Background
Simcha Binem was born in Warsaw, on 29 December 1926 (24 Teveth 5687 in the Hebrew calendar) to his father Rabbi Brachya Lieberman, a notable Gerrer hasid.
Simcha Binem was born in Warsaw, on 29 December 1926 (24 Teveth 5687 in the Hebrew calendar) to his father Rabbi Brachya Lieberman, a notable Gerrer hasid.
He was one of the last survivors of the Warsaw Ghetto. He received the traditional education in chasidic families, steeped in the study of the Talmud and its commentators. This ended abruptly in 1939 with the Nazi invasion of With the enclosure of Warsaw Jewry in a confined ghetto, his education continued along with the fight for survival entailed in ghetto life.
When the bulk of the ghetto population was sent to the Treblinka extermination camp, Simcha, as an able-bodied teenager, was transferred to Majdanek, where he worked as a slave labourer.
He was tortured brutally on account of his involvement in numerous acts of sabotage. Ultimately he was imprisoned in seven concentration camps including Dachau and Theresienstadt.
In 1945 he was rescued by Rabbi Doctor Solomon Schonfeld, Director of the Chief Rabbi"s Emergency Council, and brought to He returned to his studies and eventually became a Fellow of Gateshead Kollel. In 1971 he was appointed to the faculty of Jews" College, London as a lecturer in Talmud and Codes, a post he held until 1984, when he was "made redundant" by the then Principal of the college, Jonathan Sacks (now Chief Rabbi of Great Britain).
He then used his vast Talmudic knowledge to start writing a series of volumes titled Bishvilei Oraiso (in the paths of the Torah) and delivering public lectures on the fruits of his research.
In 1992 Rabbi Simcha emigrated from and settled in the Har Canaan district of Tzfat, a mountain-top city in the Galilee, He established an institute for the publication of his writings, eventually publishing 20 volumes in the Bishvilei Oraiso series. He died on 28 June 2009, aged 79, leaving 11 children.