Telz (Telšiai)טלז
Lithuania
# Telz (Telšiai), Lithuania In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Telz stood as a modest but vibrant Jewish center in northwestern Lithuania, a region under Russian Imperial rule following the Partitions of Poland. The city itself—surrounded by forests and lakes in a landscape of gentle hills—was predominantly Lithuanian, with a Jewish population that grew steadily to become a significant minority of the town's inhabitants. What made Telz remarkable was not its size or political importance, but rather its emergence as one of Eastern Europe's most influential yeshivas, a scholarly institution that drew ambitious young men from across the Pale of Settlement who came to master Talmudic reasoning. The yeshiva's reputation for intellectual rigor and innovative pedagogy transformed a provincial Lithuanian town into a pilgrimage site for serious Torah students, and its alumni spread its methods far and wide, even establishing branches elsewhere. By the turn of the twentieth century, Telz had become synonymous with a particular style of Talmudic study—precise, logical, and deeply engaged—and its scholars were sought after as teachers and communal leaders throughout the Jewish world, making this quiet corner of Lithuania a beacon for those dedicated to preserving and advancing Jewish learning.
11 teachers
Teachers who lived here
Rabbi Eliezer Gordon
Rabbi Eliezer Gordon (1841–1910)
study 1908
Ba'al HaLeshem
Rabbi Shlomo Elyashiv (1841–1926)
study 1860
Rabbi Meir Atlas
Rabbi Meir Atlas (1848–1926)
publication 1875
R. Shimon Shkop
Shimon Yehuda HaKohen Shkop (1860–1939)
study 1884–1902
Rabbi Naftali Trop
Rabbi Naftali Trop (1871–1928)
study 1890
R. Elchonon Wasserman
Elchonon Bunim Wasserman (1875–1941)
study 1890–1897
Rabbi Yechezkel Abramsky
Rabbi Yechezkel Abramsky (1886–1976)
study 1904–1906
Ponevezher Rav
Rabbi Yosef Shlomo Kahaneman (1886–1969)
study 1900–1911
Rabbi Yechezkel Sarna
Rabbi Yechezkel Sarna (1890–1969)
study 1904–1907
Rabbi Shimon Schwab
Rabbi Shimon Schwab (1908–1995)
study 1926–1928
- מג
R. Mordechai Gifter
R. Mordechai Gifter (Telshe Cleveland) (1915–2001)
study 1932–1939