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Yeshivas in World War II information


Rabbi Grodzinski (right) and the rosh yeshiva of the Grodno Yeshiva, Rabbi Shimon Shkop

After the German invasion of Poland in World War II and the division of Poland between Germany and the Soviet Union, many yeshivas (Jewish schools of Torah study, generally for boys and men) that had previously been part of Poland found themselves under Soviet communist rule, which did not tolerate religious institutions. The yeshivas therefore escaped to Vilnius in Lithuania on the advice of Rabbi Chaim Ozer Grodzinski. In Lithuania, the yeshivas were able to function fully for over a year and many of the students survived the Holocaust because of their taking refuge there, either because they managed to escape from there or because they were ultimately deported to other areas of Russia that the Nazis did not reach. Many students, however, did not manage to escape and were killed by the Nazis or their Lithuanian collaborators.

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Yeshivas in World War II

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Telshe Yeshiva

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Yeshivas Ner Yisroel

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Finkel's yeshiva, the Slabodka Yeshiva. Rabbi Dovid Kronglass, of the Mirrer Yeshiva in Europe (and during World War II in Shanghai) was the yeshiva's first...

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Volozhin Yeshiva

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Radin Yeshiva

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Ramailes Yeshiva

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Ponevezh Yeshiva

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considered one of the leading Litvish yeshivas in Israel. Founded in 1908, the yeshiva was originally located in city of Panevėžys (Ponevezh), Lithuania...

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Chachmei Lublin Yeshiva

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Lomza Yeshiva

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Yaakov Kamenetsky

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Gershon Liebman

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Brisk tradition and Soloveitchik dynasty

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authentic remnants of a pre-World War II Jewish Lithuania. His students include the late Rabbi Moshe Twersky Rebbi in Yeshivas Toras Moshe and Rabbi Yitzchok...

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Binyamin Zeilberger

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Yeruchom Levovitz

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orthodox Jewry in Europe was wiped out, along with their many yeshivas (Jewish schools of higher learning). One of the only yeshivas to survive as a...

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