56–58.** Neria Gutel, “The Plain Meaning of Scripture and the Censorship of the Hazon Ish’s Writings,” Bar-Ilan University, Weekly Parsha Sheet no. 1016, Parshat Bamidbar 5773 (2013). (Archived link)
- Yaakov Filber, “Eretz Yisrael and Am Yisrael in the Teachings of Rav Kook, Rav Soloveitchik, and the Hazon Ish,” in: LeZevulun, 1999, pp. 199–213.
- Yisrael Pat, “The Hazon Ish’s Method for Pronouncing God’s Name During Prayer,” HaTzofe, supplement, 12 March 1999, p. 12.
- Neria Gutel, “From the Leniencies of the Hazon Ish to the Stringencies of Rav Kook on Shemittah Laws,” Kovetz Tziyonut Datit, issue 5 (2002), pp. 327–336.
- Eliezer Ben Porat, “Faith in the Sages in the Light of the Hazon Ish,” Yeshurun, vol. 14 (2004), pp. 889–896.
- Chana Kehat, “Strengthening the Status of Torah in the Teachings of the Hazon Ish,” in: Yeshivot and Batei Midrash, 2007, pp. 315–355.
- Binyamin Brown, “Let Us Not Aspire to That Which Is Too Great for Us: The Hazon Ish’s Opposition to Holocaust Commemoration and Its Motivations,” in: Shoah MiMerchak Tavo, 2009, pp. 210–234.
- Uri Teger, Kuntres Derech Ish: Principles and Studies in the Teachings of the Hazon Ish. The commentary Derech Ish clarifies all the words of Maran Hazon Ish, compiled from his books and those of Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky. Jerusalem, 2009.
- Amitai Katz, “Electricity on Shabbat and Yom Tov – The Hazon Ish’s Halachic Rulings,” M.A. thesis, Tel Aviv University, 2012.
- Rabbi Yehoshua Anbal, “On the Methods of Halachic Ruling in the Mishnah Berurah and the Hazon Ish,” Yeshurun, vol. 31 (Elul 2014), pp. 891–920. Available online
- Sefer Zikaron – Hazon Ish, commemorating 70 years since his passing. Discussions on his halachic thought and methodology and those of his students. Eds: Rabbi Yehoshua Anbal, Rabbi Avraham Yeshayahu Shapira, Modiin Illit, 2023.
Articles Following the Monograph "The Hazon Ish: The Decisor, the Believer, and the Leader of the Haredi Revolution":
- Kimi Kaplan, “The Hazon Ish: The Decisor, the Believer, and the Leader of the Haredi Revolution – A Critical Review,” Zion, vol. 78(1), pp. 132–145, 2013.
- Shlomo Tikochinsky, “The Vision and Its Limits,” Akdamot, vol. 27 (2012), pp. 253–263. Response: Binyamin Brown & Shlomo Tikochinsky, “To Bring Eternal Justice and to Seal a Vision,” in Akdamot, vol. 28 (2013).
- Yehoshua Levin, review of The Hazon Ish – The Decisor, the Believer, and the Leader of the Haredi Revolution, HaMaayan, vol. 52(1) (2011), pp. 92–100. Response: Binyamin Brown, “Those Who Hold Fast to the Torah Should Know Its True Greats,” HaMaayan, vol. 52(2), pp. 177–192.
- Shlomo Zalman Havlin, “The Hazon Ish,” Katarxis 18 (2013), pp. 12–73. Response: Binyamin Brown, “How Should We Study Halacha in Israel? A Response,” Katarxis 19, pp. 122–142. Follow-up response by Havlin.
- Yehoshua Anbal, “On Reading Comprehension in Talmudic Texts in ‘The Hazon Ish: Decisor, Believer, and Leader of the Haredi Revolution,’” Yeshurun, vol. 29 (2013), pp. 1010–1012. Response: Binyamin Brown, “This Is Not Truly the Way of Torah,” Yeshurun, vol. 30 (2014), pp. 968–982. Final reply by Anbal, pp. 983–1019.
Notes
[edit]- ^ Among the rabbis listed in reports of this special session were: Isser Zalman Meltzer, Baruch Ber Leibowitz, Elchanan Wasserman, Chanokh Eigesh, Aharon Kotler, Yosef Shlomo Kahaneman, Meir Karelitz, Aharon Levin, and Meir Shapiro.
- ^ Apparently so as not to engage in new dwellings during this period of mourning for the destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple.
References
[edit]- ^ Eitam Henkin, Chapters in the Biography of Maran the Chazon Ish zt"l – Facts on a Portrait, HaMaayan 223, 5778, pp. 90–101.
- ^ David Frankel, Zachor LeDavid – Memorial Book, Vol. 2, p. 143.
- ^ Quoted from her (translated from Yiddish) in: Scheinerman, Ohel Moshe - Bamidbar, p. 697.
- ^ Yaakov Yisrael Kanievsky, Toldot Yaakov p. 93.
- ^ Binyamin Brown, The Chazon Ish: The Halachist, the Believer, and the Leader of the Haredi Revolution, Jerusalem 2011, p. 20.
- ^ Brown, The Chazon Ish (2011), pp. 21–22 (see there for additional examples). There are no sources for his direct exposure to Haskalah literature, but indirect influence is possible.
- ^ Shlomo Zalman Havlin, "The Chazon Ish", Ktisis 18 (2013), pp. 12–73, at Daat website.
- ^ Gerstenkorn, Chazon Ish, p. 18, quoted in: Brown, The Chazon Ish p. 21, note 14.
- ^ Rabbi Zvi Rotberg, grandson of Rabbi Meir Karelitz, in his name; cited in: Avraham Yissachar Koenig, Genazim u’She’elot u-Teshuvot Chazon Ish, Vol. 2, Jerusalem 2012, p. 23, note 3.
- ^ Brown, The Chazon Ish, p. 23.
- ^ Eliezer Steinman (editor), Encyclopedia of the Diaspora: Poland Series, Vol. 2: Brisk-Delita, Tel Aviv: Encyclopedia of the Diaspora Company, 1955, p. 165.
- ^ Y. Segal [=Yehoshua Levin], Reb Velvel: Der Eidel Mann, Bnei Brak 2003, quoting R. Ze'ev Edelman in the name of the Chazon Ish's mother.
- ^ Brown, The Chazon Ish, pp. 23–24 and note 21.
- ^ Brown 23–24 quotes the Chazon Ish’s nephew, Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky, whose version combines two explanations. According to him, the Chazon Ish "said that the prohibition of Chadash saved him from bad company he didn’t get swept into." Brown interprets this as referring to the environment in Volozhin Yeshiva where Enlightenment influences were present; but the Chazon Ish’s quote regarding "Chadash" implies the story was in Brisk, where the Bach’s ruling was followed, unlike in Volozhin.
- ^ Brown (The Chazon Ish, p. 28) suggests that the objecting rabbi, who signed with the pseudonym "Rav Ashi", may have been the Chazon Ish himself (Ashi=Ish), who proposed the objection only to refute it.
- ^ Brown, The Chazon Ish, pp. 29–30, esp. note 43.
- ^ Chaim Grade, Milchemet HaYetzer, pp. 135–136.
- ^ Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 30, based on Grade.
- ^ Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 31, based on Grade, Milchemet HaYetzer p. 136. Brown explains this according to the Rema (Even HaEzer 2:1):
Brown notes a later letter from the Chazon Ish, in which he advises another, in a similar case, to act accordingly, hinting that heIf one was promised a large dowry and they went back on it, he should not withhold the bride for this, nor fight over her property, and one who does so will not succeed, and his match will not prosper… rather, whatever his father- and mother-in-law give, he should accept graciously, and then they will succeed.
(Karelitz, Kovetz Igrot, Vol. 1, Letter 167).was accustomed to the influence of the Rema’s words for myself and for others
- ^ Tzvi Iverov, Maaseh Ish, Vol. 1, p. 16.
- ^ Horowitz, Orchot Rabbeinu (from the life of Rabbi Yaakov Yisrael Kanievsky, the Chazon Ish’s brother-in-law), Vol. 1, p. 399.
- ^ Horowitz, Orchot Rabbeinu Vol. 1, p. 400; quoted in Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 32. Horowitz also reports in the name of Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky that the Rebbetzin, as well as the Chazon Ish’s mother, wore wigs (Horowitz, Orchot Rabbeinu, Vol. 3, note 63).
- ^ Brown (Chazon Ish, p. 33), accepting the descriptions of Karelitz's early biographers.
- ^ Brown, Chazon Ish, pp. 33–34, based on Pe’er HaDor, Vol. 1, p. 70.
- ^ Father of author Chaim A. Kolleitz (author of The Seer from Lithuania, a biography of the Chazon Ish) and Rabbi Yitzchak Kolitz, Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem.
- ^ Asher Z. Rand (editor), Toldot Anshei Shem, 6562, Moshe Rozin, pp. 123–124 (page=134), New York, 1950
- ^ Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 34.
- ^ Iverov, Maaseh Ish, Vol. 1, p. 18.
- ^ Karelitz, Kovetz Igrot, Vol. 2, Letter 173.
- ^ The editor of Kovetz Igrot noted at the end of the letter (Vol. 2, 173): "Regrettably, the continuation was lost". The published parts include key points from the Chazon Ish’s thought on various topics.
- ^ Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 36. Brown further argues that the content of the letter reveals the Chazon Ish's exposure to views from Jewish rationalist philosophy and their influence on his thinking.
- ^ Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 37, compares sources regarding the couple’s economic status during this time.
- ^ Cohen et al. (eds.), Pe'er HaDor, Vol. 1, p. 232; cited in Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 38. See also supporting testimony: Rabbi Yosef Eliyahu Henkin, "The Chazon Ish zt”l", eulogies, Lev Ivra, New York, 1957. Rabbi Henkin himself later served in Stoybtz (called “Stuyfpzi” in his words) as Rosh Yeshiva.
- ^ Getzel Reiser, "Rabbi Avraham Yeshayahu Karelitz, the 'Chazon Ish'", in: Nachum Chinich (ed.), Stoybtz Sverzhna Memorial Book: and Nearby Towns Rubazewitz Deravna Nalibak, Tel Aviv: Association of Stoybtz Immigrants in Israel, 1965, p. 55; Mordechai Mechtei, "At the Outbreak of World War I", ibid., p. 36; Zvi Stolovitzky, "Rabbi Yehoshua Dov Liberman", ibid., p. 52; all cited in Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 38.
- ^ Mechtei, ibid., cited in Brown, ibid.
- ^ Karelitz, Chazon Ish, Taharot, Tractate Kelim, siman 7. A rare title appears above the siman. See also his description of the war: “A year of war over the whole land, in which the kingdom of Ashkenaz [=Germany] and Austria waged against the kingdoms of Russia, England, France, and towns were destroyed and states ruined in the dwelling places of the Jewish people, and tens of thousands of Jews exiled with no support, and the youths of Judah [=the people of Israel] fell slain on battlefields on both sides, and Torah study halls dwindled, with no supporter and upholder, and there is great turmoil among all of Israel.” The book, written in Stoybtz, was published only 21 years later.
- ^ Testimony of Rabbi Shmaryahu Greineman, cited in: Zvi Iverov, Maaseh Ish, Vol. 1, p. 190.
- ^ Reuven Grossman, Ki Im... Milestones in the Life and Spiritual Teachings of Maran Hagaon Rabbi Mordechai Ze’ev Shulman, 2nd ed., Petah Tikva 1987, p. 21.
- ^ Cohen et al. (eds.), Pe’er HaDor, Vol. 1, p. 233 (this fact is also cited by other biographers).
- ^ Aharon Surasky (ed.), Ner LeYisrael: Memorial Book for Yisrael Dov and Leah Rapoport, Tel Aviv 1998, p. 12. It is told there that Yisrael Dov Rapoport and others traveled to Stoybtz for this purpose.
- ^ Shaul Lieberman, "In the Company of Rabbis", in: David Rosenthal (ed.), Studies in the Torah of the Land of Israel, Jerusalem 1991, pp. 608–609.
- ^ Karelitz, Chazon Ish, Orach Chayim, intro to Siman 106 (Eruvin 42).
- ^ Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 41.
- ^ Testimony of Rabbi Yaakov Yisrael Kanievsky, cited in: Iverov, Maaseh Ish, Vol. 1, p. 83, and from there in Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 42.
- ^ Cohen et al. (eds.), Pe’er HaDor, Vol. 1, pp. 243–244.
- ^ Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 43, based on Grade, Milchemet HaYetzer, p. 390, who claimed the business failed and left them in debt.
- ^ Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 42.
- ^ Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 92. His biographers note his practice not to rest until he completed his in-depth analysis of the subject before him, which sometimes caused him to collapse mid-study. This continued until his final years.
- ^ Surasky, HaChazon Ish BeDorotav, p. 53, citing the apartment owner, Rabbi Greineman. There, he describes the young children following him, mimicking him and repeating the Mishnah, which they heard hundreds or thousands of times sung from his mouth.
- ^ Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 46.
- ^ The full letter is cited in Surasky, HaChazon Ish BeDorotav, p. 54.
- ^ Translated from Yiddish, cited in Iverov, Maaseh Ish, Vol. 3, p. 64.
- ^ See Pe'er HaDor.
- ^ An audio recording of his recollections from that period is linked below in "External links".
- ^ Brown, Chazon Ish, pp. 50–51. The speculation about his preference to shape learning style is by his student Dr. Zvi Yehuda, cited in Brown there.
- ^ Chaim A. Kolitz, HaChozeh MiLita, Jerusalem 1991, p. 61, cited in Brown, Chazon Ish, pp. 49–50.
- ^ Horowitz (Orchot Rabbeinu, Vol. 5, p. 169) adds that he heard this also from Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky in the name of his father; cited in Brown, Chazon Ish, pp. 55–56.
- ^ Cited in Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 56, note 160. Rabbi Soloveitchik responded to the criticisms (his original novellae appear in Igrot HaGRYD, pp. 130–132; his responses on pp. 134–139).
- ^ For more on this controversy, see: Bacon, G. "Rubinstein Vs. Grodzinski: The Dispute Over the Vilnius Rabbinate and the Religious Realignment of Vilnius Jewry, 1928–1932," in: Izraelis Lempertas (ed.), The Gaon of Vilnius and the Annals of Jewish Culture, Vilnius: Vilnius University Publishing House, 1998, pp. 295–304 (English); "Ravam Dekaru," in: Aharon Surasky (ed.), Achiezer: Collection of Letters, Vol. 2, Bnei Brak 1970, Gate Ten: Life Chapters, pp. 684–694.
- ^ Brown, Chazon Ish, pp. 53–54, on the Chazon Ish’s involvement in this political battle. Brown suggests that this episode may have solidified the Chazon Ish’s hostile stance toward the Mizrachi movement.
- ^ Shalom Meir Wallach, Shmuel Bekorei Shmo (on Rabbi Shmuel Winterov), Bnei Brak 1991, pp. 47–50; cited in Brown, Chazon Ish, pp. 52–53 and note 145. In Chaim Grade’s literary version (Milchemet HaYetzer pp. 300–302), the Chazon Ish was summoned to the session and was already en route, but turned back.
- ^ Grodzinski, Letters of Rabbi Chaim Ozer, New York, 2001, Vol. 2, Letters 951 and 968.
- ^ Rabbi Elyakim Schlesinger, son-in-law of Blau, writes in HaDor VeHaTkufa, p. 47, that the Chazon Ish explained his objection to judging monetary cases as stemming from not yet having completed his study of the Choshen Mishpat section properly. These letters and Schlesinger’s statement are cited in Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 55.
- ^ Reuven Grossman, Ki Im... Milestones in the Life and Spiritual Path of Maran HaGaon Rabbi Mordechai Ze’ev Shulman, 2nd edition, Petah Tikva 1987, p. 41.
- ^ Binyamin Brown, "The Chazon Ish and the Direction of Haredi Judaism in the Land of Israel," in: Shnei Ivrei HaGesher: Religion and State in the Early Years of Israel, Yad Yitzhak Ben-Zvi, 2002, p. 372
- ^ Surasky, HaChazon Ish BeDorotav, Chapter 9, with attached relevant documents. Brown (Chazon Ish, pp. 56–57) brings an alternative version from Rabbi Shmuel Aharon Shazuri, first secretary of the Chief Rabbinate of Israel, regarding whether the Rabbinate was involved in the immigration certificate effort. Brown believes that Agudat Yisrael activists managed independently, but he doubts the Haredi claim that the Chazon Ish absolutely refused help from the Chief Rabbinate.
- ^ Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 59, based on Surasky, HaChazon Ish BeDorotav, pp. 84–85.
- ^ Brown (Chazon Ish, pp. 59–60) quotes early biographers saying Rabbi Grodzinski regretted his departure and wrote shortly afterward: “For us, this is a great loss.”
- ^ Davar, Chaim Be’er, Report from Another World: A Jewish Town in the Heart of Felled Orchards, 1983-03-28|147.
- ^ According to a letter from Rabbi Grodzinski quoting the Chazon Ish’s words; cited in Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 64.
- ^ Shlomo Cohen et al. (eds.), Pe’er HaDor, Vol. 2, p. 38.
- ^ Today, Chazon Ish Street (Bnei Brak). The site houses Talmud Torah Tashbar, named after the Chazon Ish.
- ^ Brown, Chazon Ish, pp. 65–66. See there (note 15) for two versions of the story.
- ^ Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 202, quoting Letters of Rabbi Chaim Ozer, Vol. 2, Letters 938, 979, 927.
- ^ Raphael Halperin, In the Presence of the Chazon Ish, p. 22.
- ^ Brown, Chazon Ish, p. 72.
- ^ Unser Express, Rabbi Avraham Yeshayahu Karelitz Dangerously Ill, 1936-12-24}} (Yiddish).
- ^ Brown, Chazon Ish, esp. p. 87.
- ^ Glatt – Kashrut Guide for Passover and All Year Round, published by Badatz She'erit Yisrael, 16th ed., Bnei Brak, Nissan 2000, pp. 209–215.
- ^ See briefly below under His books, regarding his polemic with the views of Chaz"as on this topic.
- ^ Y. Koenig (ed.), Genzim u-She'elot u-Teshuvot Chazon Ish, vol. 2, Bnei Brak 2012, p. 819.
- ^ Chazon Ish – Kuntres Shemoneh Esreh Sha’ot, Jerusalem, 1943}}.
- ^ Aharon Surasky, HaChazon Ish BeDorotav, p. 274.
- ^ Aharon Surasky, HaChazon Ish BeDorotav, p. 299.
- ^ “Do Not Venture Into Matters Beyond Us”: The Chazon Ish’s Opposition to Holocaust Memorialization and Its Motives, Binyamin Brown, p. 211, note 2, in: Shoah MiMerchak Tavo: Leaders in the Yishuv and Their Attitudes Toward Nazism and the Holocaust, 1933–1948, ed. Dina Porat, 2009.
- ^ Binyamin Brown, HaChazon Ish: The Posek, the Believer, and the Leader of the Haredi Revolution, 2011, p. 799. The quote and analysis are cited from the blog Haredi Society During the Holocaust – New Facts
- ^ According to the testimony of Moshe Sheinfeld, Yalkut Da’at Torah, Ikveta d’Meshicha, p. 68. See also the article “Why Did God Do This? Haredi Responses to the Holocaust,” by Menachem Friedman, in: The Holocaust in Jewish History, p. 591.
- ^ Binyamin Brown, HaChazon Ish: The Posek, the Believer, and the Leader of the Haredi Revolution, pp. 244, 247.
- ^ Brown, ibid., pp. 246, 249.
- ^ Iverov, Maaseh Ish, vol. 3, p. 243 and onward.
- ^ Shlomo Lorincz, In the Presence of the Torah Giants, p. 86.
- ^ Kikar HaShabbat, Chananya Breitkoff, The Attitude of the Gedolei HaDor Toward the State of Israel – Through the Years • Special, 14 April 2021
- ^ See: Karelitz, Chazon Ish, new edition, Tractate Demai, Siman 15, in the section beginning "Regarding the olives that were taken".
- ^ Kovetz Igrot, vol. I, letter 112. However, in his famous meeting that year with the Prime Minister of Israel and Minister of Defense David Ben-Gurion, which took place in the midst of the public discussion about the law, the issue was not raised at all. Brown (The Chazon Ish, p. 90) adds that only after the meeting did the Chazon Ish urge Ben-Gurion via activists, and even wrote him a letter, to exert his influence to repeal the law; Ben-Gurion refused.
- ^ Sha’arim, “Why Agudah Left the Government”, 9 December 1952, p. 19.
- ^ HaTzofeh, Sh. Z. Shragai, “Certainly, you must do what the Chief Rabbinate tells you”: (On the statements of the “Chazon Ish” and our position in the Knesset), 30 August 1953, p. 28.
- ^ Haaretz, "Rabbi Karelitz ('the Chazon Ish') has passed away", October 25, 1953, p. 63.
- ^ Shlomo Cohen, Pe'er HaDor, vol. 5, p. 120.
- ^ Raphael Halperin, Bemachitzat HaChazon Ish, p. 147.
- ^ Al HaMishmar, October 26, 1953, front page.
- ^ See press reports from the period: "About twenty thousand accompany the 'Chazon Ish' to rest", Maariv, October 25, 1953, p. 1; continued article on p. 3. "The 'Chazon Ish' has passed", Al HaMishmar, October 25, 1953, p. 1. "Rabbi A.Y. Karelitz – the 'Chazon Ish'", Davar, October 25, 1953, p. 1. "Rabbi Avraham Yeshaya Karelitz, the author of Chazon Ish – is gone", HaTzofeh, October 25, 1953, p. 1; continuation on p. 4. "A.Y. Karelitz the Chazon Ish has died", Herut, October 25, 1953, p. 1. "Multitudes escort the Chazon Ish to eternal rest", HaTzofeh, October 26, 1953, p. 1. "Crowds paid their final respects to the late 'Chazon Ish'", Herut, October 26, 1953, p. 4. According to this report, nearly 30,000 people attended the funeral, and hundreds of the Chazon Ish's students tore kriyah behind his bier.
- ^ "Establishing 'Chazon Ish' Fund", Maariv, November 17, 1953.
- ^ Chazon Ish, Even HaEzer, Hilkhot Ishut, Siman 27:20.
- ^ Chazon Ish, Even HaEzer, Hilkhot Ishut, Siman 27:20, HebraBooks digital page 91.
- ^ Kovetz Igrot, vol. 1
- ^ Kovetz Igrot, vol. 1, Letter 32.
- ^ Shlomo Cohen, Pe’er HaDor, cited in Rafael Halperin, BeMekhitzat HaChazon Ish, p. 18.
- ^ Yavrov (on behalf of the nephew), Ma’aseh Ish, vol. 3, p. 172.
- ^ Letter from Rabbi Yosef Dov HaLevi Soloveitchik to Chaim Grade, September 21, 1969.
- ^ See: Aryeh Leib Friedman, "Tzidkat HaTzaddik: Laws gathered from Rishonim and Acharonim on textual variations in STaM script," Jerusalem, 1973; 2nd edition, 1988 – includes letters from the Chazon Ish.
- ^ Sorsky, "HaChazon Ish BeDorotav", pp. 65–66. For more on his meticulous observance, see there.
- ^ See article "Netan Sa'ah VeNatal Sa'ah – Method of the Chazon Ish: Borei Zeriah Only."
- ^ Sorsky, "HaChazon Ish BeDorotav", p. 66.
- ^ Maariv, "Second Purim line in Bnei Brak, which practices like a walled city," 21 March 1962.
- ^ Zohar Amar, Etrogim of the Land of Israel, 2010, p. 61. He writes there that there is no clear answer to the question of the originality of the Chazon Ish’s etrogim.
- ^ Source: Israel | Literature
- ^ "Biur Halakha", Siman 271, Se’if 13.
- ^ Binyamin Brown, The Chazon Ish, pp. 424–440.
- ^ Chazon Ish, Orach Chaim, Tractate Rosh Hashanah, Siman 138, letter 5.
- ^ Title also accepted by Binyamin Brown, scholar of his thought and persona, though not universally agreed upon: Shlomo Tikochinski believes that the fact that the Chazon Ish is not mentioned in the contemporary Haredi press testifies strongly that he was not the one "steering the ship" of Haredi Jewry. Tikochinski, "The Vision and Its Limits," Akdamot 27 (2012), pp. 253–263.
- ^ Binyamin Brown, "To Bring Eternal Justice and to Seal a Vision," Akdamot 28 (Adar 5773), pp. 187–194.
- ^ Kovetz Igrot Chazon Ish, vol. 3, letter 65.
- ^ Such as his nephews Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky and Rabbi Nissim Karelitz, and the group of students who accepted the leadership of his nephew Rabbi Chaim Greineman, including Rabbi Yehuda Boyar, Rabbi Dov Landau, and Rabbi Yechezkel Bartler.
- ^ See scanned handwritten letter: http://bh.hevre.co.il/forum/topic.asp?whichpage=8&topic_id=2023473
- ^ Rav Moshe Zvi Neria, “Between RAY”A and Chazon,” in his book "In the Field of the RAY”A", Bnei Brak: Tzela, 1991.
- ^ Rav Moshe Zvi Neria, "In the Field of the RAY”A", Kfar HaRoeh, 1991, pp. 233–248; see also Rav Avraham Horowitz, “Ways of Our Teacher.”
- ^ Besides the chapter “Between RAY”A and Chazon” in Rav Moshe Zvi Neria’s book "In the Field of the RAY”A", see also full books: (supportive side): M.Z. Neria, “RAY”A and Chazon: On Halachic Correspondence and Respect Between Maran Rabbi A.I. Kook and Maran Rabbi A.Y. Karelitz (Chazon Ish)”, Tel Aviv–Jaffa, 1982; (opposing side): Yoel Elchanan, “They Speak the Vision of Their Hearts: On the True Attitude of Maran the Chazon Ish Toward Rav Kook,” Petach Tikva 2013.
- ^ B. Brown, “The Chazon Ish,” pp. 220–227. There he also summarizes both sides’ testimonies about statements and actions of the Chazon Ish regarding Rav Kook.
- ^ Kovetz Igrot I:154
- ^ Emunah U'Bitachon 3:3
- ^ B. Brown, “The Chazon Ish,” Chapter 2 in Gate Two: “The Chazon Ish’s Polemic Against the Mussar Movement,” pp. 130–170. Brown also cites responses from rabbis who support the Mussar Movement but also revere the Chazon Ish, who say “it is a mistake of those who thought the Chazon Ish opposed the Mussar method,” and “on the contrary, he supported it wholeheartedly” (note 104).
- ^ Chapter 4, sections 18–19, and in the censored part printed in Ginzei and Responsa Chazon Ish, vol. 1, p. 107.
- ^ Yavrov, Maaseh Ish, vol. 3, p. 72.
- ^ See B. Brown, The Chazon Ish, p. 181. Some even claimed he wore festive clothing to mark the day of the excommunication of Hasidism (Nathan Kamenetsky, Making of a Gadol, p. 136), but this was denied by Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky (Dov Eliach, Besod Siach, p. 72).
- ^ Yavrov, Maaseh Ish, vol. 4, p. 229.
- ^ Rabbi Avraham Horowitz, Orchot Rabbeinu, vol. 5, p. 184.
- ^ Brown, The Chazon Ish, pp. 179–186.
- ^ Kovetz Igrot, vol. 2, letter 133.
- ^ Emunah u’Bitachon, ch. 1, sec. 8.
- ^ Kfar Haroeh, Emek Hefer Regional Council website (broken link, retrieved 7.6.2021).
- ^ For further information on the customs of this synagogue and the Hazon Ish’s rulings, see: Elchanan Cohen, Customs of the Hazon Ish Synagogue (Lederman), Bnei Brak, 2010.
- ^ Haaretz, “Hazon Ish Street inaugurated in Tel Aviv,” 30 June 1959, p. 47.
- ^ Or Alexandrovich, "Paper Boundaries: The Erased History of Neve Shalom Neighborhood", Theory and Criticism, 41, Summer 2013, p. 169, note 5.
- ^ Ministry of Tourism allocates approx. NIS 340 million to local authorities for the development of public tourism infrastructure, 11 January 2023.
- ^ Hazon Ish Heritage House Visitors Center
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