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The day of the wunderrebbe

'He looked into my eyes and told me things only I knew'

February 17, 2011 13:29
Audience: Rabbi Taub speaks to a young visitor

ByJonathan Kalmus, Jonathan Kalmus

3 min read

At a private house in Whitefield, north Manchester, on Sunday, people were spilling out of the front door, crowding onto the path, and queuing, in their hundreds, for more than four hours.

The attraction? A sweet-faced, bearded rabbi, Moshe Taub, who has electrified communities up and down the country.

Visits from dynastic rabbinical leaders are commonplace in the strictly Orthodox community. But Rabbi Taub, the Kalover Rebbe, is different. His Hungarian family of Chasidic Jews, representing generation upon generation of Torah-true rabbis, was all but wiped out in the Holocaust. The rabbi, now in his early 70s, was born on the Hungarian border with Romania while his parents were on the run from the Nazis.

Post-war, the survivors of the Kalover sect vowed to share their Chasidic teachings with non-observant or secular Jews.