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New York City police break up another ultra-Orthodox funeral as crowds gather 1 arrested; 2 days after mayor’s warning to community, NYPD issues 10 summonses at 2 synagogues in South. Hasidic politicians and an activist cut the locks off a Brooklyn playground with boltcutters, and someone called the cops for trespassing.

Heshy Tischler is on a mission to open Brooklyn playgrounds closed due to the coronavirus, and the people are on his side. That’s why they keep giving him bolt cutters.

He says he’s helped reopen six playgrounds in Brooklyn since last Thursday — the most recent in Crown Heights on Tuesday evening. Three of those had to be re-reopened after city personnel closed them again, but he did it. Last week he had just one pair of bolt cutters. Now he has seven, bequeathed by local fans — even though some of the chains around playground gates require electric metal cutting tools to break. And he’s receiving requests to come remove chains from playgrounds in Queens, as well.

“They wanted me to hold it like a symbol, like I’m Batman or something,” he said. “Whatever makes them happy.”

A video of Tischler, a Hasidic radio host, community activist and aspiring politician breaking the chains around a Williamsburg playground gate kicked off his bolt cutter campaign on Monday.

Three Brooklyn politicians channeling their Hasidic constituents’ frustrations over the continuing playground closures have joined him, in a sharp escalation of the community’s feud with New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio.

The bolt cutter crew are not breaking the law, they insist. City parks, which include playgrounds, are technically open, so it is not “breaking in” to cut the locks, Tischler says in one video.

De Blasio responded to the chain-cutting incidents in his Tuesday morning press conference, saying that he’s sympathetic to parents but that opening the playgrounds prematurely could delay the overall reopening of the city by spreading coronavirus.

“We’re not gonna allow people to take the law into their own hands,” he said. “It just doesn’t work. So people are not allowed to open up a playground that’s not yet available to the public.”

“We’re not going to allow people to take the law into their own hands.”@BilldeBlasio says playgrounds will stay closed until Stage 2 of reopening. Despite his participation in mass protests, @NYCMayor thinks playgrounds are the threat to public health. pic.twitter.com/N8mglb6rTy— Washington Examiner (@dcexaminer) June 16, 2020

The campaign comes after several demonstrations of Hasidic children have called on de Blasio to open the playgrounds and on New York Governor Andrew Cuomo to reverse the state Department of Health’s ban on sleep-away camps this summer.

“Someone should explain to me why we can have thousands of people on our beaches, thousands of people out in the streets protesting, and we can’t have kids in our local playgrounds,” said Simcha Eichenstein, a state assemblyman representing Borough Park and parts of Midwood. “Makes no sense.”

Hasidic families feel disproportionately affected by the ongoing closures of public facilities like playgrounds because they have large families, often with two parents who work, and most live in large apartment buildings with little access to private outdoor space.

Esther Weiss, a Hasidic Williamsburg resident, said that it is a struggle to keep her four children that still live with her — aged six, nine, 14 and 18 — entertained. She voted for de Blasio in his previous mayoral races, and says that she and her community feel “let down” by his overt support for the protests over their community’s unique need for public space.

On Monday and again on Tuesday, Tischler, Eichenstein, State Senator Simcha Felder and City Councilman Kalman Yeger went to parks around Hasidic neighborhoods in Brooklyn to break chains and usher families into the playground.

On Tuesday, the campaign moved to the Borough Park neighborhood’s Dome Playground. After the locks were cut, with the politicians and Tischler looking on, two police officers arrived at the scene.

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Update: Cops have arrived after call for trespassing pic.twitter.com/CHnsysDVCX— Jacob Kornbluh (@jacobkornbluh) June 16, 2020

In a video of the interaction posted to Twitter, the police officer is heard asking Yeger who cut the lock, as Yeger tells the officer that they are not obligated to answer his questions, and to call his boss.

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“I’m looking at your badge and I know you’re not a boss, so call your boss,” Yeger says.

פאליס האט פרובירט צי ארעסטירן טישלער מיט יעגער pic.twitter.com/60WeWurxcx— Hasidic2 (@hasidic_1) June 16, 2020

Benjamin Kanter, Eichenstein’s press secretary, said that the patrol officer who confronted the politicians was “overzealous,” and that the situation was resolved without summonses or arrests after a sergeant came to the scene.

Eichenstein said that de Blasio’s decision not to reopen the playgrounds despite their Sunday press conference and a letter they wrote to him left them “no choice” but to help physically remove the locks themselves, or endorse efforts to do so.

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Eichenstein said he told Tischler to go ahead with the lock-cutting at the Williamsburg park on Monday.

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“I told him not to worry, if he needs to be bailed out, I will personally bail him out,” he said.

Tischler said that the politicians who joined him on Monday were trying to share his spotlight. Tischler ran against Kalman Yeger to represent District 44 in the New York City Council in 2017, and received just under four percent of the vote; he plans to run for city council again next year.

“I let them have the credit,” he said. “But who do you think the police wanted to arrest? Not the big time politicians. They wanted to arrest Heshy.”

“Thank God Mr. Yeger’s a lawyer — not that I don’t have seven lawyers of my own — and he helped me out with the police,” he added.

The rogue playground reopenings come as the Hasidic community is experiencing a low point in its regard for local and state government, said Rabbi Yeruchim Silber, the director of government relations for New York at Agudath Israel of America, an Orthodox umbrella group.

The Hasidic community’s frustration with de Blasio over his handling of a large funeral procession in April is still fresh: He famously blamed the “Jewish community” for the procession, despite the fact that community liaison police officers in Williamsburg helped plan it.

The incident fractured de Blasio’s usually strong relationship with the Hasidic community. The community has overwhelmingly backed his mayoral campaigns, and he personally helped stall a probe into the secular educational standards of New York yeshivas in exchange for help from Orthodox lawmakers to help preserve mayoral control of city schools, according to reporting by the New York Post.

Now the Hasidic community feels that the de Blasio administration is being hypocritical by encouraging peaceful protests over the police killing of George Floyd while keeping playgrounds closed.

“That’s where a lot of anger comes from: Not only was it allowed, it was encouraged,” Silber said.

There is suspicion in the Hasidic community that the playground closures are being enforced more intensely in their neighborhoods than in others, despite the fact that playgrounds remain closed across the city.

“I question why in my community I don’t have a single playground that’s open while other communities do,” Eichenstein said. “But all playgrounds throughout the entire city that are closed should be open.”

The New York City Department of Health and Mental Services referred questions about the reasons for the playground closures to the city’s Department of Parks and Recreation, which referred to de Blasio’s Tuesday morning comments.

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“We never felt so singled out,” said Weiss, the Hasidic mother in Williamsburg, referring to what de Blasio said during the press conference. “He felt very comfortable explaining that that is more important than this, and those people were more important to satisfy than we were.”

Ari Feldman is a staff writer at the Forward. Contact him at feldman@forward.com or follow him on Twitter @aefeldman

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Table of Contents

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The Hasidic Rabbinate, Part II

Appendix: The Succession of Hasidic Dynasties

Note: Teachers in each Generation are marked with an asterisk*; surnames are highlighted in bold.

First Generation

*R. Israel b'Eliezer BaaI-Shem-Tov (Besht) 1698-1760 of Medzhibozh

Second Generation

*R. Dov Ber b'Avraham (later generations used the surname Friedman) (Magid) 1704-1773 of Miedrzyrzec
R. Pinchas b'Avraham Aba Shapira 1720-1790 of Korets
R. Shabtay Unknown 1655-1745 of Ruscova
R. Meir b'Yacov Unknown 1711-1773 of Przemyslan
R. Zvi Hirsh b'David Kaminker -1780 of Kamionka

Additional disciples of the Besht listed in 'The Hassidic Rabbinate, Part I' Appendix I (Klausner 2001).

Third Generation

*R. Yechiel Mechl b'Yitzchak Spravidliver 1721-1786 of Zloczow
R. Nachum b'Zvi Twersky 1730-1798 of Chernobyl
*R. Aharon b'Yakov Perlow Hagadol 1736-1772 of Karlin
R. Yakov Yosef b'Yehuda Arye Leib Unknown -1790 of Ostrog
*R. Elimelech b'Eliezer Lippman Weissblum 1717-1787 of Lezajsk
R. Meshulam Zusha b'Eliezer Lippman Weissblum -1800 of Hanipoli
*R. Shneor Zalman b'Baruch Unknown 1745-1812 of Lyady
R. Levi Yitzchak b'Meir Unknown [Derbarmdiger] 1740-1809 of Berdichev
R. Shimon Shlomo b'Avraham Wertheim -1790 of Savran
R. Chayim Unknown -1787of lndura (Amdur)
R. Arye Leib b'Shalom Unknown -1827 of Volochisk
R. Zvi Hirsh b'Shalom Zelig Magid -1802 of Nadvoma
R. Shlomo b'Avraham Lutzker 1740-1812 of Skole
R. Avraham Aba Weingarten of Soroca
R. Meshulam Feivish b'Aharon Moshe Heller 1740-1794 of Zbarazh
R. Gedalya b'Yitzchak Rabinovitz -1802 of Linitz
R. Chayim b'Shlomo Tierer 1760-1819 of Cemauti
*R. Shlomo b' Moshe Gottlieb Halevi (Y'D) 1738-1792 of Karlin

Additional disciples of R. Dov Ber the Magid listed in 'The Hassidic Rabbinate, Part I' Appendix II (Klausner 2001).

Fourth Generation

*R. Mordechay b'Dov Ber Shapira 1748-1800 of Neshkhiz
R. Shmuel b'Mechl Ginsburg -1818 of Davidgrodek
R. Zvi Arye b'Avraham Landa 1741-1811 of Olkusz (Elkish)
R. Yitzchak Isik b'Moshe Yechezkel Taub 1751-1821 of Kala (Kalev)
R. Moshe Arye Leib Erblich 1745-1807 of Sasow
*R. Yakov Yitzchak b'Avraham Eliezer Horovitz (the Seer) 1745-1815 of Lublin
*R. lsrael b'Shabtay Hoffstein 1736-1814 of Kozienice
*R. Avraham Yoshua HeshI b'Shmuel Manes 1755-1825 of Opatow
R. Aharon b'Moshe Horovitz Halevi 1766-1828 of StrashIa
R. Mordechay Perlow 1742-1809 of Lachowicze
R. Menachem Mendl b'Yakov Koppel Hager 1768-1825 of Kosow

Additional disciples of R. Elimelech Weissblum.

Fifth Generation

*R. David b'Shlomo Zvi Biederman 1746-1814 of Lelow
R. Klonimus Kalman b 'Aharon Epstein Halevi 1751 -1827 of Krakow
R. Yitzchak Isik b'Zvi Eichenstein 1740-1800 of Stretyn (Safrin)
R. Naftali Zvi b'Menachem Mendl Rubin-Horovitz 1760-1827 of Ropczyce
R. Natan Neta Unknown -1811 of Chelm
R. Shmuel b'Avraham Yeshaya -1820 of Kurow
R. Meir Rothenburg Halevi -1827 of Opatow
*R. Uri b'Pinchas Unknown (HaSaraf) -1826 of Strzelsk
*R. Yakov Yitzchak b'Asher Rabinovitz (The Holy Jew) 1766-1813 of Przysucha
R. Yeshayahu b'Meir Weltfried 1758-1831 of Przedborz
R. Yosef b'Mordechay Kazis Neuhaus of Chelm
R. Moshe b'Zvi Hirsh Schiff Teitelbaum 1759-1841 of Ujhely
R. Zvi Elimelech b'Pesach Shapira 1783-1841 of Dynow
R. Arye Leib Epstein -1837 of Ozarow
R. Mordechay David b'Zvi Ungar 1770-1843 of Dombrowa
R. Yitzchak Isik b'Shmuel Zanvil Gartner -1826 of Leczyca
R. Arye Leib b'Chayim Asher Lipshitz 1767-1846 of Vishnitsa
R. Avraham David b'Asher Wahrman 1771-1840 of Buchach
*R. Simcha Bunim b'Zvi Unknown 1767-1827 of Przysucha
R. Yisachar Dov Ber b'Yitzchak Baron 1765-1843 of Radoszyce
*R. Shalom b'Elazar Rokach 1779-1855 of Belz
R. Yehuda Zvi b'Shmuel Zanvil Brandwein 1780-1844 of Stratyn
R. Yechezkel b'Yosef Panet 1783-1845 of Karlsburg
R. Zvi Hirsh b'Yehuda Arye Leib Unknown 1778-1846 of Rymanow
R. Shlomo Arye Leib b'Baruch Unknown -1843 of Leczna
R. Yosef Green 1787-1839 of Jarczow
R. Arye Leib b'Elyakim Getzl Liebersohn of Pruszkow
R. Shimon b'Israel Arye Leib Elbaum Mariles 1759-1850 of Jaroslaw

Additional disciples of R. Yakov Horovitz (the Seer).

Sixth Generation

R. Yechezkel b'Zvi Hirsh Taub -1855 of Kazimierza
*R. Yitzchak b'Shimon Kalish 1779-1848 of Warka
*R. Menachem Mendl b'Yehuda Arye Leib Morgenstem 1787-1859 of Kock
*R. Chayim b'Arye Leib Halberstam 1793-1876 of Zanz
R. Shlomo b'Dov Zvi Rabinovitz Hakohen 1803-1866 of Radomsk
R. Shalom b'Yakov Yosef Rosenfeld Halevi 1800-1851 of Kamionka
R. Moshe b'lsrael Falier 1784-1858 of Kobryn
R. Yakov Arye b'Shlomo Gutterman 1792-1874 of Radzymin
R. Mordechay Yosef b'Yakov Leiner 1801-1854 of lzbica
*R. Yitzchak Meir b'Israel Rothenberg-Alter 1799-1866 of Gora
*R. Avraham b'Refael Landa 1744-1875 of Ciechanow
R. Avraham b'Yitzchak Matityahu Weinberg 1804-1883 of Slonim
R. Shmuel Aba b'Selig Zichlinski 1810-1879 of Zychlin
R. Yehuda Pesach b'Avraham Unknown 1802-1865 of Lipsko
R. Shlomo Zalman b'Avraham Frenkel 1804-1858 of Wielopole
R. Eliezer Zev Wolf b'Chayim Rabinsohn 1800-1852 of Buchach

Additional disciples of R. Yakov Horovitz (the Seer).

Seventh Generation

*R. Yehuda Arye Leib b'Shlomo Eger 1815-1888 of Lublin
R. Avraham Yosef b'Eliyahu Lehrman 1857-1891 of Konskowola
R. Yechiel Meir Lipshitz 1816-1887 Husiatyn
R. Avraham b'Zev Nachum Bornstein 1839-1910 of Sochaczew
R. Shraga Feivel b'Zvi Hirsh Danziger -1848 of Alexander
R. Yisachar Dov Ber Thornheim Hakohen 1803-1877 of Wolborz
R. Uri b'Efraim Zvi Yalles Hakohen 1833-1910 of Sambor
R. Meshulam Feish Levi 1821-1875 of Tesin
R. Zvi Hirsh b'Aharon Friedman 1790-1874 of Lesko
R. Naftali Hirtz Unknown -1897 of Ratzfert
R. Shmuel b'Shraga Feivel Frenkel 1814-1883 of Komod-Darag
R. Yoshua HeshI Fried Hakohen 1824-1921 of Kopycz
R. Yosef Meir b 'Shmuel Zvi Weiss 183 8-1909 of Szapinka
R. Yeshaya b'Moshe Steiner 1852-1925 of Kereszt-Ur
R. Zadok b'Yakov Rabinovitz Hakohen 1823-1900 of Lublin

Eighth and Last Generation

R. Menachem Nachum b'Yehuda Arye Leib Epstein 1846-1918 of Kobrin
R. Avraham Moshe Weintraub -1915 of Marshakow
R. Meir Yechiel b'Avraham Yitzchak HoIzstock Halevi 1851-1928 of Ostrowice
R. Aharon Yeshaya Fisch 1815-1928 of Hadas
R. Aharon Rothe 1894-1947 of Satu-Mare
R. Yehuda Arye Leib Ashlag 1886-1954 of Parysow
R. Avraham Yoshua b'Moshe Arye Freund 1856-1932 of Naszod
R. Eliezer Fisch 1880-1944 of Bikszad
Independent Admorim