Yehudah Aryeh Leib Alter

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Yehudah Aryeh Leib Alter
Gerrer Rebbe
Term 187011 January 1905
Full name Yehuda (Arye) Leib Alter
Main work שפת אמת Sfas Emes
Born 15 April, 1847
Warsaw
Died 11 January, 1905
Ger
Buried Ger
Dynasty Ger
Predecessor Chanoch Heynekh of Aleksander
Successor Avrohom Mordechai Alter
Father Avrohom Mordechai Alter
Mother Ester Landsztajn
Wife 1 Yocheved Rivka Kaminer
Issue 1 Avrohom Mordechai Alter
Yitschok Myer Alter
Moshe Betsalel Alter
Chanokh Chayim Alter
Feyge Lewin
Yisroel Alter
Nechemya Alter
Menachem Mendl Alter
Noach Alter
Esther Biderman
Wife 2 Reyzl Halberstam


Yehudah Aryeh Leib Alter (1847 - 1905), also known by the title of his Torah book/s as the Sfas Emes (שפת אמת), was born in Warsaw, Poland and died in Góra Kalwaria, Poland. He was an Orthodox Judaism rabbi, who succeeded his grandfather, Chidushei Horim as the rabbi (ABD) of Ger and succeeded the Rebbe Reb Heynekh of Alexander, as rebbe of the Gerrer chasidim.

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He was born in 1847 and named Yehuda Leib; he was known to family and friends as Leybl. His father, Rabbi Abraham Mordka Alter, died when Yehudah Aryeh was only eight years old, and his mother died before that. Orphaned of both parents, he was brought up by his grandparents, Rabbi Yitschok Myer Alter and his wife. When he was about ten years old, his grandfather took him to visit the Kotsker Rebbe, an event which left a lifelong impression on him.

He married Yocheved Rivka, daughter of Reb Yidl (Yehuda) Kaminer. In order not to have the same name as his father-in-law, his own name was changed to Yehuda Arye Leib. he is said to have been attached to the name Yehuda, and was upset at not being able to use it as his name any longer.

When his grandfather, the Chidushei hoRim, died in 1866, many of the chasidim sought to bestow the mantle of leadership on eighteen-year-old Yehuda Arye Leib. He refused that posiiton, and leadership of the chasidim went to Rabbi Chanoch Heynekh of Aleksander. After the death of the latter in 1870 the chasidim succeeded in gaining Yehuda Arye Leib's assent to become their leader as rebbe.

During the Russo-Japanese War many of his young followers were drafted into the Russian Army and sent to the battlefields in Manchuria. Alter was very worried over these devotees and would constantly write to them. It began to be detrimental to his health. On 11 January 1905 (5 Shevat 5665) he died at the age of 57.

"When news of the Admor's petiroh spread, so many people rushed to Ger yesterday morning that although the railway dispatched extra trains there was hardly any space in the cars and thousands of people were still left without means to travel... One (tram)car with seating for 44 people held over 200, not even leaving any standing room, and in another car some people fainted as a result of the overcrowded conditions... When the time for tefillas Minchah arrived, all of the funeral goers, 20,000 in number, stood in a field and davened Minchah together... The brief words spoken by the Rav of Sochatshov made a powerful impression." [1]

He was succeeded as Gerrer Rebbe by his son Rabbi Avraham Mordechai Alter.

Following the Holocaust, the chasidus of Ger has become a large movement in the State of Israel and other countries.

Rabbi Yehuda Arye Leib was one of the greatest Torah scholars of his generation. His output was prodigious, and his works (all entitled Sfas Emes) deal with the legalistic Talmud, the ethics of Midrash, and mysticism of the Zohar. His Torah homilies as delivered to his chasidim, and arranged according to the weekly parsha and the Festivals, were the first to be published posthumously under the name Sfas Emes. The title was taken from the closing words of the final piece he wrote (Sfas Emes, Vaychi 5665). His novellae on many masechtos of the Talmud, and on Yore Deah, have been published under the same name.

Rabbi Avrohom of Sochatchov, author of the Avnei Nezer, and a leading Torah scholar, is said to have maintained two bookcases, one for Rishonim (earlier commentators) and another for the Acharonim (later ones). The volumes of the Sfas Emes, written in the late 1800s, were to be found in his bookcase containing the Rishonim. To study some portions of the Talmud without the Sfas Emes is unthinkable to the modern day scholar[2].

One of the greatest religious problems is that people fear having a relationship with God and consequently distance themselves from Him. Just as angels serve God without fear despite their lower status in comparison to God, so, too, human being should take their model (walk amongst them) and not be afraid of developing a relationship with God and serving Him. This represents a wholeness that we as human beings are capable of only if we think of ourselves as walking amongst angels. (Sefas Emes Parshat B'haalotcha 5636)

  • Arthur Green, The Language of Truth: The Torah Commentary of Sefat Emet (JPS 1998)
  • Articles by Dr. Yoram Jacobson
  • Exile and Redemption in Gur Hasidism (Heb.), Da'at, 2-3 (1978-1979), pp. 175-215.
  • Truth and Faith in Gur Hasidic Thought (Heb.), in: Studies in Jewish Mysticism, Philosophy and Ethical Literature Presented to Isaiah Tishby, Jerusalem 1986, pp. 593-616.
  • The Sanctity of the Mundane in the Hasidic School of Gur - Studies in the Understanding of the Sabbath in the Homilies of Sefat Emet (Heb.), in: Hasidism in Poland, Jerusalem 1994, pp. 241-277.
  • From Youth to Leadership and from Kabbalah to Hasidism - Stages in the Spiritual Development of the Author of Sefat Emet (Heb.), in: Rivkah Shatz-Uffenheimer Memorial Volume, II, Jerusalem 1996, pp. 429-446.
  • Primordial Chaos and Creation in the Thought of Gur Hasidism, or: the Sabbath that Preceded Creation (Polish), in Duchowosc Zydowska w Polsce, Krakow 2000, pp. 151-171.

  1. Yitzchak Meir Alter (1798-1866)
  2. Yehudah Aryeh Leib Alter (1847-1905)
  3. Avraham Mordechai Alter (1866-1948)
  4. Yisrael Alter (1895-1977)
  5. Simchah Bunim Alter (1898-1992)
  6. Pinchas Menachem Alter (1926-1996)
  7. Yaakov Aryeh Alter (b. 1939)

  1. ^ http://chareidi.shemayisrael.com/archives5765/KDS65features2.htm
  2. ^ Rabbi Menachem Lubinsky, in the Jewish Observer

Preceded by
(Rebbe Reb Heynekh of Aleksander)
Gerrer Rebbe
18701905
Succeeded by
Avrohom Mordechai Alter
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