Boruch Dayan Hoemes: Tosher Rebbe, OBM

Rabbi Meshulem Feish Lowy, the Tosher Rebbe, known for his magnetic personality and an ever present aura of holiness, died today at the age of 95.

The Rebbe was born in Demetch, Hungary and was the son of the Grand Rebbe Rabbi Mordechai Segal Lowy, the third rebbe in the Tosher dynasty which had strong links to the Chozeh of Lublin, Reb Elimilech of Lizhensk, the Magid of Mizritch and the Baal Shem Tov.  According to one source, the Tosher Rebbe was able to trace his patrilineal ancestors all the way back to Rashi.

A Holocaust survivor who served in the Hungarian Labour Service before being liberated by the Red Army in 1944, Rabbi Lowy was proclaimed the new Tosher Rebbe by his father’s surviving Chasidim.

The Rebbe first settled in Nyiregyhaza in northeast Hungary, and married his wife Chava Weingarten, a direct descendant of the Noam Elimilech in 1946.  Fearful of the nearby Communist government, the Rebbe and his Chasidim relocated to Montreal in 1951, establishing Kiryas Tosh in Boisbriand, Quebec in 1963.  The first Tasher Rebbetzin passed away in 1996 and the Rebbe remarried in 2007.

A 1966 article in the Canadian Jewish News by Norman Abrahams described the Tosher Rebbe’s dedication to his followers, many of whom were Holocaust survivors who turned to the Rebbe for guidance.

“Indicative of the Rebbe’s devotion to Judaism and his followers, this great man stays up most of the night fulfilling the many requests for advice and prayer and it is not uncommon to see him eating breakfast, his first meal of the day at five o’clock in the afternoon.”

A Talmudic expert, the Rebbe was incredibly knowledgeable in many other areas, frequently offering medical advice and guidance on other topics.

“His wisdom extends to other fields, particularly those of politics and law,” wrote Abrahams. “It is said that even lawyers come to him for advice.”

Renowned for his insistence to read from the Torah on his own for over 50 years, the Rebbe would complete the entire Sefer Tehillim daily and could stand in shul for over five hours, according to Israeli news site Kikar HaShabbat.

Over the past five decades, Tosh became a destination for those seeking spiritual counsel, advice and brachos, with thousands coming every year from all walks of life to seek out the Tosher Rebbe’s guidance.

A six volume set titled Avodas Avodah features the Rebbe’s discussions of the parsha, yomtim tovim and other insights, in both Yiddish and Hebrew, as well as a Yiddish/Hebrew collection of the Rebbe’s teachings about yahrtzeits of various tzadikim.  Satellite Tosher communities have been established in various locations including Borough Park, Williamsburg, Kiryas Joel, Monsey and London.

The levaya for the Tosher Rebbe is expected to take place at 7 PM tonight in Kiryas Tosh.

9 Comments

  • friend of lubavitch

    he sent many people to the rebbe and the ohel

    a true chossid of chabad

  • Eli

    It’s a shame that I failed to accept an opportunity to meet him when I would spend summers with my cousins in Tosh…
    Btw, when he first moved to Tosh he sent his daughter to study in the Chabad Girls School.

  • CHT

    Can someone explain this:

    “Renowned for his insistence to read from the Torah on his own for over 50 years, the Rebbe would complete the entire Sefer Tehillim daily and could stand in shul for over five hours”

    Did not get the bind between reading Torah and Tehilim

  • I had the z'chus

    Many years ago, I was in Tosh for a couple of days, for a relative’s chasuna. A chasid told me that, while I still had the chance, go to the Rebbe’s minyon, where they were davening Shachris, Mincha and Maariv, within a span of 3 hours. This was on the 17th of Tammuz.

    So, I went. The young, teenage Chassidic boys were teasing each other, pulling each other’s long jackets. Anyway, when it came to the Torah leining, I had the honor of getting an Aliyah, and was standing right next to the Rebbe, who was doing the leining!

  • A baal mofes

    I wish I had permission from the person who told me the story, and to whom it happened. But I can definitely tell you that this man was a baal mofes. Poshut saved someone’s life by reviewing a stack of medical papers, then meditating for some 15 minutes and then telling them not to do the proposed surgery, rather to take a different approach. The doctors had to be “arm twisted” to take what they thought was a risky approach, and in the end, on the operating table a situation arose and had they taken their original approach the patient would have died. Having listened to the Tosher Rebbe, this individual survived and told me the tale personally with more details of course.