Tzadikim

Rabbi Tzadka Chutzin

Rabbi Tzadka Chutzin (Hebrew: צדקה חוצין‎; in Ashkenazi Hebrew: Tzadka Chutzin; Arabic: صدقا حسين‎) February 3, 1876 – February 17, 1961) was a Sephardi dayan, mohel, and spiritual leader to the Iraqi Jewish community in Iraq and Israel.

Born: 1876 Baghdad, Ottoman Iraq
Died: Jerusalem, Israel, 1961
 

 

Rabbi Tzadka Chutzin (Hebrew: צדקה חוצין‎; in Ashkenazi Hebrew: Tzadka Chutzin; Arabic: صدقا حسين‎) February 3, 1876 – February 17, 1961) was a Sephardi dayan, mohel, and spiritual leader to the Iraqi Jewish community in Iraq and Israel. He taught thousands of students in Baghdad, and led the Iraqi expatriate community in Jerusalem. He was the founder and rosh mesivta of the Shemesh Sedaqah Synagogue in the Geula neighborhood of Jerusalem.

Early life

Tzadka Chutzin was born in Baghdad, Ottoman Iraq, to Rabbi Moshe Tzadka Chutzin, and grew up in a prosperous family. He was a fifth-generation descendant of the 18th-century rabbi Tzadka Bekhor Tzadka Chutzin, the author of the halakhic responsa Sedaqah U-Mishpat. In his youth, he studied at Midrash Bet Zilkha, the foremost yeshiva of its day, under the tutelage of Rabbi Elisha Dangour, Av Beit Din of Baghdad. He later studied under the Ben Ish Hai, who would count him among his favorite students. Tzadka Chutzin's financial situation allowed him to pursue his studies uninterrupted, allowing him to achieve a high degree of Torah scholarship. 

Educator

Chutzin founded Midrash Talmud Torah, the community heder in Baghdad, which accepted hundreds of children regardless of their parents' ability to pay tuition. Funding for the school was arranged by way of a luxury tax that was imposed on the sale of meat. During his years in Baghdad, Tzadka Chutzin personally taught upwards of 4,000 children. Every evening he gave a shiur in halakha to householders that went four or five hours. From those years he earned the title "Hakham Tzadka", which he was known by the rest of his life. 
As a result of World War I, the Ottoman Empire lost control of Iraq to the United Kingdom. At first, the material situation of the local Jews improved. The British, who found themselves in control of a vastly enlarged empire, needed clerks who were familiar with the local language and customs to help them with their bureaucracy, and found the Jews to be suited to the task. The Jewish community would go on to take a commanding role in the banking and insurance sectors of the economy. This period also saw many young students seeking to advance their education abroad at the great universities of England. 
As a result of these events, the Jews began to drift away from their traditional customs, taking on a more modern approach to their daily lives. Eventually, certain people in the laity began to challenge some of Tzadka Chutzin's education policies, especially in regards to the unpopular meat tax, and his decision to omit most secular studies from the Talmud Torah's curriculum. He stood virtually alone against his adversaries, who did not refrain from trying to implicate him to the authorities on account of his perceived antiquated positions. By calling for public protests, fasting, and the reading of kinnot (dirges), he eventually succeeded in blocking the reformers' initiatives, refusing to give in to his opponents' disregard for the traditions that had been bequeathed to him by his mentors.

Moved to Jerusalem

Having absorbed from his master the Ben Ish Hai a longing for Jerusalem, Tzadka Chutzin had made a pilgrimage there in 1904 together with Rabbi Yaakov Chaim Sofer (the Kaf HaHayyim) and Rabbi Yehezkel Ezra Rahamim (the Asei HaYa'ar), where they held communion in the court of Rabbi Yaakov Shaul Elyashar. In 1924, with his family and a few close disciples, Tzadka Chutzin made aliyah and settled in Jerusalem, then part of British Mandatory Palestine. 
Shemesh Sedaqah Synagogue 

In 1929 Tzadka Chutzin established the Shemesh Sedaqah Synagogue on Rechov Haggai in the Geula neighborhood of Jerusalem. The name of the congregation was derived from the verse "And the sun of righteousness shall arise with healing in its wings" (Malachi 3:20). Tzadka Chutzin both led the synagogue as rabbi, and taught shiurim in the synagogue to students and local householders.

Tzadka Chutzin endeavored to fulfill many of the mitzvot particular to the Land of Israel (mitzvot hateluyot ba'aretz). To that end, he planted wheat in the backyard of the synagogue, separating from it the terumah and ma'aser, and relinquished the pe'ah. He would then harvest it for use in his own specially prepared Passover matzo, which he then distributed. He also kept a donkey for the fulfillment of the petter hamor. 
Tzadka Chutzin demanded this kind of scrupulousness from his peers as well. One time in the 1950s, he asked his student Mordechai Eliyahu to arrange a meeting for him with Grand Rabbi Yoel Teitelbaum of Satmar, who was visiting Jerusalem at the time. Tzadka Chutzin ordered Teitelbaum to desist from his practice of riding in a car on Friday afternoon after sundown; Teitelbaum based this practice on the rulings of Rabbeinu Tam, but Tzadka Chutzin deemed it a violation of the Shabbat. 

Sefardi Edah HaHaredith

 Tzadka Chutzin refused to receive any benefit from his status in the community, recusing himself from any formal rabbinic position, although he did serve as dayan in the Sephardi Edah HaHaredith. He set up free Torah lectures for young and old, and either paid for tutors out of his own pocket, or taught the lessons himself. An expert mohel, Tzadka Chutzin performed circumcisions on thousands of infants, sometimes to a fourth generation in the family. 

Family

Tzadka Chutzin married No'am, his first cousin, the daughter of Rabbi Avraham Tzadka, who bore him one son. His grandson, Rabbi Menashe Tzadka, is a pulpit rabbi in Queens, New York. 
Death and legacy 
Tzadka Chutzin died at the age of 85, and was buried in the Sanhedria Cemetery in Jerusalem. 
Among Tzadka Chutzin's students were Sephardi Chief Rabbis of Israel Yitzhak Nissim and Mordechai Eliyahu; deans of Porath Yosef Yeshiva Yehuda Tzadka and Ben Zion Abba Shaul; and Yaakov Mutzafi, who succeeded him as Av Beit Din and Rabbi of Shemesh Sedaqah Synagogue. 
In 1933, Tzadka Chutzin persuaded the father of a 12-year-old Ovadia Yosef to send his son to the Porat Yosef Yeshiva. Yosef would go on to become the greatest figure of Mizrahi Jewry in the 20th century. 

Works

Meqitz Nirdamim A collection of exhortations delivered on Rosh Hashanah in Jerusalem during the Holocaust (2 volumes, published in Jerusalem in 1943 and 1944)

May the merit of the tzadik Rabbi Tzadka Chutzin protect us all. Amen

 

 

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