User:גיברס/ישיבת חיי משה

Yeshivat Hayes Moshe is a Chassidic, ultra-Orthodox yeshiva located in the Har Nof neighborhood of Jerusalem. About 300 students are being studied there, chaired by the former Chief Rabbi - Rabbi Yisrael Meir Lau and chaired by Rabbi Naftali Nussbaum.

The history of the yeshiva
The yeshiva was founded in the year 1990 (1992) on Mount Nof, by Rabbi Benjamin Kahn, son-in-law of Rabbi Israel Meir Lau, and is named after his father Rabbi Moshe Haim Lau who was murdered in the Holocaust. It is established through the controversy between the Hasidim and the Lithuanians, which began in 1998, and provides a response to the type of students who previously studied in Lithuanian yeshivas. Housed in a building that used to be the Yeshivat Moshe Yeshiva.

Role topics
The founder of the yeshiva Rabbi Kahn is the actual yeshiva manager from both the financial and spiritual side, he also appoints the staff and is responsible for welcoming guys. Officially, Rabbi Naftali Nussbaum is the head of the yeshiva. Rabbis are Rabbi David Miller who also serves as Chief Rabbi of the Ponevezh Yeshiva, Rabbi Aryeh Leib Auerbach who also serves as Chief Rabbi of Mir Berachfeld Yeshiva, Rabbi Moshe Friedman, Rabbi Zalman Halperin, and Rabbi Chaim Leib Rizel, who are Rabbi Yitzchak Wingut, and Rabbi Shlomo Glick, who also serves as an influencer in the yeshiva, the respondents, Rabbi Wexberger and Rabbi Beniya Nebenzel

Method and teaching arrangements in sitting
The way of studying yeshiva is fundamentally similar to the way of learning in Lithuanian yeshivas. Based on the data encompassing each Talmudic issue, their mutual confrontation and innovative conclusions. The study arrangements at the yeshiva are as usual in the other Lithuanian yeshivas. In practice, study takes place in the beit midrash for almost 24 hours.

It is customary for each class (class) to have class tellers who give an hourly lesson. Students prepare for these lessons by learning the commentary on the issues being learned at the time. In the lower classes (classes) per class there are two lesson tellers. Replacing the students with a six-month rotation.

The weekly power is like a Gemara pillar (or sugai) that dresses in "perusal" for the week. In contrast to afternoon studies where the study focuses on "proficiency" studies where the weekly supply is about two Gemara pages.

Moshe's life also has a small sitting in Jerusalem, on Jeremiah Street and there are about 150 boys studying. The small and large meeting is conducted separately apart from the joint management.