Chananya Yom Tov Lipa Goldman
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (February 2024) |
Chananya Yom Tov Lipa Goldman (1905/1907 – July 6, 1980) was a renowned Orthodox rabbi, dayan, and publisher in Hungary and the United States.
Goldman was born in Neupest (Hungarian: Újpest), a suburb of Budapest, Hungary. His father, Rabbi Yosef Goldman, was the chief rabbi and Av Beit Din of the Orthodox Jewish community. In 1926, he became a rabbi in Romania, and in 1934 in Bessarabia (then part of Romania). In 1938, after his father died, he was given his father's position as chief rabbi and Av Beit Din of the Orthodox Jewish community in Neupest.
To save his family from the 1944 Nazi invasion of Hungary, he obtained false papers that certified them as non-Jews, a ruse that enabled them to live on a farm disguised as gentiles and thereby escape deportation to concentration or death camps by the Nazis. After the war, Goldman's family lived in Hamburg, Germany for a period of time. In 1950, Goldman, his wife, and their eight children arrived in America aboard the Marine Shark.
In the United States, Goldman was a dayan and publisher of seforim. He published a Shas and various other seforim. His Shas was one of the most popular editions available at the time. Initially, he lived on the Lower East Side, Manhattan, then in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, and finally in Boro Park, Brooklyn, where he served as rabbi of a synagogue known as "Naipest" (namesake of his previous rabbinate, in Hungary). He died in Boro Park on July 6, 1980.
References
[edit]- Levine, Yitzchak. "Hooked On American Jewish History", The Jewish Press, December 6, 2006. Accessed 2008-03-11.
- Roth, Jake. "DP Rabbi, Family Dock, Full of Joy", The New York Times, 1949-04-06. Accessed 2008-03-11.(registration required)
- 1900s births
- 1980 deaths
- American book publishers (people)
- American booksellers
- American Orthodox rabbis
- Holocaust survivors
- Romanian Jews
- American people of Hungarian-Jewish descent
- Hungarian emigrants to the United States
- Hungarian Orthodox rabbis
- People from Újpest
- 20th-century American businesspeople
- 20th-century American rabbis
- Naturalized citizens of the United States