Matisyahu Salomon

Matisyahu Chaim Salomon (November 28, 1937 – January 2, 2024) was an English-born American rabbi, author and public speaker. He served as the mashgiach ruchani (spiritual supervisor) of Beth Medrash Govoha, one of the world's largest yeshivas, located in Lakewood, New Jersey, United States. An opponent of unrestrained internet access in the Orthodox Jewish community, he spearheaded a campaign to have internet filters installed on all computers and smartphones.

Early life and education
Matisyahu Chaim Salomon was born in London, England to Yaakov and Ettel. After receiving his primary education in London, he moved with his family to Gateshead in the early 1940s, where he studied in a yeshiva and kollel. His study partner for 16 years was Chaim Kaufman, who went on to found the Gateshead Yeshiva L'Zeirim. Salomon studied under Elyah Lopian, the former rosh yeshiva of Etz Chaim Yeshiva for less than a year. He considered Lopian to be his main rebbe (mentor). Lopian, who had studied under Simcha Zissel Ziv, sparked in Salomon a life-long interest in following the Kelm Talmud Torah mussar school of philosophy.

Career
Salomon started out as assistant mashgiach ruchani (spiritual supervisor) in the Gateshead Yeshiva, working under Moshe Schwab. He later took over as the senior mashgiach at Gateshead, a position Salomon would hold for almost 30 years. In the fall of 1997, he was invited by Nosson Meir Wachtfogel to come to the United States in order to assume the position of mashgiach ruchani of Beth Medrash Govoha, one of the world's largest yeshivas located in Lakewood, New Jersey. Salomon was succeeded at Gateshead by Mordechai Yosef Karnowsky. Around this time, Salomon began to take a leadership position in the Vaad L'Hatzolas Nidchei Yisroel, an advocacy organization seeing to the spiritual needs of Jews in Russia, Georgia and Azerbaijan.

Salomon was a lecturer on topics relating to Jewish religious growth and communal issues in the yeshiva world. On May 3, 2009, Salomon comforted the mourners of a 9-year-old boy who was struck and killed by an errant baseball, reminding them that the boy had already achieved the afterlife, and we "are not here for this world". One week later, Salomon gave the keynote address at the 46th annual Agudath Israel of America National Siyum Mishnayos, which honored students' achievements in the study of Mishnah. On September 15, 2009, he was one of the main speakers at a (inauguration of a Torah scroll) ceremony in Lakewood which was attended by over 6,000 people.

While Salomon preferred that cases pertaining to sexual abuse in the Orthodox community be handled by a beth din (rabbinical court) rather than the secular justice system&mdash;in order to "protect human dignity" and because "we are guided by the Torah" &mdash;he closed down the beth din in 2009 due to pressure from child advocates, victims' relatives and mental health professionals. Salomon was not opposed to whistleblowing blogs focused on the Orthodox community, so long as the bloggers avoided the use of profanity and sarcasm. But he was opposed to unfettered internet access, due to the perceived risk of harm to the mores of the Orthodox Jewish community. Instead, he advocated for the installation of internet filters on all computers and smartphones. In May 2012 he organized, together with the Skulener Rebbe, a mass gathering of over 60,000 people at both Citi Field and the adjacent Arthur Ashe Stadium in Queens, New York in order to bring attention to the dangers of using the internet. For similar reasons, Salomon discouraged the adoption of kosher versions of forbidden foods such as cheeseburgers, pork and shellfish. In 2015 he signed a letter, along with Shmuel Kamenetsky and Malkiel Kotler, imploring school principals to admit unvaccinated children into the classroom.

Personal life and death
Salomon was married to Miriam, a descendant of Jacob Joshua Falk, from 1960 until her death in 2016. He died in Lakewood on January 2, 2024, at age 86, and was buried in Jerusalem's Har HaMenuchot cemetery.

Works
A number of books have been published in Hebrew based on Salomon's public (mussar discourses) and shiurim (lectures) under the title Matnas Chaim:

The Jewish Observer published an interview with Salomon on the Jewish approach to marriage.