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Amram Taub

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Amram[1] Taub (Template:Lang-he; c. 1917 – 2007) was the rabbi of over fifty years[citation needed] of Congregation Arugas Habosem (קהל ערוגת הבשם; Ashkenazi pronunciation: Kehal Arugas HaBosem), a synagogue in the Park Heights neighborhood[citation needed] of Baltimore, Maryland.[2] Taub was called the "Brider Rebbe", after his paternal ancestor Rabbi Aharon Tzvi Taub, the Hasidic rebbe of Brid in Hungary.[2]

Taub was born about 1917 in Khust, Hungary (now Ukraine) as the eldest child of his father, Shmuel David, a grandson of the rebbe of Brid, and to his mother Yocheved Yitl née Grunwald, whose father was part of the Grunwald rabbinic family. Shmuel David, originally from Berehovo, had studied before their marriage under her uncle, Rabbi Moshe Grunwald (called the "Arugas HaBosem"), the rabbi of Khust. After his birth, Taub's parents removed from Khust and later settled in Muzhay, Hungary (now Muzhiyevo, Ukraine) where they lived until the Holocaust. In his teens, Taub studied in the yeshivot of Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum, who later became the Satmar Rebbe, first in Kruli (Carei), then in Satmar (Satu Mare).[2]

At age eighteen, Taub married Sarah Chanah Leah, the only daughter of Elimelech Lieber, a wealthy resident of Apsha near Solotvyno in the Maramureș region who was a trusted friend of Rabbi Chaim Tzvi Teitelbaum, the rabbi of nearby Sighet and the brother of the rabbi of Satmar. Having earned the admiration of the rabbi of Solotvyno and the surrounding villages, Rabbi Eisik Halberstam (the rabbi of Sighet's son-in-law),[citation needed] he was appointed as the dayan (rabbinical judge) of the village of Behutz at the age of twenty, where he remained for about two years until he became, for a short while, a dayan in Solotvyno itself; this was his last position before the Holocaust.[2]

During the Holocaust, Taub, his wife and their five children were taken to Auschwitz; he alone survived. His parents, who were then in the ghetto in Berehovo, as well as his maternal grandfather and his father-in-law were also taken to Auschwitz in 1944 and killed.[2]

In the 1950s the Rebbe Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum asked him to come to Baltimore, where he established this synagogue.[citation needed]

Taub gained a reputation for showing a love of people and an interest in improving their lives, for making peace between people, and for his joy in life and the opportunities it afforded for doing God's will. He married six times, the last time in 1993.[citation needed]

He died on July 14, 2007,[3] and was buried in Kiryas Joel, New York, next to Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum.[citation needed]

He was succeeded as Brider Rebbe and as Rabbi of the congregation, by his son, R' Shaya Taub, and as assistant rabbi of the synagogue by his great-nephew, Aron Tzvi Taub.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ Also spelled Amrom
  2. ^ a b c d e Amsel, Meir (1974). Sheʼelot u-teshuvot ha-maor ve-zikaron ba-sefer (in Hebrew). New York. pp. 360–362. OCLC 123001618.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) title in Hebrew: שו"ת המאור וזכרון בספר
  3. ^ "Rav Amrom Taub ZATZAL". Yeshiva World News. July 14, 2007. Retrieved August 18, 2014.