YUDE-LEYB TSIRLSON (JUDAH LEIB ZIRELSON) (December 23,
1859-September 23, 1942)
He was
born in Kozelits (Kozelets), Chernigov (Chernihiv) Province, Ukraine. He was educated in the Talmud and commentators,
and thanks to his immense talents, he mastered several European languages. In 1885 he sat for the examinations into the
rabbinate, and in 1907 he assumed a rabbinical post in Pryluky. In 1910 he was named chairman of the
rabbinical commission for religious Jewish affairs under Tsarist
authorities. During the Beilis trial in
1911, he published in the Russian press a protest against the blood libel. With the outbreak of WWI, he worked on behalf
of war victims and the homeless, and he continued his activities under the subsequent
Russian authorities. Through this work,
he became the chief rabbi of Bessarabia.
In 1922 he was elected deputy in the Romanian parliament, where he
appeared several times to gave speeches on the condition of Jewry, among other
items to support Hebrew and Yiddish as languages of instruction in Jewish
schools. In 1926 he was elected senator
from Kishinev. When the Senate
unlawfully did not support publication of his speech against Romanian
anti-Semitism in the official state archives, Tsirlson resigned his senatorial
post. He was among the most prominent
authorities in the Orthodox Jewish world.
He was a leader in Agudat Yisrael in Bessarabia and president of the
Orthodox Kenesia Gedola (World congress) in Vienna, among other positions. In 1920 he founded in Kishinev an Orthodox
Hebrew high school. Already in 1898 he
participated in the All-Russian Zionist conference in Warsaw and from that
point worked for the settlement in the land of Israel and for preparatory
agricultural training for those planning to settle the land, make aliya, and
build, which he expressed in the years before the Holocaust. He published essays in a variety of Hebrew-language
newspapers, such as: Hamagid (The
preacher), Hashavua (The week), Hamelits (The advocate), Hapeles (The balance), Hatsfira (The siren), and Hapisga (The summit). He published two religious works of questions
and answers, Gevul yehuda (Judah’s
territory) and Atse halevenon (The trees
of Lebanon), and a collection of essays and poems entitled Derekh haselula (The paved road); pamphlets in Russian on the
Russo-Japanese War and “soap bubbles” (a polemic work). In Yiddish he published essays in the Warsaw
Orthodox daily newspaper Der yud (The
Jew), in the Kishinev dailies Der morgn
(The morning), Der yud, and Unzer tsayt (Our time), and he also
published the pamphlets: Genug shlofn
(Enough sleep) on behalf of the Herzl Forest, Hilf far hilf (Help for help) on behalf of etrogs in the land of
Israel, Kol-koyre (Appeal) on behalf
of Agudat Yisrael, and Loy zo haderekh
(That’s not the way) concerning the death of Professor Jacob Israël de Haan. For a time he also published an Orthodox weekly
entitled Der funk (The spark) in
Kishinev. He was murdered in Kishinev at
age eighty-two with a portion of his community.
Sources: Zalmen Reyzen, Leksikon, vol. 3; American
Jewish Yearbook (1943); Sh. Z. Mozes, in Dos idishe vort (New York) (Iyar-Sivan [= April-June] 1961;
Tamuz-Av [= June-August] 1964); Ele
ezkara (These we remember), vol. 1 (New York, 1955/1956), pp. 164-76;
Shloyme Bikl, in Tog (New York)
(September 19, 1964).
Yankev Kahan
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