Romi Cohn

American rabbi
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican rabbi
A.K.A.Avraham Hakohen Cohn
A.K.A.Avraham Hakohen Cohn
PlacesUnited States of America Czech Republic
wasReligious leader Rabbi Real estate developer Businessperson Entrepreneur
Work fieldBusiness Religion
Gender
Male
Religion:Judaism
Birth10 March 1929, Bratislava, Bratislava Region, Slovakia
Death24 March 2020Maimonides Medical Center, Brooklyn, New York City, USA (aged 91 years)
Star signPisces
ResidenceBorough Park, Brooklyn, New York City, USA; Great Kills, Staten Island, New York City, USA; New York City, New York, USA
Awards
prix d'État Jozef-Miloslav-Hurban2020
The details

Biography

Romi Cohn (born Avraham Hakohen Cohn; March 10, 1929 – March 24, 2020) was a Czechoslovakian-born American Rabbi, and real estate developer.

Early life

Avraham Hakohen Cohn was born on March 10, 1929, in Bratislava, Czechoslovakia. He was one of seven children.

World War II and the Holocaust

During World War II, most Slovak Jews were deported to concentration camps. While Cohn's family managed to sneak him into Hungary, his mother, as well as two of his brothers and two of his sisters died in camps. In Hungary, Cohn studied in a Hasidic yeshiva until 1944 when the Nazis occupied the country. At that point, at the age of 15, he escaped back into Slovakia and joined a partisan brigade fighting the Nazis. As a partisan, he provided Jewish refugees with housing and false Christian identifications. According to the Twitter account of Representative Max Rose, he was able to save 56 families through his efforts.

Career

After the war, Cohn emigrated to the U.S. He "became wealthy developing thousands of single-family homes on Staten Island" and "turned himself into an expert mohel, performing thousands of circumcisions and writing scholarly articles."

On January 29, 2020, at the invitation of his congressman Max Rose, Cohen delivered the opening prayer for the U.S. House of Representatives to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz and International Holocaust Remembrance Day.

Mohel

As a mohel, Cohn "set up an operating theater in his Staten Island home to circumcise adult Russian Jews who had not been able to undergo the ritual as infants because of Soviet strictures."

In almost all of the circumcisions Cohn performed, he practiced the ancient controversial practice of metzitzah b'peh in which the mohel places his mouth directly on the circumcision wound to draw blood away from the cut.

Personal life

In the U.S., Cohn married Malvine Geldzahler. They had no children. Cohn died on March 24, 2020, at Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York, of respiratory distress caused by pneumonia and COVID-19. He was 91 years old.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 07 Sep 2024. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.