Auction 6 Passover Auction! Special Collection
Mar 10, 2021
USA
 17 Perlman Dr. Suite 204 Spring Valley NY 10977
The auction has ended

LOT 42:

Historic letter by Rabbi Herman Neuberger 1961

catalog
  Previous item
Next item 
Sold for: $100
Start price:
$ 100
Auction house commission: 22%
tags:

Historic letter by Rabbi Herman Neuberger 1961

Herman Naftali Neuberger (26 June 1918 – 21 October 2005) was an Orthodox rabbi and leader "for over half a century." He was the brother of Albert Neuberger CBE FRS FRCP.

That's many levels of nerdy-cool! You have Rabbis Neuberger, Elberg and Weinberg in one letter.
Born in Hassfurt, northern Bavaria, he was the son of Meir and Bertha Neuberger (née Hiller), the youngest of three children His parents hired a teacher, or melamed, to teach him about his heritage and the Torah.
When Herman was eight years old, the Neubergers moved to Würzburg with its sizeable Jewish community so that the three children could prosper and learn. When Herman was only 13, a few weeks after his bar mitzvah, his father died. While in Würzburg the young teenager met Rabbi Shamshon Rafael Weiss, an affluent Torah scholar who became his mentor. Rabbi Weiss convinced him that the best place for him to be was one of the larger yeshivas, so he traveled to Poland to learn in the Mir Yeshiva.
By 1938, Anti-Semitism was growing in Europe due to the rise of the Nazis. Rabbi Neuberger had a relative in New York who was able to send him immigration papers to come to America. Not wanting to leave others behind, he arranged for papers for some of his close relatives too. As good fate would have it, Mrs. Bertha Neuberger and her two other children had already escaped. He also helped Rabbi Dovid Kronglass, who would later become the Mashgiach of Ner Israel, escape.
In America
On a visit to Baltimore, the young yeshiva student met Rabbi Yaakov Yitzchok Ruderman, who a few years prior had started a small yeshiva in a local synagogue, named Ner Israel. Inspired by the great man, Rabbi Neuberger decided to stay in Baltimore and learn in the yeshiva full-time. At that time, the Yeshiva was only five years old and had fewer than forty students. By 1941 the young scholar was already on the Board. He helped with administrative functions and arranged for the construction of a new school building on Garrison Blvd.
Starting a yeshiva
In 1942, Rabbi Neuberger married Judy Kramer, Rabbi Ruderman's sister in-law They remained married until her death in 1994. During these early years, Rabbi Neuberger helped develop the yeshiva become a true center for Torah.
Saving a nation
He took part in the rescue of Persian Jewry. In 1975 the Shah was still in power in Iran and although the country was secular, Jews had few opportunities to study Torah. Rabbi Neuberger brought a small group of Iranian youngsters to the Yeshiva with the intent that they would go back to Iran after receiving their Rabbinnical degrees to become educators. Before the plan began to bear fruit, it was 1979 and the Ayatollahs took command creating a more awkward situation for Persian Jews. Through a series of connections, Rabbi Neuberger worked to help over 60,000 Jews escape from Iran in an operation still in effect today


catalog
  Previous item
Next item