{"id":33016,"date":"2026-06-02T08:45:39","date_gmt":"2026-06-02T08:45:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/?p=33016"},"modified":"2026-05-29T16:30:48","modified_gmt":"2026-05-29T16:30:48","slug":"the-american-story-in-the-responsa-sheeilos-from-the-new-world","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/the-american-story-in-the-responsa-sheeilos-from-the-new-world\/","title":{"rendered":"The American Story in the Responsa: She\u2019eilos from the New World"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1780072223\/Jewishaction\/17_33194e2044\/17_33194e2044.png?_i=AA\"><img width=\"1116\" height=\"387\" data-public-id=\"Jewishaction\/17_33194e2044\/17_33194e2044.png\" loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone  wp-post-33016 wp-image-33194\" src=\"https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_1116,h_387,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1780072223\/Jewishaction\/17_33194e2044\/17_33194e2044.png?_i=AA\" alt=\"\" data-format=\"png\" data-transformations=\"f_auto,q_auto\" data-version=\"1780072223\" data-seo=\"1\" data-responsive=\"1\" srcset=\"https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_1116,h_387,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1780072223\/Jewishaction\/17_33194e2044\/17_33194e2044.png?_i=AA 600w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_448,h_155,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1780072223\/Jewishaction\/17_33194e2044\/17_33194e2044.png?_i=AA 448w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_248,h_85,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1780072223\/Jewishaction\/17_33194e2044\/17_33194e2044.png?_i=AA 248w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 600px) 100vw, 600px\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><em>\u201cZeh sefer toldos Adam\u2014<\/em>This is the book of the history of mankind.\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><em>\u2014Ramban to Bereishis 5:1<\/em><\/p>\n<p>The history of Jews in America has been recorded in countless books, archives and scholarly journals. Already in 1892, the American Jewish Historical Society was founded to document the Jewish presence in the New World. Yet the Jewish people have always possessed another archive\u2014one far older and often more revealing than formal histories. It sits not in libraries but in the <em>beis midrash<\/em>: the vast literature of <em>She\u2019eilos U\u2019Teshuvos<\/em> (rabbinic responsa). These volumes are more than collections of halachic rulings; they offer a window into the condition and character of the Torah Jew across the centuries.<\/p>\n<p>Historically, when one had a Torah question beyond his expertise, it was sent to the Great Sanhedrin. Already in the era of the Geonim, these queries were directed to Mesopotamia. From the period of the Rishonim until today we have studied and preserved dispatches to and from countries including France, Spain, Iraq, China, and all regions in between. Reading through the responsa preserved in halachic literature, one begins to glimpse the struggles, the triumphs and the salvations of our people. Our <em>sefarim<\/em> have a story to tell.<\/p>\n<p>America is no exception. Long before historians began chronicling American Jewish life, <em>she\u2019eilos<\/em> from the New World were landing on the desks of Europe\u2019s and the Ottoman Empire\u2019s greatest <em>poskim<\/em>. Read carefully, and the responsa form an unexpected chronicle: the halachic history of American Jewry.<\/p>\n<p><strong>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>The <em>She\u2019eilos <\/em>Begin<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">\u201cI received a question from a far-off land, the kingdom of Brazil . . . which rests below the equator . . . .\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">\u2014<em>She\u2019eilos U\u2019Teshuvos Toras Chaim, <\/em>vol. 3,<em> siman <\/em>3<\/p>\n<p>Remarkably, we are as distant today from America\u2019s founding\u2014two-hundred-and-fifty years\u2014as America\u2019s founders were from the arrival of the first Jews to the New World, who came to South America in the early-to-mid 1500s (Adam Smith,<em> The Wealth of Nations<\/em>, <em>Book IV<\/em>, chap. 7). Some eighty years later, around 1630, the first <em>kehillah<\/em> began to flourish in Recife, Brazil. The unfamiliar environment posed halachic challenges, prompting them to reach out to rabbinic authorities abroad. These Jews may also have been the first to live below the equator, experiencing seasons reversed from the rest of world Jewry. This compelled them to send a letter to the great Rabbi Chaim Shabsei of Salonika (d. 1647), seeking guidance on whether and when to switch to \u201c<em>v\u2019sein tal umatar<\/em>,\u201d a blessing in the weekday Shemoneh Esrei recited during the winter months to pray for rain.<\/p>\n<p>This early question set the tone for the next four hundred years. Indeed, American Jewry would soon need to question the level of <em>mesorah<\/em> to ascribe to these early South American and Caribbean <em>kehillos<\/em>. For example, some seventy years after our country\u2019s founding, in the 1840s, Jews were purchasing <em>esrogim <\/em>grown in and around the West Indies. The appearance of these <em>esrogim <\/em>differed somewhat from their European counterparts, and some questioned whether these were halachically viable. Rabbi Yaakov Ettlinger, the great German<em> posek<\/em> (d. 1871), went so far as to question whether European Jews could rely on <em>any<\/em> American <em>esrogim<\/em>. He stressed that the <em>arba minim<\/em> must be used (held) in the direction in which they grew, <em>derech gedeilasan<\/em>. From the perspective of one living in Europe, <em>esrogim<\/em> grown in America could be perceived as growing sideways and below [the equator] and therefore not be acceptable (<em>Bikurei Yaakov<\/em>, <em>siman<\/em> 568:13; he ultimately did not maintain this strict approach)!<\/p>\n<p>Rabbi Ettlinger was a strong influence on the first Orthodox-ordained rabbi in America, Rabbi Abraham Rice of Baltimore. Ironically, Rabbi Rice publicly affirmed the kosher status of the Caribbean <em>esrogim<\/em>, writing in the <em>Occident <\/em>in April of 1847:<\/p>\n<p><em>[T]ime is approaching when our yearly communications are made to the West Indies for the supply of Citrons, and I think it therefore my duty to state that these <\/em>esrogim<em> are kosher, and there cannot be found any word against them in all Rishonim, Acharonim and <\/em>poskim<em>. All rumors that were set afloat against the <\/em>kashrus<em> of these <\/em>esrogim<em> are founded in error and misinformation . . .<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Rabbi Yissachar Dov (Bernard) Illowy, another early Orthodox-ordained rabbi in the US and prominent leader of Congregation Shangarai Chasset [also called Shaarei Chesed] in New Orleans from 1861 to 1865, disagreed. His son recounted (in his father\u2019s biography, <em>Milchemes Elokim)<\/em>: \u201cIn the year 1861 . . . the <em>Ethrog<\/em> that grew indigenously was found to be <em>passul<\/em>. In the emergency, my father decided that it should be used, but without the usual <em>Berakhah<\/em>, <em>al netilas Lulav<\/em>.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Rabbi Illowy soon called upon European <em>rabbanim<\/em> regarding another matter related to early Caribbean <em>kehillos.<\/em> In New Orleans, Muscovy duck was a popular dish. The <em>Shulchan Aruch<\/em> clearly states that any bird without a <em>mesorah<\/em> must not be consumed (<em>YD<\/em>, <em>siman<\/em> 82). However, Rabbi Illowy wrote, the local chazzan explained that its <em>mesorah<\/em> rested on the practice of Jamaican Jewry, who had been consuming it for years.<\/p>\n<p>Rabbi Illowy shared with his congregation: \u201cSuch a \u2018<em>mesorah<\/em>\u2019 does not allow us to permit this doubt. First, these [Caribbean Jewish] communities have never had a true <em>musmach<\/em> from a known <em>beis din<\/em> [yeshivah] . . .\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Rabbi Illowy turned to two of his European <em>rebbeim<\/em>, Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch and Chief Rabbi Nathan Adler of London (great-nephew of the more famous Rabbi Nosson Adler, <em>rebbi <\/em>of the <em>Chasam Sofer<\/em><sup>1<\/sup>). They concurred with their student\u2019s <em>pesak<\/em>. Rabbi Hirsch wrote:<\/p>\n<p><em>. . . [R]egarding the Muscovy duck . . . whose eggs are round and yellow\/green . . . certainly you are correct that such a <\/em>mesorah <em>is unfounded, and that we would need a <\/em>mesorah<em> going back to early times . . . and even with a <\/em>mesorah<em>, since these eggs are round and discolored [this is a sign in and of itself that they are not kosher], and therefore such a<\/em> mesorah<em> would be an error . . .<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n<p><strong>Enter<em> Shechitah<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Questions pertaining to <em>kashrus<\/em> went beyond <em>mesorah<\/em>. Rabbi Yekusiel Yehudah Greenwald, who settled in the United States in 1924, where he served as the rabbi of a shul in New York and subsequently, of Congregation Beth Jacob in Columbus, Ohio, lamented the fragile state of Torah observance in the country in his <em>HaShochet V\u2019HaShechitah B\u2019Sifrus HaRabbanus<\/em>: \u201cHere in our country, America . . . it is hard to find written recordings of these disagreements from our early [American] history regarding these halachic matters; this is likely due to them not having anyone worthy [local] to ask . . .\u201d<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><strong>Read carefully, and the responsa form an unexpected chronicle: the halachic history of American Jewry.<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Expounding upon the lack of knowledgeable and reliable <em>shochtim<\/em> in America, he shared a stunning comment from a London <em>rav<\/em> in 1840 who wrote (Avraham Baharav, <em>Beis Avraham<\/em>):<\/p>\n<p><em>I now wish to awaken the hearts of the Chareidim . . . there are people who do not even know more than one law [of <\/em>shechitah<em>], who can\u2019t speak or understand <\/em>lashon kodesh<em>. Yet they learn these <\/em>halachos<em> in English by heart, and then embark for America to become \u201c<\/em>shochtim<em>.\u201d This [America] is a place where there is no <\/em>rav<em>, no <\/em>talmid chacham<em>, and no <\/em>mashgiach<em> who can watch over them.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Rabbi Greenwald then added: \u201cHowever, as soon as learned <em>rabbanim<\/em> arrived here, fights broke out regarding the <em>shochet <\/em>and <em>shechitah<\/em>. The first reached all the way to Europe, in the year 1862 . . . .\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Rabbi Greenwald was referring to a controversy surrounding Rabbi Avraham Friedman, author of <em>Chein Tov<\/em> on <em>shechitah, <\/em>who arrived in the United States from Poland in 1860. Rabbi Friedman\u2019s appearance was strikingly unfamiliar in America; his distinctive dress, flowing beard, and <em>peyos<\/em> led many to label him \u201cthe Baal Shem.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>One of the founders of the Beth Hamidrash Hagadol on Manhattan\u2019s Lower East Side, Rabbi Abraham Joseph Ash, who arrived in 1851, proclaimed Rabbi Friedman\u2019s <em>shechitah <\/em>unreliable. However, another prominent member of the shul, Rabbi Yudel Mittelman, stunned by this <em>pesak<\/em>, wrote to his <em>rav<\/em> back home, Rabbi Yosef Shaul Nathanson in Galicia, author of the renowned responsa <em>Shoel U\u2019Meishiv<\/em>. Rabbi Nathanson responded together with his <em>chavrusa<\/em>, Rabbi Mordechai Zev Ettinger, expressing their support for Rav Yudel and the <em>shochet<\/em> (their <em>sefer<\/em> of <em>teshuvos<\/em>, <em>Sheves Achim<\/em>, was never published; see the postscript to <em>Divrei Shaul<\/em>, Shemos, for the tragic reason<sup>2<\/sup>). To defend his <em>pesak<\/em>, Rabbi Ash sent a <em>she\u2019eilah<\/em> to Chief Rabbi Nathan Adler who confirmed that Rabbi Friedman\u2019s <em>shechitah<\/em> had already been revoked in Europe.<\/p>\n<p>From there, the controversy only deepened. In 1861, Rabbi Yosef Moshe Aronson arrived in New York. He conducted services at his home on East Broadway and was referred to by some of his followers as the \u201cEast Broadvayer Maggid.\u201d In his <em>sefer<\/em> <em>Mattei Moshe<\/em> (which has a <em>haskamah<\/em> from Rabbi Moshe Yehoshua Yehuda Leib Diskin, the Maharil Diskin), he recorded:<\/p>\n<p><em>. . . [S]oon after my arrival in New York, I discovered that in every city they eat veal from calves whose blood had been let while alive so that the meat would be smooth and white. They do this hours or even days before <\/em>shechitah<em> . . . in New York they accept it, largely due to Rav Friedman and Rav Mittelman, who seek <\/em>heterim <em>for all forbidden things . . .<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Rabbi Aronson immediately wrote letters about this new practice\u2014bleeding calves before slaughter in order to improve the appearance and marketability of the meat\u2014to <em>gedolim<\/em> in Europe. Specifically, he wrote to Rabbi Shlomo Kluger (<em>Shu\u201dt Tuv Ta\u2019am Vada\u2019as<\/em> 3:48), Rabbi Yaakov Tzvi Mecklenburg, known as the <em>Kesav VeHakabbalah<\/em> (<em>Matteh Moshe<\/em> 53), Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch, Rabbi Shmuel Salant (see the <em>Mavo<\/em> [preface] to <em>HaShochet V\u2019HaShechitah B\u2019Sifrus HaRabbanus<\/em>) and many others, all of whom largely agreed that such bloodletting was forbidden. The other side had their own supporters as well, including a <em>pesak <\/em>handed down from the <em>Chasam Sofer<\/em> and others.<\/p>\n<p>Soon, Rabbi Mittelman\u2019s <em>rebbi<\/em>, the <em>Shoel U\u2019Meishiv<\/em>, withdrew his <em>heter.<\/em> In his final letter on the subject (see <em>Chein Tov <\/em>48<em>ff<\/em>), he wrote of his desire not to get involved and pleads with both him and Rabbi Aronson: \u201c[P]erhaps this land (America) cannot withstand both of you. . . .\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Churches and Pews<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Still other questions arose. Beth Hamidrash Hagadol was founded in the summer of 1852 at 83 Bayard Street. By 1858, the <em>rav<\/em> of the shul, Rabbi Ash, had learned of a church for sale that could accommodate the congregation\u2019s growing numbers. Seeking guidance on the halachic implications of converting a church into a shul, he sent a <em>she\u2019eilah<\/em> to Rabbi Yaakov Ettlinger, the chief rabbi of Altona (Hamburg) at the time. Rabbi Ettlinger responded that while one should generally be <em>machmir<\/em>, and avoid using such a building for a shul, in cases of pressing need, exceptions could be made (<em>Shu\u201dt<\/em> <em>Binyan Tzion<\/em> 63).<\/p>\n<p>By then, many churches had adopted family seating. Purchasing a church meant acquiring its pews, fixtures and seating layout. For some congregations, leaving that setup unchanged was far easier\u2014and far less expensive\u2014than reconstructing a new interior.<\/p>\n<p>This is what had occurred seven years earlier in Albany, New York. In 1851, thirty-two-year-old Isaac Mayer Wise\u2014who would later become a leading voice of American Reform Judaism\u2014purchased a church and introduced the world to a synagogue without a <em>mechitzah<\/em>. He wrote in his autobiography: \u201cAmerican Judaism is indebted to the Anshe Emeth congregation of Albany for one important reform; viz., family pews. The church building had family pews, and the congregation resolved unanimously to retain them\u201d (Isaac M. Wise, <em>Reminiscences<\/em> [Cincinnati: Leo Wise and Company, 1901], 212, <a href=\"https:\/\/collections.americanjewisharchives.org\/wise\/attachment\/5306\/reminiscences.pdf\">https:\/\/collections.americanjewisharchives.org\/wise\/attachment\/5306\/reminiscences.pdf<\/a>).<\/p>\n<p>Even European Reformers took note of this dramatic break with tradition. Jonathan Sarna, professor emeritus of American Jewish history at Brandeis University, explains that they viewed the move toward mixed seating as \u201c. . . following the ways of the Gentiles!\u201d (\u201cThe Debate Over Mixed Seating in the American Synagogue,\u201d in <em>The American Synagogue: A Sanctuary Transformed<\/em>, ed. Jack Wertheimer [Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988], 363\u201394; n. 26).<\/p>\n<p><strong>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>European <em>Gedolim <\/em>and American Reform<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The response of European <em>gedolim<\/em> to the early American reformations was sharp and swift, best illustrated by Charleston\u2019s Congregation Beth Elohim. Its Reform-minded members founded the Reformed Society of Israelites in 1825, advocating revision of the \u201cMaimonidean [Rambam\u2019s] creed,\u201d \u201cworship without hats,\u201d and even the addition of \u201cinstrumental music\u201d on Shabbos.<\/p>\n<p>The traditionalists in the congregation retained influence for several decades, but tensions escalated when a new chazzan had to be hired. During this period, the Reformers gained support from the Hungarian Rabbi Aaron Chorin, a former student of the Noda B\u2019Yehudah who, unfortunately, embraced Reform. Chorin responded: \u201c. . . It is not only permissible, but obligated, to free the worship-rituals from its adhesions . . .\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Traditionalists countered by appealing to European <em>gedolim<\/em>. In the <em>sefer Eleh Divrei HaBris<\/em>, published by the <em>beis din<\/em> of Hamburg, <em>gedolim<\/em> such as the <em>Chasam Sofer<\/em> and the <em>Nesivos Hamishpat<\/em> (Rabbi Yaakov of Lissa) forcefully reject these innovations, decrying the emerging concept of the \u201cTemple.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<blockquote><p><strong>Woven into the challenges and difficulties of transplanting Torah to new soil, there was also a deep and abiding sense of appreciation for the blessings and freedoms of life in the New World.<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><strong>Slavery and Intermarriage<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>We have presented above but a sampling of the rabbinic literature that emerged from early America. While this account of American halachic history is far from comprehensive, mention must be made of the following other matters of import:<\/p>\n<p>For example, on the issue of slavery, Rabbi Hirsch wrote:<\/p>\n<p><em>No Jew could make any other human being into a slave. He could only acquire, by purchase, people, who by the then-universally accepted international law, were already slaves. But [for] this transference into the property of a Jew was the one and only salvation for anybody. . . . The terribly sad experiences of the last century, Union, Jamaica 1865, teach us how completely unprotected and liable to the most inhuman treatment was the slave who in accordance with the national law was not emancipated, and even when emancipated, where he was, looked upon as still belonging to the slave class, or as a freed slave . . . . <\/em>(Shemos 12:43\u201344, <em>The Hirsch Chumash<\/em>, 1976 ed.; cf<em>. <\/em>Rambam, chap. 8,<em> \u201cHilchos Avadim\u201d<\/em>)<\/p>\n<p>At the height of America\u2019s slavery tensions, Rabbi Morris Yaakov Raphall, of B\u2019nai Jeshurun on Green Street in lower Manhattan, an ardent Unionist, wrote a treatise on the matter:<\/p>\n<p><em>The learned sage delved deep into the Hebrew Bible, citing the books of Leviticus, Deuteronomy, Job and even Exodus before concluding that \u201cslaveholding is not only recognized and sanctioned as an integral part of the social structure . . . [but] the property in slaves is placed under the same protection as any other species of lawful property.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Nevertheless, Rabbi Raphall also found reason to criticize American slaveholders<em>. <\/em>\u201cAccording to the Bible,\u201d he said, \u201cThe slave is a person in whom the dignity of human nature is to be respected; he has rights. Whereas, the heathen view of slavery which . . . I am sorry to say, is adopted in the South, reduces the slave to a thing, and a thing can have no rights\u201d (quoted in Adam Goodheart, \u201cThe Rabbi and the Rebellion,\u201d <em>New York Times<\/em>, March 7, 2011).<\/p>\n<p>This same Rabbi Raphall fought valiantly to publicly expose the leaders of the new American Reform movement. In Charleston, South Carolina, he famously challenged his interlocutor to publicly declare his belief in fundamental Jewish principles\u2014the coming of Mashiach and in <em>techias hameisim<\/em> (he sadly refused to do so).<\/p>\n<p>Congregants in a shul in St. Paul, Missouri, sent him a <em>she\u2019eilah<\/em> asking if a man married to a Christian woman may be counted in their minyan<em>. <\/em>In his <em>teshuvah,<\/em> he stated: \u201cI beg to say that no congregation will receive a member or admit to the <em>sefer <\/em>[Torah, i.e., an <em>aliyah<\/em>] or for any <em>devar shebekedushah <\/em>a man who is married to a non-Israelite . . . .\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Yiddish, Rambam and <em>Hakaras Hatov<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Woven into the challenges and difficulties of transplanting Torah to new soil, there was also a deep and abiding sense of appreciation for the blessings and freedoms of life in the New World.<\/p>\n<p>Jonas Phillips (d. 1803), a founder of the famed Mikveh Israel synagogue in Philadelphia, served valiantly in the American Revolutionary War. On July 28, 1776, he sent a letter from Philadelphia to someone in Amsterdam, describing the war\u2014and included the entire Declaration of Independence in Yiddish!<\/p>\n<p>His letter reflected a deep desire to share both the joy of American independence and the freedoms it brought with the Jews remaining in Europe. Centuries later, this spirit of gratitude and observance continues to resonate.<\/p>\n<p>It is therefore fitting to conclude with a rabbinical writing of a different kind. In 1620, the pilgrims on the Mayflower, fleeing persecution in England, arrived safely to the New World, and read Psalm 107. William Bradford, future governor of Plymouth Colony, led the prayer of thanks to G-d, which was recited from a Bible with the annotations of a Puritan scholar Henry Ainsworth (1571\u20131622).<\/p>\n<p>Bradford and the pilgrims prayed the following text:<\/p>\n<p><em>And from this Psalme, and this verse of it, the Hebrues have this Canon; Foure must confess (unto G-d): the sick, when he is healed; the prisoner when he is released out of bonds; they that goe down to sea, when they are come up (to land); and wayfaring men, when they are come to the inhabited land. And they must make confession before ten men, and two of them wise men.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>The Psalm the pilgrims recited speaks of four individuals who \u201cowe thanks to the Lord\u201d for being saved from dire situations: those who emerge safely from a journey through the desert, those who were imprisoned and released, those who recover from serious illness, and those who sail across the sea and reach dry land. In his commentary, Ainsworth notes that Psalm 107 serves as the basis of the Jewish law requiring a public declaration of thanks to G-d upon being saved from a potentially life-threatening situation\u2014including after safe passage across the ocean. He cites his source by name: Rambam, who incorporated the halachah into his <em>Yad Hachazakah<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Bradford and his fellow passengers took the Jewish law seriously. Once they disembarked, the pilgrims made sure to give public thanks.<\/p>\n<p>America indeed released our nation\u2014and countless others\u2014from bonds and from the sea. May it continue to serve as a Divine agent for good, sustaining both our physical security and spiritual continuity.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong>Notes<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>1. Being that Chief Rabbi Nathan Adler\u2019s pedigree is often recorded ambiguously, allow me to share the following excerpt from a speech delivered by his son, Marcus Nathan Adler, on June 6, 1909 (Rabbi Nathan Adler\u2019s other son was the then-serving chief rabbi of the British Empire, Rabbi Hermann Adler).<\/p>\n<p>The title for his lecture was \u201cThe Adler Family,\u201d and it was contemporaneously printed:<\/p>\n<p><em>My father used to tell of a tradition which was current in our family that our ancestors came to Europe from the Isle of Crete, and his revered grand-uncle, the so-called <\/em>ha\u2019nesher, ha\u2019gadol, ha\u2019chassid<em>, the pious Rabbi Nathan Adler, who was not given to saying or doing things lightly, avowed himself \u201c<\/em>M\u2019zerah yichusei kehunah, baal Yalkut Shimoni<em> [a descendant of the author of the Yalkut Shimoni, an accredited priest.\u201d<\/em> (See: <a href=\"https:\/\/archive.org\/details\/adlerfamilyaddre00adleiala\/page\/6\/mode\/2up\">https:\/\/archive.org\/details\/adlerfamilyaddre00adleiala\/page\/6\/mode\/2up<\/a>.)<\/p>\n<p>2. For the full details behind their split, and how that <em>machlokes<\/em> would soon arrive to America, see: <a href=\"https:\/\/shulchronicles.com\/2025\/08\/26\/the-complete-history-of-machine-matza-matzo\/\">https:\/\/shulchronicles.com\/2025\/08\/26\/the-complete-history-of-machine-matza-matzo\/<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><em>Rabbi Moshe Taub is the author of <\/em>Jews in the New World: History, Halachah, and Hashkafah<em> (Beit Shemesh: Mosaica Press, 2024). He is the rabbi of Young Israel of Holliswood\/Holliswood Jewish Center in Queens, New York, and serves as Ami Magazine\u2019s rabbinical editor.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<h3><strong>In This Section<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/celebrating-250-years-of-america-the-orthodox-jewish-experience\/\"><strong>Celebrating 250 Years of America: The Orthodox Jewish Experience<\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/reflections-on-orthodox-jewish-life-in-america\/\"><strong>Reflections on Orthodox Jewish Life in America <\/strong><em>by Rabbi Dr. Jacob J. Schacter<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/why-american-jewish-history-matters-the-orthodox-experience\/\"><strong>Why American Jewish History Matters: The Orthodox Experience <\/strong><em>by Rabbi Dr. Zev Eleff<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/america-and-the-problem-of-opportunity\/\"><strong>America and the Problem of Opportunity<\/strong><em>, a conversation with Rabbi Yaakov Glasser<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/the-early-years-of-american-orthodox-judaism-a-historical-timeline\/\"><strong>The Early Years of American Orthodox Judaism: A Historical Timeline<\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n<p><strong>1830s\u20131860s: Pre\u2013Civil War\/Early Nineteenth Century<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/moses-seixas-1744-1809-the-promise-of-liberty\/\"><strong>Moses Seixas (1744\u20131809)\u2014The Promise of Liberty<\/strong><em> by Dr. Jeanne Abrams<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/aaron-lopez-1731-1782-faith-before-fortune-jewish-life-in-colonial-america\/\"><strong>Aaron Lopez (1731\u20131782)\u2014Faith Before Fortune: Jewish Life in Colonial America <\/strong><em>by Saul Jay Singer\u00a0 <\/em><\/a><\/p>\n<p><strong>1830s\u20131860s: Pre\u2013Civil War\/Early Nineteenth Century<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/isaac-leeser-1806-1868-champion-of-orthodoxy\/\"><strong>Isaac Leeser (1806\u20131868)\u2014Champion of Orthodoxy<\/strong><em> by Rabbi Dr. Zev Eleff<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/rabbi-abraham-joseph-rice-1802-1862-in-complete-isolation-the-struggle-for-torah-in-america\/\"><strong>Rabbi Abraham Joseph Rice (1802\u20131862)\u2014In Complete Isolation: The Struggle for Torah in America<\/strong><em> by Rabbi Dr. Aaron Rakeffet-Rothkoff<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/rebecca-gratz-1781-1869-a-life-of-giving\/\"><strong>Rebecca Gratz (1781\u20131869)\u2014A Life of Giving <\/strong><em>by Dr. Melissa R. Klapper<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n<p><strong>1870s\u20131930s: Post\u2013Civil War through Early Twentieth Century<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/rabbi-jacob-joseph-1840-1902-the-tragic-tale-of-new-yorks-only-chief-rabbi\/\"><strong>Rabbi Jacob Joseph (1840\u20131902)\u2014The Tragic Tale of New York\u2019s Only Chief Rabbi <\/strong><em>by Rabbi Dr. Zev Eleff<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/rabbi-herbert-s-goldstein-1890-1970-the-maverick-rabbi\/\"><strong>Rabbi Herbert S. Goldstein (1890\u20131970)\u2014The Maverick Rabbi <\/strong><em>by Rabbi Aaron I. Reichel<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/faith-on-the-frontier-orthodox-women-of-the-wild-west\/\"><strong>Faith on the Frontier: Orthodox Women of the Wild West<\/strong><em> by Dr. Jeanne Abrams<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/the-american-story-in-the-responsa-sheeilos-from-the-new-world\/\"><strong>The American Story in the Responsa: <em>She\u2019eilos<\/em> from the New World <\/strong><em>by Rabbi Moshe Taub<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Read carefully, and the responsa form an unexpected chronicle: the halachic history of American Jewry.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":609,"featured_media":33112,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"ep_exclude_from_search":false,"_cloudinary_featured_overwrite":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[597,199,109,16,65,64,6],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-33016","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-america-250","category-cover-story","category-faith","category-history","category-jewish-law","category-kashrut","category-shabbat-holidays","issues-summer-2026-5786"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v24.6 - 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