Radomsko (Radomsk), Solomon Ha-Kohen Rabinowich of

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RADOMSKO (Radomsk), SOLOMON HA-KOHEN RABINOWICH OF

RADOMSKO (Radomsk ), SOLOMON HA-KOHEN RABINOWICH OF (1803–1866), ?asidic ?addik. Solomon studied in the yeshivah of Piotrkow under Abraham ?evi, author of the responsa Berit Avraham (1819). His father educated him in ?asidism. In his youth he joined Meir of *Apta, leader of the popular trend in Polish ?asidism after the death of *Jacob Isaac ha-?ozeh ("the Seer") of Lublin. In 1834 Solomon was appointed rabbi of Radomsk, and from 1843 he was accepted as an ?asidic rabbi. Solomon's teachings were in the spirit of the popular trend of Polish ?asidism. He engaged in public affairs and worked on behalf of the poor of his town. His striking personality, his enthusiastic way of praying, and his witty sayings attracted to him many disciples, among them the ?asid and philosopher Aaron *Marcus (Verus) and the physician ?ayyim David Bernard of Piotrkow. Solomon's book, Tiferet Shelomo (1867–69), is considered one of the classic works of Polish ?asidism. His successor was abraham issachar ha-kohen (d. 1892), author of ?esed le-Avraham (1893–95), who in turn was succeeded by his son ezekiel ha-kohen (d. 1911), author of Keneset Ye?ezkel (1913). The last of the ?asidic rabbis of Radomsk in Poland before the Holocaust was solomon enoch ha-kohen (d. 1942), famous for his establishment of a network of yeshivot called Keter Torah. He was murdered in the Warsaw ghetto. His novellae and those of his son-in-law David Moses, who was killed at the same time, were collected in the book Shiv?ei Kohen (1953).

bibliography:

I.M. Rabinowitz, Ohel Shelomo (1924); idem, Ateret Sholomo (1926); A. Marcus (Verus), Der Chassidismus (1901), 363–5; Sefer Yizkor le-Kehillat Radomsk ve-ha-Sevivah (1967), 22–26, 75–106, 110–4.

[Zvi Meir Rabinowitz]

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