Culture07:08 · Jun 26, 2025

Film Revisits the Life and Legacy of Rabbi Yehuda Deri

Behadrei HaredimReligious
Translated & summarized from Behadrei Haredim by baba
The story · English

A new film recounts the life of Rabbi Yehuda Deri, described in the source as a figure who built a path of hope, light and truth for many people. It traces his childhood in Bat Yam, where at age 10 he left home to study at Porat Yosef yeshiva in Geula, a boarding environment marked by basic conditions and hardship, and highlights the support he received from leading rabbis including Ben Zion Abba Shaul, Yehuda Tzadka, Yaakov Ades, Ovadia Yosef and Baruch Mordechai Ezrachi.

The film says that as rabbi of Jerusalem’s Ramot neighborhood, he moved between synagogues, encouraging, embracing and uniting residents. A major turning point came when Ovadia Yosef told him, “Beer Sheva is calling you,” prompting him to move there with his wife and young children and transform the city into a stronger religious center, with stricter kashrut, upgraded mikvaot and greater public emphasis on Shabbat, modesty and observance.

Alongside serving as city rabbi, Deri also headed the Beersheba rabbinical court. He dealt with complex halakhic cases involving divorce, abandoned wives, money, lineage and marriage, and the article says he was known for exceptional ability to find permitted solutions without deviating from Jewish law. His rulings were accepted with trust and respect even by senior dayanim, and people from across the religious spectrum relied on him for guidance.

The article says Deri authored more than 36 Torah books, written through years of intense night study, and that his works are studied by rabbis, judges and halakhic decisors. He was widely loved by Sephardim, Lithuanians, Hasidim, Chabad followers, national-religious Jews and others. At his funeral, attended by tens of thousands and leading rabbis, Rehovot Yeshiva head Rabbi Yaakov Friedman said, “Beersheba before Rabbi Yehuda Deri and Beersheba after is not the same.”

Read the original at Behadrei Haredim
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