Shu"t She'eris Yisrael
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1872 CE–1962 CE · Acharonim · Jerusalem
Born in Turobin, Poland, he immigrated to Eretz Yisrael as a child and studied at the Chassidic Yeshiva Chayyei Olam in Jerusalem. He served as av beit din of the Chassidic Beis Din in Jerusalem (founded by R' Shneur Zalman Fradkin, the Toras Chessed) from 1922–1931, and later as a dayan of the Edah HaChareidis. He was the Ashkenazi Rav of the Old City of Jerusalem until its fall in the 1948 War of Independence, when he personally negotiated the surrender with the Arab Legion under a white flag. Author of She'eris Yisrael, a major collection of teshuvos covering all four sections of the Shulchan Aruch.
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Died in Jerusalem in 1962.
Jerusalem in the Acharonic era was a city of faded grandeur under Ottoman rule, its Jewish population small but spiritually magnetic. The community numbered only a few thousand—impoverished, taxed heavily, yet drawn magnetically to the holiest ground in Jewish memory. While Tzfat to the north blazed as the era's great center of Kabbalah, Jerusalem remained a place of pilgrimage and deep study, where mystical traditions took root in the cramped quarters of the Old City. The Arizal's teachings filtered southward from Tzfat, and scholars like Rabbi Chaim Vital and the Rashash engaged in intense Kabbalistic interpretation within Jerusalem's yeshivas, seeing in the city itself a living text to be decoded. The narrow, stone-paved streets of the Jewish Quarter, with their modest synagogues tucked into ancient buildings, hummed with Talmudic debate and mystical contemplation—a community materially struggling but spiritually exalted, sustained by the conviction that Jerusalem's very stones held redemptive power.
# Jerusalem Jerusalem has remained the spiritual and intellectual heart of Jewish learning across nearly two thousand years of exile, diaspora, and return. Perched on the stony hills of Judea, this ancient city—ruled by Romans, Byzantine Christians, Muslim caliphates, Crusaders, Ottomans, and finally restored to Jewish sovereignty in 1948—never ceased to draw sages seeking to study Torah in the very place where the Second Temple once stood. The Jewish community here, though often small and struggling under foreign rule, maintained an unbroken chain of learning and mysticism: the city's narrow stone alleyways in the Old City's Jewish Quarter became pathways to yeshivas where kabbalah flourished, especially from the sixteenth century onward when mystical teachings transformed the study of Jewish law and theology. The climate is cool and dry on the heights, with Jerusalem's limestone buildings glowing pale gold in the Mediterranean sun. What made Jerusalem irreplaceable was not merely its holy history but the conviction that studying and teaching Torah within its walls carried cosmic significance—that the city itself was a living connection to revelation. Today, Jerusalem pulses with dozens of major yeshivas and study halls, their students debating Talmud in the same streets where Jewish learning has never truly been interrupted.
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