Noah Weinberg


Yisrael Noah Weinberg was an Orthodox rabbi and the founder of Aish HaTorah.

Early life

Noah Weinberg was born on the Lower East Side of New York City. His father, Yitzchak Mattisyahu Weinberg was a Slonimer Hasid, and a grandson of. Weinberg studied at Yeshiva Rabbi Chaim Berlin in Brooklyn and at Yeshivas Ner Yisroel in Baltimore, where he received his semikhah. He completed his undergraduate studies at Johns Hopkins University and his post-graduate studies at Loyola Graduate School.

Aish HaTorah

In 1966, Weinberg decided to enter the field of kiruv, and he opened the first yeshiva in this style for Jewish men in Jerusalem. The school was short-lived, as were several other attempts, before he co-founded Yeshivas Shma Yisrael in 1970 with Nota Schiller, Mendel Weinbach and Yaakov Rosenberg.
After a few years, Weinberg broke away from the partnership over a difference in educational philosophy. He believed that the times called for the call up of "kiruv soldiers"people who would be given a few years of basic education training, and then sent out to give introductory classes to other young Jews at risk of assimilation and intermarriage. Weinberg established Aish HaTorah with five students in a small apartment in Jerusalem's Old City in 1974. In addition to its Jerusalem headquarters, Weinberg helped establish an Aish HaTorah branch in St. Louis in 1979. The organization later grew to 30 branches worldwide.
In 1985, Weinberg launched the Discovery Seminar, a multi-day seminar attempting to prove God's existence.
In 2001, Weinberg founded the Hasbara Fellowships program to bring university students to Israel for an intensive two-week Israel activism training course.

Personal life and death

Weinberg married Denah Goldman, and established their first home in the Mea Shearim neighborhood of Jerusalem. In 1967, they moved into a new apartment in the Kiryat Sanz neighborhood. His older brother Yaakov was rosh yeshiva of Yeshivas Ner Yisroel in Baltimore. His nephew, son of his sister Chava Leah, was Shimshon Dovid Pincus.
Weinberg was diagnosed with lung cancer in 2007. He died on February 5, 2009.

Works

Weinberg created new curricula to teach the fundamentals of Jewish belief and practice to Jews. These include:
  • "The 48 Ways to Wisdom"
  • "The 6 Constant Mitzvot"
  • "Foundations"
  • "The 5 Levels of Pleasure"

Books

48 Ways to Wisdom What the Angel Taught You: Seven Keys to Life Fulfillment The 5 Levels of Pleasure: Enlightened Decision Making for Success in Life
  • ''Wisdom for Living''