Shemaryahu Yosef Chaim Kanievsky (
Hebrew: שמריהו יוסף חיים קַניֶבסקִי; January 8, 1928 – March 18, 2022) was an Israeli
Haredirabbi and posek.[2] He was a leading authority in Haredi Jewish society on legal and ethical practice.[3][4][5] Known as Gadol HaDor ("the greatest of his generation")[6] and the "Prince of Torah", much of his prominence came through
Torah education and advice about
Jewish law.[7][8]
Though Kanievsky held no formal community-wide post,[9] he was the de facto head of the
Lithuanian branch of
Haredi Judaism, revered as a consummate scholar of Jewish law and tradition, with unimpeachable rulings.[10]
Kanievsky became a major authority on all matters of Jewish law, authoring several books about Jewish legal writings.[7][15] He was notable even among Jewish scholars for annually learning the entire text of many sources of Jewish law, including not only the
Babylonian Talmud but also the less commonly studied
Jerusalem Talmud.[6][16]
Kanievsky was the official rabbi and spiritual guide for the non-profit organization
Belev Echad, which was founded in Israel in 2011 for the purpose of assisting sick and disabled children and adults.[15][17]
Starting around 2010, a controversy arose as to who would take control from the aging founder and director of
Bnei Brak's
Mayanei Hayeshua Medical Center,
Moshe Rothschild [
he]. Historically, the hospital had been managed by three distinct groups: A board of directors, an association of rabbis and public servants, and most influential of all, the "Halakhic Supervision Committee", a rabbinical committee consisting of
Shmuel Wosner,
Nissim Karelitz and
Yitzchok Zilberstein, with Yisrael Rand, a confidant of
Aharon Yehuda Leib Shteinman, serving as its secretary. Rothschild wanted his son Shlomo to become director, while the rabbinical committee thought him to be a poor choice. In 2013, Kanievsky wrote a letter of recommendation for Shlomo, with Shteinman and Wosner signing on. One year later, Kanievsky was persuaded to join the board of directors.[18]
From Shteinman's death in December 2017 until his own death, Kanievsky and
Ponevezh Yeshiva head
Gershon Edelstein were considered to be the leaders of the Israeli Haredi community.[19][20][21]
He was regarded as the preeminent leader of Israel's
non-hasidic ultra-Orthodox Jews.[7]
Halakhic rulings
In 2012, Kanievsky ruled that it is forbidden to possess or use a smartphone without individual permission from a
halakhic authority, and that owners are not allowed to sell their phones, but should instead burn them.[22][23][24][25][26] In 2015, he instructed
United Hatzalah paramedics that in the event of a terrorist attack, they should not treat the terrorists before the victims, even if the terrorist is more seriously injured, and they may even leave the terrorist to die.[27][28]
In 2017, Kanievsky ruled that reporting instances of sexual child abuse to the police is consistent with halakha (Jewish law).[30][31]
In 2011, he interpreted
Arab Spring uprisings as evidence that the Messiah might be near.[32] In 2015, following the
2014 Jerusalem synagogue attack, he repeatedly referred to the imminent arrival of the Messiah, and urged
diaspora Jews to make
aliyah (immigrate to Israel), reportedly resulting in the arrival of a substantial number of
French Jews.[33][34] In February 2020, shortly before the
Israeli legislative elections, it was reported by one rabbi that Kanievsky had stated that the coming of the Messiah was possibly imminent.[35]
Covid-19
At the beginning of the
COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, Kanievsky told his followers that the best ways to defeat the virus were to avoid lashon hara (gossiping about one's peers), to strengthen humility, and to place the needs of others before their own.[36] As a result of the discussion, he was visited, on March 15, by senior police officials who, with great respect, wanted to ask him of the importance of following the orders of medical professionals with regard to the outbreak.[36]
On March 29, after the ultra-Orthodox community was hit hard by the virus,[37] with Bnei Brak having a high percentage of coronavirus cases in Israel, relative to its population,[38] Kanievsky ruled that one who does not follow the Israeli Health Ministry's guidelines on
COVID-19 is in the position of a rodef, i. e., one who pursues another with intent to kill, a murderer.[39] He also ruled that telephones may be answered on
Shabbat to get COVID-19 test results, and that
minyanim must not meet at all during the pandemic – a stricter requirement than the
Health Ministry's rules, which at the time allowed congregations to meet outdoors as long as participants are at least two meters (6 feet) distant from each other.[40]
On October 2, 2020, Kanievsky was diagnosed with COVID-19.[41] On October 28, 2020, his physician said Kanievsky had recovered from the virus.[42]
Kanievsky endorsed vaccination for all, and wished experts success in the national campaign of vaccination.[43]
At one point in 2020, Rav Chaim advocated for Jewish academies to remain open. On the 11th of October, however, he rescinded.[44]
Death
Kanievsky died at his home in Bnei Brak due to a heart attack, on the Jewish holiday of
Shushan Purim on March 18, 2022, at the age of 94.[45][46][47] More than 800,000 mourners attended his funeral on March 20, 2022, making it one of the largest funerals in Israeli history, second only to
Ovadia Yosef's funeral which had more than 800,000 in October 2013.[48]
Commentary on Talmud Yerushalmi ("Be'ur") covering Berakhot through Nedarim (roughly 70% of the Jerusalem Talmud). Most of it is reprinted in the
Oz Vehadar edition of the Yerushalmi.
^Editor, Y. W. (April 8, 2020).
"Hagaon HaRav Chaim Kanievsky Makes 76th Annual Siyum On Entire Torah [PHOTOS]". The Yeshiva World. Retrieved February 23, 2023. {{
cite web}}: |last= has generic name (
help) "Hagaon HaRav Chaim Kanievsky made his annual Siyum on Kol HaTorah Kulah on Erev Pesach. This is reportedly his 76th Siyum cycle at which Rav Chaim completes Talmud Bavli, Talmud Yerushalmi, Nach, Medrash Rabba, Medrash Tanchuma, Tosefta, Sifra, Sifri, Mishnayos, Rambam, Tur, Shulchan Aruch, Mishnah Berurah, the Zohar among other Seforim." The total number of pages of text with commentary studied in-depth that year would presumably number over 15,000.
^Cohen, Yisrael (June 8, 2014).
"לאחר שנים: כך הוכרע קרב השליטה ב"מעייני הישועה" [Years Later: This Is How The Battle For Control Over 'Mayanei Hayeshua' Was Decided]. Kikar HaShabbat (in Hebrew). Retrieved May 22, 2022.