Open main menu
Home
Random
Log in
Settings
About Chabadpedia
Chabadpedia
Search
Editing
Rabbi Ezra Binyomin Schochet
(section)
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
Advanced
Special characters
Help
Heading
Level 2
Level 3
Level 4
Level 5
Format
Insert
Latin
Latin extended
IPA
Symbols
Greek
Greek extended
Cyrillic
Arabic
Arabic extended
Hebrew
Bangla
Tamil
Telugu
Sinhala
Devanagari
Gujarati
Thai
Lao
Khmer
Canadian Aboriginal
Runes
Á
á
À
à
Â
â
Ä
ä
Ã
ã
Ǎ
ǎ
Ā
ā
Ă
ă
Ą
ą
Å
å
Ć
ć
Ĉ
ĉ
Ç
ç
Č
č
Ċ
ċ
Đ
đ
Ď
ď
É
é
È
è
Ê
ê
Ë
ë
Ě
ě
Ē
ē
Ĕ
ĕ
Ė
ė
Ę
ę
Ĝ
ĝ
Ģ
ģ
Ğ
ğ
Ġ
ġ
Ĥ
ĥ
Ħ
ħ
Í
í
Ì
ì
Î
î
Ï
ï
Ĩ
ĩ
Ǐ
ǐ
Ī
ī
Ĭ
ĭ
İ
ı
Į
į
Ĵ
ĵ
Ķ
ķ
Ĺ
ĺ
Ļ
ļ
Ľ
ľ
Ł
ł
Ń
ń
Ñ
ñ
Ņ
ņ
Ň
ň
Ó
ó
Ò
ò
Ô
ô
Ö
ö
Õ
õ
Ǒ
ǒ
Ō
ō
Ŏ
ŏ
Ǫ
ǫ
Ő
ő
Ŕ
ŕ
Ŗ
ŗ
Ř
ř
Ś
ś
Ŝ
ŝ
Ş
ş
Š
š
Ș
ș
Ț
ț
Ť
ť
Ú
ú
Ù
ù
Û
û
Ü
ü
Ũ
ũ
Ů
ů
Ǔ
ǔ
Ū
ū
ǖ
ǘ
ǚ
ǜ
Ŭ
ŭ
Ų
ų
Ű
ű
Ŵ
ŵ
Ý
ý
Ŷ
ŷ
Ÿ
ÿ
Ȳ
ȳ
Ź
ź
Ž
ž
Ż
ż
Æ
æ
Ǣ
ǣ
Ø
ø
Œ
œ
ß
Ð
ð
Þ
þ
Ə
ə
Formatting
Links
Headings
Lists
Files
References
Discussion
Description
What you type
What you get
Italic
''Italic text''
Italic text
Bold
'''Bold text'''
Bold text
Bold & italic
'''''Bold & italic text'''''
Bold & italic text
== Life History == Born in Switzerland on the 24th of Adar II 1943 to Rabbi Dov Yehuda Shochet and Rebbetzin Sarah Shasha. His father was a Torah genius, and even during the difficult times of World War II while traveling on various routes, he studied diligently. At the end of the war, his family moved to The Hague in Holland where his father was appointed as the temporary rabbi of the Jewish community. After a short period when they managed to arrange immigration papers, in the year 1951, the family moved to Toronto, Canada. Following a miraculous event that happened to one of the daughters of the family with the Rebbe's blessing, the entire family became close to Chabad Chassidus, and then he went to study at the central Tomchei Tmimim Yeshiva in 770. In his youth, he was very endeared to Rabbi Aharon Kotler, who learned with him as a chavrusa during his years studying at Lakewood Yeshiva, and to Rabbi Meshulam Dovid Soloveitchik, during the years he studied at Brisk Yeshiva. The Rebbe drew him close through many letters in which he responded to his questions about learning and avodas Hashem, and through private audiences (yechidus) he merited to have. One of the letters that he testified changed his life was in response to his feeling disheartened when hearing about the true Torah giants of previous generations who wrote works that illuminated the world while they were still young, whereas he had no chance of reaching such heights at a similar age, and if so - why should he study Torah. The Rebbe replied with a special letter explaining that a Jew's aspiration should be 'to serve my Creator' with the tools, abilities, and opportunities that Hashem gave him, and not to seek to become a 'gadol b'Yisrael'. In 1964, he traveled to Eretz HaKodesh, where he studied at the Brisk Yeshiva in Jerusalem. This was after the Rebbe answered him in Elul 1963 regarding his place of study for the following year. In 1966, he married Rebbetzin Sarah Rachel, granddaughter of the Rebbe of Slonim. After their marriage, they lived in Bnei Brak city, as instructed by the Rebbe. After his marriage, he was appointed as a Rosh Mesivta (teacher) in Tomchei Tmimim Yeshiva in Kfar Chabad. Alongside his classes in the yeshiva on the studied tractates, he gave in-depth classes on Chabad Chassidus outside the yeshiva. In 1971, when the Nachalat Har Chabad neighborhood was established, he assisted in establishing the Kollel for married students there. In 1978, when the Ohr Elchanan Yeshiva was transferred to Lubavitch by its founder Rabbi Simcha Wasserman, the Rebbe appointed Rabbi Shochet as the head of the yeshiva. Over the years, he developed the yeshiva and implemented a unique educational and learning approach that attracts many students to the yeshiva.
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
Please note that all contributions to Chabadpedia are considered to be released under the GNU Free Documentation License 1.3 or later (see
Chabadpedia:Copyrights
for details). If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly and redistributed at will, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource.
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Close
Loading editor…