202:. He ordered copies or microfilms of the manuscripts, which he would analyze and try to determine who authored it, as many of them were anonymous. To accomplish this, a near-surgical search of every possible commentary of relevance was required, in the hope of finding an attributed quote drawn from the anonymous work. Sometimes it involved catching a certain style, choice of words, or recurring phrase, that was found in an already existing commentary that attributed those words to a specific rabbi. He succeeded in identifying tens of
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to travel to small cities in the United States and Canada to check
Tefillin and Mezuzos free of charge and provided subsidized Tefillin and Mezuzos for those who did not have Kosher ones, or did not have them at all.
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In the United States he started corresponding with various library's, institutions, universities and museums to examine their holdings looking for unpublished ancient manuscripts of the
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left untouched for hundreds of years. Once found he singlehandedly published these commentaries with his own notes. The first and one of the most famous books he published was the
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256:. He would write and lecture about Kosher Tefillin and Mezuzos and that small Mezuzos were very often not
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5673) to his parents Dr. Yirmiyahu Armin
Hakohen and Leah Blau. At the age of 19 he went to study at the
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and went to great lengths to receive the blessing of the
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Publishing about 40 volumes of never before seen
Rishonim
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enabling him and his wife to flee to Japan, and finally
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Tannenbaum, Rabbi
Gershon (13 June 2003). "Machberes".
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Rabbi Blau actively campaigned for the upkeep of the
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Hecht, M (16 May 2003). "Champion of the
Rishonim".
225:Rabbi Blau served as the spiritual leader of the
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67:Dr. Yirmiyahu Armin Hakohen and Leah Blau
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233:for 20 years, and then of congregation
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373:German emigrants to the United States
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130:, Germany on 15 October 1912 (4th of
108:Rabbi Chaim Moshe Yehuda Hakohen Blau
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218:. Many of his books were titled as "
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378:Jewish emigrants from Nazi Germany
222:" (Commentary of the early ones).
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25:Chaim Moshe Yehuda Hakohen Blau
110:(1912–2003) was a German-born
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260:. He arranged for roving
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231:East New York, Brooklyn
178:, China, surviving the
170:, received a visa from
158:. With the outbreak of
126:Rabbi Blau was born in
101:Rabbi, lecturer, author
239:Borough Park, Brooklyn
235:Avrohom U'tzvi Hirsch
190:Publishing Rishonim
85:Mir Yeshiva, Poland
368:Mir Yeshiva alumni
326:. pp. 40–42.
184:Lubavitcher Rebbe
148:Yeruchom Levovitz
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42:Hamburg, Germany
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160:World War II
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348:2003 deaths
343:1912 births
136:Mir Yeshiva
56:Nationality
337:Categories
269:References
220:Hakadmonim
216:Bava Batra
208:Commentary
122:Early life
98:Occupation
180:Holocaust
168:Lithuania
144:Mashgiach
82:Education
64:Parent(s)
296:Brooklyn
250:Tefillin
204:Reshonim
196:Rishonim
176:Shanghai
132:Cheshvan
116:Rishonim
73:Movement
31:Personal
254:Mezuzos
246:Mitzvos
210:of the
164:Yeshiva
152:Yeshiva
128:Hamburg
262:Sofrim
258:Kosher
146:, Rav
140:Poland
59:German
212:Ritva
138:, in
112:rabbi
22:Rabbi
252:and
51:2003
48:Died
36:Born
248:of
237:in
214:on
166:to
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118:.
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