Yitzchok Shlomo Zilberman was born in
Berlin,
Germany to Rabbi Dr. Avraham Moshe Zilberman, translator of the
Tanakh into
German, and Rivka, née Levy. His mother died when he was 3 years old, and he was raised by his father. In 1934, in response to the coming to power of
Adolf Hitler, Zilberman escaped with his father, brother, and sister to
England. In 1939, after his father died, Zilberman caught the last boat leaving England for
Palestine before the war halted sea traffic, and he made
aliyah. He went to live with his uncle Yaakov Levy in
Rehavia,
Jerusalem, the director of the
labor ward at
Bikur Cholim Hospital. He studied at the Horev Yeshiva, and continued his education at
Kol Torah under the watchful eye of Rabbi Dr. Yechiel Michel Schlesinger. He later went on to study in the
Mir Yeshiva. Lacking the guidance of a father figure, Zilberman struggled in his youth to find an appropriate spiritual path within
Orthodox Judaism to which he could relate. He first experimented with
Hasidic Judaism, in particular
Chabad and
Breslov, before eventually adopting the stance of the
Perushim of the
Sha'arei Hesed neighbourhood, followers of the
Vilna Gaon. == Educator ==