Rabbi Asher Arieli (born 1957) is an Israeli rabbi and the senior lecturer at the Mir Yeshiva in Israel. He is globally renowned for his lectures on Talmud and is widely recognized as a leading figure in the haredi community. He presently delivers the largest Talmudic lecture by attendance in the world with over 1000 daily attendees. His primary, daily shiur begins at 12:20pm and is streamed live at Kol Haloshon.
Rabbi Asher Arieli | |
---|---|
Title | Rabbi Asher Arieli |
Personal | |
Born | 1957 |
Religion | Judaism |
Spouse | Malka Arieli |
Denomination | Orthodox |
Position | Senior Lecturer |
Yeshiva | Mir Yeshiva |
Residence | Jerusalem, Israel |
Family life
editRabbi Asher Arieli is married to Rebbetzin Malka, the daughter of Hagaon Rabbi Nachum Partzovitz, the late rosh yeshiva of Mir. Rabbi Arieli is the son of rabbi Chaim Yaakov Arieli, author of Be'er Yaakov (באר יעקב). Rabbi Chaim Yaakov Arieli was the son of Rabbi Yitzhak Arieli, author of Einaim L'Mishpat (עינים למשפט) and mashgiach ruchani of Mercaz HaRav. Rabbi Mordechai Ilan, the son-in-law of Rabbi Yitzhak Arieli is Asher's paternal uncle. Reb Chaim Yaakov's wife[1] is the sister of rabbi Moshe Sternbuch, as are the wives of rabbi Meshulam Dovid Soloveitchik and Dayan Chanoch Ehrentreu making the three rabbis his uncles. Reb Asher's brother Rabbi Shlomo Arieli is the author of a critical edition of the novellae of rabbi Akiva Eiger.
Lectures
editRabbi Arieli has delivered guest lectures for such events as the Agudat Yisrael annual Yarchei Kallah.[2][3] The last 3 cycles of Arieli's lectures on most of the major tractates are available by telephone[4] and for download.[5]
Although Rabbi Arieli daily morning lectures are in Yiddish, his mother tongue is Hebrew and he only learnt Yiddish in order to understand the lectures which he heard in the Mir Yeshiva.[6] Lectures in the Mir are often given in Yiddish. One of his chavrusas in Ponevezh, rabbi Avrohom Horovitz, taught him Yiddish.
Since the beginning of the fall semester of 2022, Rabbi Arieli gives his lectures twice daily, adding a second lecture at night. The night lectures are exactly the same as the morning lectures just in hebrew, allowing those more fluent in hebrew to attend in a language they understand.
Students
editSeveral of Rabbi Arieli's students, such as Rabbis Yoel Rabin, Yehudah Wagshal, Shmuli Wolman, Yaakov Moshe Katz,[7] Binyomin Cohen, Elimelech Reznick, Moshe Ahron Friedman, Yosef Elefant, Eli Friedman, and Shamai Bernstein give lectures in the Mir Yeshiva for English-speaking audiences, mainly in the Beis Yeshaya building of Mir. All these students do not wear ties when they lecture, out of deference to Rabbi Arieli who doesn't wear a tie when he lectures out of modesty. Rabbi Reuven Schwartz, Pinchas Braunstein, Yitzchak Meir Oksenberg, Yisroel Feder and Eitan Yaffan are also distinguished talmidim of Rabbi Arieli. Rabbi Yechiel Spero, author of "Touched by a Story" is also a student of Rabbi Arieli.[8]
Sources
edit- ^ Meller, Shimon Yosef (1 January 2007). The Brisker Rav: The Life and Times of Maran HaGaon ... Yitzchok Ze'ev HaLevi Soloveichik Zt"l : Including Stories of the Great City of Brisk from Its Establishment as a Torah Center Until Its Destruction During the Holocaust. Feldheim Publishers. ISBN 9781583309698 – via Google Books.
- ^ "theyeshivaworld.com". [permanent dead link ]
- ^ "Dei'ah veDibur - Information & Insight - NEWS". Archived from the original on 25 May 2011. Retrieved 20 April 2009.
- ^ Scharf, Menasche (27 December 2001). "Our Little Corner: Local and other news round up - Read all about it here". Our Little Corner. Retrieved 15 May 2016.
- ^ "Kol Haloshon - Harav Osher Arieli - Harav Asher Ari'eli". www.kolhalashon.com. Retrieved 6 August 2023.
- ^ "Avodah V3 #20". www.aishdas.org.
- ^ "Rav Yaakov Moshe Katz website". Archived from the original on 12 February 2019. Retrieved 11 February 2019.
- ^ Spero, Yechiel (2003). Touched by a Story: Inspiring Stories Retold by a Master Teacher. Mesorah Publications. ISBN 9781578193820.
External links
editMedia related to Asher Arieli at Wikimedia Commons