Yitzhak Aharon Korff
Grand Rabbi Yitzhak Aharon (Ira A.) Korff is the Rebbe of the Zvhil – Mezhbizh. Since 1975 he has been the Chaplain of the City of Boston (serving the Boston Police and Fire Departments, Mayor's Office, and other City departments and agencies) and spiritual leader of Congregation Bnai Jacob, Zvhil–Mezhbizh Beis Medrash of Boston, Miami and Jerusalem, Israel. He is a dayan (judge of Jewish law) of the BaDaTz Boston Beth din (rabbinical court), an affiliate of the Zvhil–Mezhbizh Beis Medrash,[1] Consul of the Republic of Austria and Head of Mission of the Austrian Consulate in Boston for New England, and Publisher of the Boston-based Jewish newspaper The Jewish Advocate.
Family
Grand Rabbi Korff is a direct descendant of the Baal Shem Tov, the 18th century founder of the Hasidic movement, through the Baal Shem Tov’s grandson Rabbi Boruch of Medzhybizh, founder of the Mezhbizh Hasidic dynasty. Rabbi Korff also descended from numerous other Hasidic dynasties, including Zlotshev, Chernobyl, Apt, Yampol and Karlin, as well as Zvhil.
He is also a descendant of the Chabad chasidic dynasty through the Chabad Mitler Rebbe's daughter and son-in-law Rabbi Yaakov Yisroel of Cherkass, son of Grand Rabbi Mordechai (Magid of Chernobyl).
His first wife, Shari Redstone, was the daughter of Sumner Redstone, Chairman of the Board and controlling shareholder of the Viacom and CBS Corporation media conglomerates.
The Rebbe's second wife, the Rebbetzin, is a native of Jerusalem and a descendant of the Baal Shem Tov and the Hasidic dynasties of Zvhil, Zlotshev, and Tshernobl. She is the daughter of the late Shomer Emunim Rebbe, Grand Rabbi Avrohom Chayim Roth of Jerusalem and Bnei Brak, who was the son of Rebbe Aharon Roth, known as Reb Arele. Her mother, the late Shomrei Emunim Rebbetzin, Rabbi Korff's third cousin, was the daughter of the previous Zvhiller Rebbe of Jerusalem, Rabbi Mordechai.
Education
He received three ordinations (Smicha, D.D.), educated at Yeshiva Rabbi Chaim Berlin, the Rabbinical Seminary of Israel, and Yeshivas Beis Mordechai (Zvhil) of Jerusalem, and was tutored privately by masters of Hasidism and Kabbalah.
In addition, The Rebbe is a graduate of Columbia University, Harvard University, Hebrew College, Brooklyn Law School, and Boston University School of Law, and holds the BA., B.J.E., J.D., and LL.M. degrees. In conjunction with The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy and the Harvard Law School International Law Center he received an M.A. in international relations, an M.A.L.D. in international law and diplomacy, and a Ph.D. in international law. He was also a resident graduate at Harvard Divinity School.
Career
Grand Rabbi Korff simultaneously combined careers as a rabbi, chaplain, lawyer, diplomat, businessman and entrepreneur.
Grand Rabbi Korff served as rabbi of several congregations before succeeding his grandfather as Rebbe. He organized and staffed one of the first White Collar Crime units in the United States as a special consultant to the Norfolk County (Mass.) District Attorney's Office, and he served as a Special Assistant Attorney General for Massachusetts. On a political level he has advised candidates for political office at the City Council, Mayoral, Mass. Senate, Governor’s Office, and U.S. Senate and Congressional level, and assisted officials in substantive matters following their election to office. Grand Rabbi Korff also served as president of Sumner Redstone's National Amusements from 1987 until 1994.
He has served as an advisor and consultant in both public and private international relations, assisting numerous governments (including the United States, the U.K., Austria, Thailand, China, Jordan and others) in matters of diplomacy and international relations, and he has advised numerous national and multi-national business ventures in the United States and abroad.
Works
Rabbi Korff is also the author of Meshivas Nefesh Yitzchok: Insights of a Contemporary Chassidic Master, published (2001) in the original Hebrew/Yiddish/Aramaic and in English translation, on Kabbalah and Halachah, Jewish Law.[2]
See also
References
External links
Sources
- Toldos Anshei Shem, Rand and Greenblat, New York, 1950
- Sefer Meshivas Nefesh Yitzhak, New York, 2000, 2001, second Revised Edition ISBN 0-9645367-1-4
- HaHasidut, Prof. Yizhak Alfasi, Jerusalem.
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- Harvard University alumni
- Harvard Divinity School alumni
- Columbia University alumni
- Clergy from Boston, Massachusetts
- Hasidic rebbes
- American Hasidic rabbis
- Living people
- The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy alumni
- Boston University School of Law alumni
- Brooklyn Law School alumni
- Rabbis from Massachusetts