Misplaced Pages

Bracha Qafih

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Israeli rabbanit and social worker
Bracha Qafih
Bracha Kapach
Born1922
Yemen
DiedNovember 23, 2013
Israel
NationalityYemenite-Israeli
Other namesBracha Kapach
OccupationRabbanit
Known forPhilanthropy and Tzedakah

Bracha Qafih also known as Bracha Kapach (Hebrew: ברכה קאפח; 1922 – 26 November 2013) was an Israeli rabbanit, wife of Rabbi Yosef Qafih, who was awarded the Israel Prize for her charitable work.

Early life

Qafih was born in Yemen. She was married to her first cousin, Yosef Kapach, at the age of eleven. Seven years later, they immigrated to Palestine with their three children, one of whom died on the way. Another son, Arieh, was born in Palestine.

Social work

Qafih’s first enterprise in the country was running an embroidery workshop employing 50 Yemenite women. For over half a century, she organized holiday food packages for the needy of Jerusalem. The food was packaged by student volunteers and distributed from her home in Nahlaot. Qafih also collected old wedding gowns to loan to brides from poor families.

Awards and recognition

In 1999, Kapach was awarded the Israel Prize for her special contributions to society and the State of Israel. Kapach and her husband are the only married couple to have both won the Israel Prize.

In 2018, a street in her Jerusalem neighborhood of Nahlaot was renamed in her honor, alongside her husband.

Her biography is included Danny Siegel's 1998 volume Munbaz II and Other Mitzvah Heroes and his 2020 anthology Radiance: Creative Mitzvah Living. It is also expounded in a 2005 Hebrew work called V'zot HaBracha (literally: "and this is the blessing") by Yael Shai. There is also a Hebrew children's book about her and her husband called Ankei HaTorah Ve-haḤesed ("The Giants of Torah and Chesed") by Noam and Shira Nagrober, as part of the "Gedolei HaUmah" ("Great Ones of the People") series.

References

  1. ^ A rising star, The Jerusalem Post Archived 2013-12-03 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Rebbetzin aids Jerusalem poor
  3. Teaching Jewish Life Cycle: Traditions and Activities, Barbara Binder Kadden, Bruce Kadden
  4. "Israel Prize Official Site - Recipients in 1999 (in Hebrew)".
  5. Rebbetzin aids Jerusalem poor Archived 2012-06-03 at the Wayback Machine
  6. "Jerusalem: Committee Approves Naming Several Streets After Distinguished Individuals". 6 September 2018.
  7. שי, יעל (2005). "וזאת הברכה :: סיפורה של ברכה קאפח /".
  8. מאיר, יהודה. "ענקי התורה והחסד הרב והרבנית קאפח". ספרי אור החיים (in Hebrew). Retrieved 2024-12-24.
Categories: