Menachem Mendel Monsohn

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Menachem Mendel Monsohn
Mendel and Zipporah Monsohn
BornOctober 13, 1895
Jerusalem, Ottoman Syria
DiedSeptember 3, 1953
Brooklyn, New York
OccupationRabbi
SpouseZipporah Yehudit (Silberman) Monsohn
ChildrenEsther (Schwartz), Shmuel [Samuel Stanford] Manson, Shimon [Simon] Manson, Chaya Masha Gittel [Marsha] (Bunis), Raytse [Rose] (Aronson)

Rabbi Menachem Mendel Monsohn (Hebrew: מנחם מענדל מאנזאהן‎; October 13, 1895 – September 3, 1953) was a member of the Monsohn family of Jerusalem, born in the Old City of Jerusalem. He was a great-grandson of Abraham-Leib Monsohn, one of the founders of the Ashkenazi Old Yishuv of Jerusalem in the early nineteenth century, and a son of Abraham-Leib Monsohn II, a founder of the A.L. Monsohn Lithography in Jerusalem. [1] After marrying, Monsohn lived with his family in the Batei Broide section of Nachlaot, Jerusalem, which provided housing for rabbis and their families. In 1924 Monsohn immigrated to the United States with a group of rabbis from Eretz Israel,[2] settling in Brooklyn, New York, where he served as rabbi of Congregation Ezrath Israel on Gates Avenue, in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section,[3] until his death in 1953.[4] His book, Mi-Peninei Ha-Rambam: Bi’ur ‘al ha-Torah, a compendium of Maimonides’ commentaries on the Pentateuch, arranged by the compiler in order of the Torah chapters, first appeared in Brooklyn c.1925 and was reprinted there several times in the early 1930s.[5] In 2006 it was re-released by Mossad Harav Kook of Jerusalem,[6] which also published an English translation, Pearls of the Rambam[7] (tr. Avraham Berkovits) c. 2008. Some of the early editions included a Yiddish introduction to the life of Maimonides.[8]

Expanded description[edit]

Monsohn’s intellectual prowess became apparent at an early age: at 16 he received rabbinical ordination (semikhah) from Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook, the first Ashkenazic chief rabbi of British Mandatory Palestine;[9] diverging from his usual practice, Rabbi Kook gave Monsohn an approbation to be published in his Mi-Peninei Ha-Rambam.[10] To earn a living, for a while Monsohn worked at the lithographic press established in Jerusalem by his father and uncle. But he objected to the press's printing of a calendar for one of the Jerusalem churches and he quit the press.[11] After establishing himself as a rabbi in Brooklyn, New York, Monsohn brought his wife, Zipporah Yehudit (Chipe, née Silberman, a descendant of Yitschak Shatz/Schwartz and Baruch-Mordechai Schwartz,[12] who immigrated to Jerusalem from Nesvizh in the early 19th century)[13] and their Jerusalem-born children, Eshke (Esther Schwartz, wife of Max Schwartz), Shmuel (Samuel Stanford Manson), Shimon (Simon Manson), and Chaya Masha Gitl (Marsha Bunis, wife of Jacob Bunis) to Brooklyn; their daughter Raytse (Rose Aronson, wife of Matthew Aronson) was born there. In Brooklyn, Monsohn eked out a living, devoting most of his time to work on his Mi-Penine Ha-Rambam, which he printed himself, using the skills acquired at his father’s press. In all editions of his book—published in Hebrew (as מפניני הרמב"ם) in Brooklyn, New York in 1932, 1934, 1936, 1937, 1939 and in Jerusalem in 2006, and in English (as Pearls of the Rambam) in Jerusalem, 2008—Monsohn noted that he was born in Jerusalem.[14]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Monzon, Aryeh (2007). When Menachem Mendel was working in the family's lithography the fingers of his right hand were maimed in the press and they never healed properly (2007). The Monzon Family History in Jerusalem. Jerusalem : The author.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ "U.S., Atlantic Ports Passenger Lists, 1820-1873 and 1893-1959 forMendel Monsohn".
  3. ^ Monsohn, Mendel (1931). Mi-peninei haRambam :beʼur ʻal ha-Torah. Brooklyn, NY :Poster Press. OCLC 19152824.
  4. ^ Levitt, Ellen (2009). The Lost Synagogues of Brooklyn. New Haven, CT : Avotaynu. OCLC 301948154.
  5. ^ Monsohn, Mendel (1931). Mi-peninei haRambam :beʼur ʻal ha-Torah. Brooklyn, NY :Poster Press. OCLC 19152824.
  6. ^ Monsohn, Mendel (2006). Mi-penine ha-Rambam : Leshon ha-Rambam mi-Yad-ha-hazakah lef -seder pesuke ha-torah. Yerushalayim : Hotsa’at Mosad Ha-Rav Kuk. OCLC 74100148.
  7. ^ Monsohn, Menachem Mendel (2008). Pearls of the Rambam : Maimonides' Commentary on the Torah. Jerusalem : Mosad Harav Kook.
  8. ^ Monsohn, Mendel (1937). Dem Rambams hisṭori un zayn farzog tsu zayne ḳinder. Brooklyn, NY : Moinester. OCLC 313494081.
  9. ^ "Yitzchok Shteierman, "Harav Menachem Mendel Monsohn", Hamodia (Brooklyn, New York, May 13, 2015), 50".
  10. ^ Monsohn, Mendel (1931). Mi-peninei haRambam :beʼur ʻal ha-Torah. Brooklyn, NY :Poster Press. OCLC 19152824.
  11. ^ Monzon, Arye (2007). The Monzon Family History in Jerusalem. Jerusalem : The author.[permanent dead link]
  12. ^ Lavi, Shay (2012). Elias Effendi: Eliahu Honig of Jerusalem, his era, communal activities and family, 1860-1924. Tel Mond : Honig Family Foundation.
  13. ^ "The Montefiore Censuses 1849" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-05-18.
  14. ^ Monsohn, Mendel (1931). Mi-peninei haRambam :beʼur ʻal ha-Torah. Brooklyn, NY :Poster Press. OCLC 19152824.