Shmuel Dovid Halberstam

Rabbi Shmiel Dovid Halberstam, (Hebrew: שמואל דוד הלברשטאם), also known as the Sanz-Klausenberger Rebbe, is the younger son and one of the successors of Rabbi Yekusiel Yehudah Halberstam, the previous Klausenberger Rebbe. He resides in Brooklyn, New York.

Shmuel Dovid Halberstam
Rabbi Samuel Duvid Halberstam, Sanz-Klausenburger Rebbe
TitleSanz-Klausenberger Rebbe
Personal
Born
Shmiel David Halberstam
ReligionJudaism
SpouseTzipora Weider
Parents
  • Rabbi Yekusiel Yehudah Halberstam (father)
  • Chaya Nechama Ungar (mother)
Jewish leader
PredecessorRabbi Yekusiel Yehudah Halberstam
Began1994
Endedpresent
DynastyKlausenberg

Biography

He is one of seven children born in his father's second marriage to Chaya Nechama Ungar, daughter of the Nitra Rav, Rabbi Shmuel Dovid Ungar.[1] He was named after his mother's father, who died during the Holocaust. His older brother, Rabbi Zvi Elimelech Halberstam, is the Sanzer Rebbe of Israel, and he also has five sisters. He married Tzipora Weider, daughter of Rabbi Aharon Wieder, the Linzer Rav, who was a long-time dayan in the Klausenberger beis din (rabbinical court) in America.[2]

Rabbi Halberstam is the leader of North American operations for the Mifal HaShas Torah study network founded by his father, and honoree president of the Kolel Chibas Yerushalayim charity organization in the name of Reb Meir Baal HaNess.

He is known for his effusive and lengthy prayers.

gollark: People didn't actually know they caused lung cancer for a while.
gollark: So was radium.
gollark: That's no longer very cool™.
gollark: "Drugs" are poorly defined. Caffeine is drugs. Alcohol is drugs and oddly popular despite its badness.
gollark: To be fair, the lasers are apparently only to confuse the missiles' tracking systems, not destroy them.

See also

  • Klausenberg (Hasidic dynasty)
  • Sanz (Hasidic dynasty)

References

  1. Landesman, Yeruchem. The Wedding that Changed Despair to Hope. Mishpacha, 11 November 2009, pp. 30-34.
  2. Donn, Yochonon. The Linzer Rav, Harav Aharon Wieder, zt"l. Hamodia American News, 25 March 2010, p. B55.


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