Rav Pinchas Teitz became friendly with
Shimon Wittenberg, also a representative to the Sejim, and
Avigdor Balshanek, the head of Agudath Israel in Latvia. He became Secretary of Agudath Israel and traveled around the country to establish a heder in every town. His powers of analysis, memorable phrasing, and ability to engender enthusiasm in an audience led to his being asked to speak at many gatherings. He met the
Lubavitcher Rebbe (1880–1950) at the border when the Communists released him from Russia to Latvia; he helped the Rebbe establish a yeshiva in Riga. He met Rav
Yehezkel Abramsky (1886–1976) at the train station in Riga when the Communists released him from prison. The prison officials had wanted to humiliate Rav Abramsky by removing his beard. Rav Teitz arranged a minyan in an apartment where the rav could stay while his beard grew back. He edited
Unzer Shtimme, "Our Voice," a Yiddish newspaper in Riga; he headed a religious youth movement that he named Yavneh; he was the rabbi of a small town. At his sister's wedding the heads of the
Telz Yeshiva observed his organizational skills and heard him speak. They asked him to accompany Rabbi
Eliyahu Meir Bloch (1895–1955) on a fund-raising trip to
North America. Basya and Pinchas hesitated to meet since people spoke about a solution to the problem of finding a rabbi, not about the relationship of a young couple. Then Rav Bloch introduced them to each other. In autumn 1934 they became engaged and on January 13, 1935, the 9th of Shvat, they married; she would teach her husband English.
Rescuing Jews from Europe Their trip to Latvia and Lithuania to meet the family took them across
Germany; fear of the
Nazis was evident. Rabbi Teitz spoke wherever he was invited about the danger of
Hitler carrying out his plans and the need to leave Europe. When the couple returned to America, he started the process of immigration for his family. He was able to save one brother and his parents. A brother-in-law came to the
United States in 1938, then went back to accompany his wife and young children; they waited too long. He had worked in Europe in the 1930s on an economic boycott of Germany, but the Nazis used it for propaganda against the Jews. Now that he was in the United States, he met with government officials, including senators, to propose paying $100 for each Jew who would be permitted to leave the lands that the Nazis had conquered. But
anti-Semitism was rampant; one politician told him that helping Jews would hurt his chances in the next election. He joined
Va’ad Hatzalah, sending food and trying to rescue people. In 1941, Jewish life in Europe was being destroyed; Torah education and observance would have to grow in America. He started a day school where a high level of Jewish and secular knowledge would be attained. He instituted nursery for 3-year-olds, kindergarten at 4, and primer at 5, where children learned to read
Hebrew and
English, each one at an individual pace. He wanted children to enjoy learning through Shabbos parties, making a seder, singing, performances, and daily recess in a large playground. Opposition to a day school was intense; the word ‘yeshiva’ could not be used until Dr.
Samuel Belkin, president of
Yeshiva University from 1943 to 1975, made it part of the American vocabulary. The assumption was that only a big city with a large Jewish population could sustain a yeshiva. Elizabeth was the third small community to start a school. After the war he went to
England, France and
D.P. (Displaced Persons) camps to help survivors find refuge. He listed the school and synagogues in Elizabeth as places where they could be employed. The savings account that contained money he had raised to construct a school building became assurance that none of the survivors would request welfare. In a booklet published by
Bobover Hassidim they note that Rav Teitz helped the Rebbe with the paperwork and got him into the United States. For 30 years he was the treasurer of
Ezras Torah, a charity to support Torah scholars; he worked closely with Rabbi
Yosef Eliyahu Henkin, who headed the charity. When a project to provide housing in Jerusalem for Torah scholars was about to go bankrupt, he raised the funds to complete it in 1977.
Building Torah in America In 1947, he built a modern synagogue with perfect sight lines and acoustics for the men's and women's sections; it was located in a beautiful neighborhood, an example of the rabbi's principle that
Orthodoxy should be first-rate in every way. In 1951, he opened a new building for the school, around the corner from the synagogue; the school and synagogue were now named the
Jewish Educational Center, JEC; visitors borrowed educational materials, mission statements, publicity flyers, and architectural plans. In 1955, two projects combined: a yeshiva high school for boys opened; the classrooms were in a new synagogue in an area that had been fields a few years earlier, but was now the place to build spacious homes. The synagogue had 6 steps leading down to the men's section, and 6 steps up to the women's section, demonstrating that men and women shared in separating for prayer. In 1963, he opened the
Bruriah High School, the first yeshiva high school for girls in New Jersey. In 1965, the boys’ high school moved into a new building with a beit midrash-study hall, labs, a gym, a library; it was connected to the elementary school building. In 1972, Bruriah moved into a new building with a mikvah for the new neighborhood. While he was fundraising and, together with his wife, creating a community where every member was important, he took responsibility for original projects: In 1958–1964, he testified before congressional committees and state legislatures on the humane qualities of kosher slaughter; he debated on the radio with those who wanted to ban
shechitah. For a book about the confrontation with death in America, Dr. Michael Lesy reported on the contrast between an ordinary packinghouse in
Omaha, Nebraska and the kosher slaughterhouse that Rav Teitz permitted him to visit. He was impressed with the rabbi's explanation of shechitah and with the shochet's attitude to his work as a
mitzvah. He thought "in Omaha, the kill was rational and brutal. Here it’s religious and humane." In 1960, he served on the board of Yavneh, the newly formed National Association of Religious Jewish Students. In 1961, he assisted students at Princeton in renting a house where they could pray, have Torah classes, and eat kosher food. He signed the lease for the house, spoke to officials at the university, invited Milton Levy, a member of the Elizabeth community who wanted to support this initiative (and who donated all the furniture and outfitted the kitchen), and gave several classes to the students.
Russia Between 1964 and the 1980s, Rav Teitz traveled to the
USSR twenty-two times to assure the 3 million Jews who were caught behind the Iron Curtain that their brothers and sisters cared for them, and to bring siddurim, chumashim, haggadot for Passover, etrogim and lulavim for Sukkot, and kosher cured meat. He published a
siddur called Kol Yisrael Haverim, All Jews Are Friends, which contained all the information needed for a Jewish life: how to read Hebrew, how to pray, the text for a
ketubah (marriage contract), how to make
tefillin,
mezuzot, and
tzitzit. He added pictures of fruits, vegetables, grains, plants used for spices, with their names in Hebrew, Russian, and Latin/English (sometimes together, sometimes Latin alone), grouped together according to the blessing on each. Young people met in secret groups to learn from the siddurim how to read and speak Hebrew; several began to observe mitzvot. He met with government officials to stop the destruction of cemeteries and to get permits to build an ohel, a canopy, for the graves of such luminaries as Rabbi
Chaim Ozer Grodzinski and the
Vilna Gaon, and a gravestone for the
Ba’al Shem Tov. His wife accompanied him on all the trips but two, when his daughters came instead. He wanted the insurance of American passports belonging to citizens born in America; his passport indicated that he was a naturalized citizen, and he did not want to be "reclaimed" by Latvia. He also wanted to demonstrate that they were tourists, not spies; a spy would not have his family accompany him. He opposed demonstrations against the Soviet government; people criticized his approach of quietly applying for visas and repeatedly going to Russia. He did not want publicity; he did not speak about what he did on these trips. He was concerned that if the name of a person he worked with would become known, that person might be imprisoned. After he died, and as Russia changed, emigrants started to tell what he had done. If a person wanted to leave Russia, he could take nothing along except for some clothing; everything of value was confiscated. Rav Teitz arranged with a family that was planning to exit: they would trade all their possessions for rubles; he would return the money to them in dollars when they got out. He gave the rubles to refuseniks who had been dismissed from their jobs, and to old people who were living in poverty, including a few talmidei hakhamim, Torah scholars, who were destitute. When the family reached the United States, he gave them dollars. They were able to start a business; within a few years, they bought a house. Two men who were in the USSR appreciated what Rav Teitz was doing: Rav
Eliyahu Essas, who led a return to Jewish education and observance in Russia, and now teaches Torah in Israel; Rav
Yitzchak Zilber (1917–2004), who stood up for his beliefs in Tashkent, encouraged others to do the same, and became the "rabbi of the Russians" in Israel when he arrived there in 1972.
Daf Hashavua In 1953, in order to awaken Jews who knew
Yiddish, but had gotten distant from their origins, he founded a half-hour radio program of
Talmud, Daf Hashavua, aired at 9:30 on Saturday night. He chose
WEVD, a socialist station, to reach his intended audience. Over the years he taught 9 Tractates -
Brakhot,
Rosh Hashanah,
Yoma,
Sukkah and others that would be immediately relevant. The program continued until 1988. To meet the demand for texts each time he started a new tractate, he printed copies with line numbers so that listeners could easily find the place. He sent tapes for broadcasts in local stations to
Boston,
Chicago,
Detroit,
Miami,
Philadelphia, and
Montreal.
Kol Yisrael LaGolah aired the tapes behind the
Iron Curtain. When the U.S. government monitored foreign language programs, it reported 200,000 listeners. His son, Rabbi Elazar Mayer Teitz (1935-2025), taught Talmud on the radio in English for eleven years. There were objections from people who thought that Torah on the radio was forbidden. While David Eisenberg wrote in "She’arim" May 15, 1955 about "Limmud Torah Ba’rabim: Rive’vot Ma’azinim L’ Shiuro Shel HaRav Pinchas Mordechai Teitz," others were not positive. But Rabbi
Yitzchak Herzog, Rabbi
Shmuel Belkin, Rabbi
Moshe Feinstein, Rabbi
Yechiel Yaakov Weinberg and Rabbi
Yosef Kahaneman, who spoke at the one-year celebration of the broadcast, all wrote in favor of teaching Torah through modern technology. In a taped message from Jerusalem to the celebration, Rav Herzog said perhaps this was the reason the radio was invented. Tapes of Rav Teitz's broadcasts demonstrated that here was another new technology that could be used to teach Torah; Torah Tapes were in the future. ==Publications==