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Israel Denderovich

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Israel Denderovich
Personal
Born1978
Jerusalem, Israel
SpouseHannah Miller
ParentsMoses Chaim Denderovich (father)
Batsheva Segal (mother)
EducationSfas Emes Yeshiva
Known forJerusalem Talmud research, religious publications
OccupationRabbi, Torah scholar, author, editor

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Israel Denderovich (Yiddish: דענדעראוויטש; born 1978) is an Israeli rabbi, Torah scholar, author, and editor specializing in Jerusalem Talmud research.

Biography

Denderovich was born in Jerusalem to Rabbi Moses Chaim Denderovich, head of the Sfas Emes Yeshiva for youth and member of Ger Hasidism's education committee. His mother Batsheva is the daughter of Rabbi Chaim Shalom Halevi Segal of the Harry Fischel Institute. In 2000, he relocated to Arad, Israel, where he joined the Jerusalem Talmud Research Institute. There, he contributed to editing the "Darchei Simcha" edition of various Talmudic tractates. He later became a lecturer for the "Kol HaDaf" recorded learning system, teaching Jerusalem Talmud alongside Rabbi Michal Zilber.

Denderovich's research focuses on Talmudic analysis and religious folklore. His articles have appeared in numerous scholarly journals including Moriah, Yeshurun, HaMa'ayan, and Kovetz Beit Aharon V'Yisrael. His findings are cited in various religious reference works[1]. He serves as chief editor at the Nachalat Avot Institute and works as an editor for Oz veHadar publishing house.

Publications

Books

  • Hanehmadim MiZahav (2010) - on gold in Jewish sources
  • Hayu Devarim Me'Olam (2023)
  • Hayu Devarim Me'Olam 2 (2024)

Edited Works

Further reading

  • Grovais, Israel (June 22, 2023). "A Scholars' Platform" (in Hebrew). Mishpacha Magazine: 56–63

External links

Notes


This article "Israel Denderovich" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Israel Denderovich. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.

  1. For example: in the ArtScroll Schottenstein edition of the Babylonian Talmud, Tractate Sotah 49b; and in Mishnah Avot "Mishnat Reuven" by Mossad Harav Kook