- Harry Fischel
Harry Fischel (c.1865 - 1948) was an American businessman and
philanthropist based inNew York City at the turn of the 20th century.Fischel was one of the leading pioneers in the growth of American Judaism, in general, and in American Jewish Orthodoxy, in particular, particularly in the dynamic precedent-setting first half of the 20th Century.
Biography
Harry Fischel was born in
Russia in 1865. He became an architect and a builder at 19, immigrated to America virtually penniless at 20 (after giving most of his earnings to his parents who remained in Russia), and earned his first million in real estate at a young age, but sent money home to help support his parents in Russia even before he was earning $10 per week in America. He is also an Orthodox Jew. [ [http://www.jewishpress.com/displayContent_new.cfm?mode=a§ionid=17&contentid=17742&contentName=Part%2014%20-%20Harry%20Fischel:%20Orthodox%20Jewish%20Philanthropist%20Par%20Excellence%20(Part%20I) Part 14 - Harry Fischel: Orthodox Jewish Philanthropist Par Excellence (Part I) ] ]Involvement in Society
It should be noted at the outset that this entry does not mention all of the organizations that Fischel played a role in.
Among his numerous distinctions were his service as the
Treasurer of theHebrew Sheltering and Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS) , beginning in 1890; a director of theBeth Israel Medical Center in 1891 (credited with laying the groundwork for its kosher policy up to and including the present); Vice-President of theHebrew Free Loan Society ; Vice President of theBeth Israel Medical Center in 1900; Vice-President of theBeth Hamedrash Hagadol on theLower East Side , until he moved toPark Avenue in 1902; builder of the first modern Jewish theater in 1904 (exclusively for productions inYiddish ); charter member of theAmerican Jewish Committee in 1906; prevailed on his co-founders to designate him to chair its second annual luncheon, to assure it and its future events would be kosher; personally prevailed on President Taft to install a kosher kitchen at Ellis Island in 1911, so that Orthodox Jewish immigrants could have the opportunity to eat kosher food during a probation period, thus becoming strong enough to pass the test to avoid deportation; President of theUptown Talmud Torah in Manhattan in 1911 (in one of the first structures in New York built exclusively for this purpose, and then widely considered “the most important Jewish educational institution in America”);first Treasurer of theCentral Committee for the Relief of Jews Suffering Through the War , in 1914; member of the Executive Committee of theJoint Distribution Committee in 1914; organizer of thePalestine Building Loan Association in 1921; builder of a home and synagogue for theChief Rabbi ofPalestine at his own expense in 1923; he established theHarry Fischel Institute for Talmudic Research in 1931 (which, after the creation of the country of Israel, trained, for many years, a large percentage of the judges who presided over the religious courts in the country); established the Harry Fischel Foundation in 1933 (later renamed theHarry & Jane Fischel Foundation ).Fischel’s efforts on behalf of
Yeshiva College and its predecessor yeshivot can be highlighted as follows: in 1889, Fischel became a director of the Etz Chaim Yeshiva; in 1895, Fischel became the Chair of its Building Committee; in 1915, he became the Chair of the Building Committee of the newly merged Etz Chaim Yeshiva andRabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary , and a vice-president of the latter; in 1920 he became the Chair of the Building Committee of the institution that would become Yeshiva College; and in 1927 he was the Chair of the Building Committee upon the occasion of the laying of the cornerstone of the main building of the main campus of Yeshiva College in Washington Heights (now known as theWilf Campus ). Fischel established theHarry Fischel Graduate School for Higher Jewish Studies atYeshiva University in 1945. The main study hall or bet medrash at the main campus is known to this day as theHarry Fischel Study Hall , but it was so named only after Fischel paid for a major renovation around 1940. A plaque in the main building of the main campus testifies that Mr. Fischel even served, for a time, as Acting President of Yeshiva College.Descendants
Fischel had four daughters and no sons who survived into adulthood. One daughter married a physician (Dr. Henry Rafsky), one married a lawyer (State Senator
Albert Wald ), one married a banker (David Kass), and one, married a rabbi (RabbiHerbert S. Goldstein ). Fischel openly stated that since he had no sons to bear his name, he had more of a motivation than most people to perpetuate his name by other means, in his case, the institutions named after him, in Israel and in AmericaHis granddaughter
Josephine Reichel , served as national president of theAgudah Women of America ; his granddaughterDr. Naomi Cohen , is a professor at theUniversity of Haifa ; his grandson Simeon H.F. Goldstein, served as the executive director of the Harry Fischel Foundation; his great-granddaughter, Deborah Stepelman, serves on the Board of the Riverdale Jewish Center; his great-grandson Seth Goldstein became the president of the Etz Chayim Congregation in Queens; his great-grandson Rabbi Hillel Reichel is the Director of theMachon Harry Fischel (the Fischel Institute) in the historic campus and building in theBucharian Quarter , inIsrael .Among the prominent spouses married to some of his descendants are
Haifa Chief Rabbi Shear Yashuv Cohen , who briefly served asChief Rabbi ofIsrael ; who also heads theFischel Institute and theAriel Institutes , and who previously served as Deputy Mayor of Jerusalem; andRabbi Dr. O. Asher Reichel , who served as Rabbi of theWest Side Institutional Synagogue and wrote a major biography on the historian and diplomat, RabbiYitzchak Isaac Halevy , based in part on his thesis when he was awarded the first M.H.L. degree ever issued by the Harry Fischel Graduate School, before he met – and married – Rabbi Goldstein’s daughter, Josephine.A biography of Harry Fischel, entitled "Forty Years of Struggle for a Principle", was written by Rabbi Dr.
Herbert S. Goldstein , his son-in-law. Many of Fischel’s activities are also discussed in the biography of Rabbi Goldstein, entitled "The Maverick Rabbi", written by RabbiAaron I. Reichel , Esq., a grandson of Rabbi Goldstein, and a great-grandson of Harry Fischel.Sources
* [http://www.jewishpress.com/page.do/18328/Glimpses_Into_American_Jewish_History_(Part_15).html Harry Fischel: Orthodox Jewish Philanthropist Par Excellence] , Glimpses Into American Jewish History, jewishpress.com
References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.