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His voice was the sound of music: An American Hasid lost on Mt Meron – The Forward

Rabbi Shragi Gestetner was born to make music. He started composing when he was 12. He sold his first song at 18. His debut album, Shragee, pulsates with the joy of a man who has found his calling. The year after it came out, Tablet called Gestetner one of the “rising talents of the current generation” of Hasidic music. “His voice was the sound of music,” said Gershy Moskowits, the producer who discovered him. “It sounded like a violin playing.” But when Gestetner died at Mt. Meron on Thursday at the age of 33, he had already left his music career behind. Dozens of songwriting credits and a solo album had given him a taste of celebrity, but the work playing weddings and fundraising dinners up and down the Eastern Seaboard occupied his nights and weekends. So several years ago, with four children at the time, he walked away from the music scene to pursue life as a family man.

From Across the Oceans

From Across the Oceans From Montreal and Manchester, Buenos Aires and Teaneck, each of these very different people had made their own way to the same destination   As the outpouring of grief across Israel and beyond has made clear, Meron 2021 will go down as a tragedy of the entire Jewish People 45 holy souls, Jews of all types, who died minutes after beseeching kera ro’a gezar dineinu. But of the many thousands drawn to the elevation of Rabi Shimon last week, and the hundreds who entered the horror that was the tunnel of death, one group stands apart. From different cities, countries, and continents, they’d waved goodbye as they boarded a plane to learn in yeshivah and grow in kollel, to spend time in Eretz Yisrael or go directly to Meron. From Montreal and Manchester, Buenos Aires and Teaneck, each of these very different people had made their own way to the same destination.

Lakewood, including bride-to-be, touched by stampede tragedy We are drawn to tears

Lakewood, including bride-to-be, touched by stampede tragedy. We are drawn to tears Aron Wieder talks about Israel stampede deaths Replay Video UP NEXT LAKEWOOD - Just one month ago Hindy Rozmarin was celebrating her engagement. The young township woman had plans for a wedding in just five months to Menachem Knoblowitz of Queens, New York, according to her family. But that all disappeared amid the stampede tragedy in Northern Israel that killed Knoblowitz and 44 others at historic Mount Meron on Friday. Now Rozmarin is facing the future without him. “They planned so much for life,” Rozmarin’s brother, who declined to give his name, told The Washington Post. “They just wanted to build a nice little home. And everything is gone in two seconds. I just can’t describe the pain.”

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