celebration (2006) Around this time, Rabbi
Eliezer Yehuda Finkel traveled to
Mandatory Palestine to
obtain visas for his students and re-establish the Mir Yeshiva in
Eretz Yisrael, but these plans were interrupted by the
outbreak of World War II in Europe. In 1944, Rabbi Finkel opened a branch of the yeshiva in
Jerusalem with ten students, among them Rabbi Yudel Shapiro (later Rosh Kollel Chazon Ish), Rabbi Chaim Brim (later Rosh Yeshiva of Rizhn-Boyan), and Rabbi Chaim Greineman. During
World War II, as the
Wehrmacht continued to push to the
Eastern Front, the yeshiva students fled to
Japanese-controlled Shanghai under the
Wang Jingwei regime, where they remained until the end of the war. The story of the escape to the Far East of Mir Yeshiva along with
thousands of other Jewish refugees from
Nazi-occupied Europe, thanks largely to visas issued by the Dutch consul,
Jan Zwartendijk, and the Japanese consul-general to Lithuania,
Chiune Sugihara, has been the subject of several books and movies, including the
PBS documentary film
Conspiracy of Kindness. After the war, most of the Jewish refugees from the
Shanghai Ghetto left for
Mandatory Palestine and the
United States. Among them were survivors from the Mir Yeshiva, many of whom rejoined the yeshiva in Jerusalem. Rabbi Finkel's son, Rabbi Chaim Zev Finkel (commonly called Chazap), served as mashgiach. When Rabbi Eliezer Yehuda Finkel died on July 19, 1965, his son, Rabbi
Beinish Finkel and his brother-in-law, Rabbi
Chaim Leib Shmuelevitz became joint Mirrer Rosh Yeshivas. Reb Chaim was considered the main Rosh Yeshiva and when he died, his son-in-law, Rabbi
Nachum Partzovitz, replaced him. Rabbi
Beinish Finkel became Rosh Yeshiva after Reb Nachum died. With Rabbi
Beinish Finkel's death in 1990, the reins were taken over by Rabbi
Beinish Finkel's sons-in-law, with the Rosh Yeshiva, Rabbi
Nosson Tzvi Finkel, at the helm. After
Nosson Tzvi Finkel's death on November 8, 2011, his eldest son, Rabbi
Eliezer Yehuda Finkel, was named as his successor. ==Chaburas==