by Eric Lidji - The Jewish Chronicle
Rabbi Yisroel Meir Altein, an educator, administrator and spiritual mentor in the local Lubavitch community for more than 60 years, passed away on Saturday, Aug. 22.

He was 86.

Altein came to Pittsburgh in the mid-1940s. As one of the oldest and longest serving emissaries, or shluchim, of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn, the sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe, Altein watched the Lubavitch movement grow from a small outpost in the East End of Pittsburgh to a large school with a vast, regional presence in the community.

Around 1 p.m. on Sunday afternoon, more than 200 people gathered outside of the Lubavitch Center on Wightman Street in Squirrel Hill to read psalms as the hearse stopped in front of the synagogue Altein helped build. Then, a 30-car procession drove up Murray Avenue and on to the Homewood Cemetery, where Altein was buried.

Rabbi Yisroel Meir Altein OBM, an Educator & Spiritual Mentor

by Eric Lidji – The Jewish Chronicle

Rabbi Yisroel Meir Altein, an educator, administrator and spiritual mentor in the local Lubavitch community for more than 60 years, passed away on Saturday, Aug. 22.

He was 86.

Altein came to Pittsburgh in the mid-1940s. As one of the oldest and longest serving emissaries, or shluchim, of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn, the sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe, Altein watched the Lubavitch movement grow from a small outpost in the East End of Pittsburgh to a large school with a vast, regional presence in the community.

Around 1 p.m. on Sunday afternoon, more than 200 people gathered outside of the Lubavitch Center on Wightman Street in Squirrel Hill to read psalms as the hearse stopped in front of the synagogue Altein helped build. Then, a 30-car procession drove up Murray Avenue and on to the Homewood Cemetery, where Altein was buried.

Born in Manhattan in 1923, Altein attended Yeshiva Rabbeinu Chaim Berlin, among the oldest yeshivas in Brooklyn, as a young student. When Schneersohn left Europe in 1940 and brought the Lubavitch movement to America, Altein transferred to the new yeshiva set up at 770 Eastern Parkway in the Crown Heights section of Brooklyn.

“He was one of the top students there (at Yeshiva Rabbeinu Chaim Berlin). … When he left to go to Lubavitch, they mourned,” said his son, Rabbi Mendel Altein.

During the 1940s, the Lubavitch movement worried about a loss of Jewish traditions resulting from assimilation into American society. Schneersohn sent Altein to Pittsburgh around 1945 to help Rabbi Sholom Posner run a new Jewish day school on Dawson Street in Oakland, the forerunner to the two Yeshiva Schools in Squirrel Hill.

At the time, many Jewish students in Pittsburgh attended public school during the day followed by Jewish afterschool programs. Altein understood that Jewish students needed an inviting environment in order to take any interest in a full-time Jewish education.

“He was very careful how he talked with these students,” said Rabbi Hershel Pfeffer, Altein’s childhood classmate, fellow teacher and lifelong friend. “He talked in a very respectful manner. … We had to make it very interest and very sustaining.”

Altein knew how to talk to students on their level, showing as great an understanding for the world outside the doors of the yeshiva as he did for the world of holy books, according to Marshal Strahl, one of his elementary students during the late 1940s and early 1950s.

After an article ran in the local papers challenging circumcision, Strahl remembered being impressed a few days later by a letter to the editor from Altein rebutting the assertion in an articulate manner using both religious and secular sources.

“He had a very brilliant and sharp mind, very incisive,” Strahl said.

Altein’s kindness and respectfulness in the classroom extended to his home, said his son Mendel, who also had his father as a teacher in third and fourth grades. Altein said his father worked hard to prevent arguments and discord at home and in the community.

“He never called anyone a name of any kind, except as a compliment,” Altein said.

Altein remembers his father as a deliberate man. Whenever he bought a new book, he would make a point of looking through it for a little while before putting it on the shelf.

“My father was very handy,” Mendel Altein said. His father taught his son how to use tools, and the two worked together on household projects like plumbing, electricity, carpentry and flooring. Altein picked up these skills without traditional training.

In the 1960s, Altein became assistant to the dean, the second in command position to Posner. The job took him out of the classroom and into the community as a fundraiser.

Altein said his father struggled at first with the transition.

“It was not easy on him. He didn’t like going around to collect money. He was not a hustler. He did it because it needed to be done. Rabbi Posner needed the help,” he said.

Eventually, though, the older Altein saw an opportunity to meld the necessary requests for money with a larger effort at community building. He grew to enjoy spending time with Jews around the city, and established thousands of contacts as a result, his son said.

“That was what he felt was really the reason to collect,” he said.

Altein continued to raise money in his later years, but he also assumed a more intimate role in the community, becoming the mashpia, or spiritual mentor, of the local Lubavitch congregations, offering spiritual and moral advice and teaching groups and individuals.

“Anyone who had questions about morals or spirituality would go to him for these problems,” Pfeffer said.

Altein is survived by his wife, Ethel; and by his children, Chana Stein of Oak Park, Mich., Tzerel Backman of Pittsburgh, Mendel Altein of Montreal, Yossi Altein of Crown Heights, Perl Namdar of Crown Heights and Malya Teitelbaum of Montreal.

6 Comments

  • Shlucha in Florida

    Beautiful Article. Rabbi Altein was an inspiring an Ehrliche Yid. As a girl growing up in Pittsburgh, I revered him as a Beinoni of Tanya. His Middos and Chassidishkeit gave him enormous Hadras Panim. I think about him every day and wish the family Nechama and Bracha as they grapple with the loss of their beloved Patriarch.

  • Gershon Beck

    Very telling article about someones dediction for Torah and Mitzvohs for many many years. Doesn’t sound like it was so easy in the transition from the classroom to fund raising and communal work. Interesting about his transition into Chabad in the 40’s. I had met him in Pittsburgh a few times. Pleasant person and easygoing.

    This in particular moved me.
    Altein said his father worked hard to prevent arguments and discord at home and in the community.

    “He never called anyone a name of any kind, except as a compliment,” Altein said.

    We all can use a dose of that these days in particular.

    May his memory be for a Bracha.

  • Meir Pfeffer

    I was very close to this special Tommim, me and my sister had the Zechus of having Rabbi Altein as a teacher/mentor for many years. I would spend part of my Shabbos afternoons learning with him at his house. Shabbos Mevarchim he would be in Shul till late afternoon saying Tehilim, before coming home for the Seduah.As handy as he was (also in cars) Rabbi really did not want to have any part of Olam Hazeh more than absolutly minimum necessary.

    At my Bar Mitzva (37 years ago) R’Shmerel Katzen for me to have Yechdus with the Rebbie, I was accompanied with Rabbi Altein and an still in awe with the Reverence he had for the Rebbie before, during, and after.

    One piece not mentioned was that he was Rav of the Chofetz Chaim Shul for decades.

  • Chaim

    Baruch Dayan HaEmes.
    We will all miss and always remember Rabbi Altein.
    P.S. Great article Shmuel!

  • Shmuel

    A most wonderful Rav and Mashpiah; a true
    anav. A tribute to the family and community.

    Having lived in Pittsburgh for a while,
    I would frequently go to Rabbi Altein
    for guidance. He really came off like a
    father to his own son. You always got the
    impression that he was glad you came to him,
    and would spend a lot of time with you.

    He will surely be missed.

    The mishpacha should have consolation for such
    a great loss; same for the copmmunity. But, for
    now on, simchas only, please!

  • Chani S.

    I’d like to echo the comment by M. Pfeffer :

    Rabbi Altein really did not want to have any part of Olam Hazeh more than absolutly minimum necessary.

    He and his family are excellent examples on how to live without updating the Gashmius in their homes and lives. They never waste a single thing ! If the clothing, appliances, floors, rooms, and everything else works, then they are happy with it ! In today’s day and age, when people are scrambling to live on smaller amount of income, we can learn so much by how they lived their lives for the past 60 years. Always focusing on the Ruchnius, spending their time and money on helping another Jew, regardless of who they are !