It is with great sadness that Matzav.com reports the petirah of Rav Yitzchok Alster zt”l, a distinguished talmid chochom, revered marbitz Torah, gifted baal menagen, and a noted talmid of Rav Yitzchok Hutner zt”l.
For more than seven decades, Rav Alster carried the teachings, spirit, and vision of his rebbi across continents, building institutions, nurturing talmidim, and bringing Yidden closer to Torah.
Born in Cologne, Germany, Rav Alster was still a child when his family escaped Europe shortly before the outbreak of World War II. Like so many refugees who arrived on American shores with little more than faith and determination, he would help build the very Torah world that barely existed in America at the time.
His spiritual home became Yeshivas Rabbeinu Chaim Berlin, where he arrived in 1953 and came under the influence of the rosh yeshiva, Rav Yitzchok Hutner. What began as admiration developed into a lifelong kesher that would shape every aspect of his life.
Years later, reflecting on his arrival at the yeshiva, Rav Alster recalled that he had already sensed something unique before becoming a talmid. He noticed the extraordinary reverence that Rav Hutner’s talmidim displayed toward their rebbi and realized that theirs was no ordinary rebbi-talmid relationship. It was a profound connection that he himself yearned to attain.
That relationship, he explained, did not emerge overnight. It developed gradually through years of learning, observation, conversations, and immersion in the atmosphere Rav Hutner created. By then, Rav Hutner no longer delivered the daily blatt shiur and instead focused on the shiur klali and the famed maamarim that would later become the classic Pachad Yitzchok. Talmidim forged relationships with him through personal meetings in his office and by watching him during davening, shiurim, maamarim, and Yom Tov observances.
Rav Alster often spoke about the uniqueness of Chaim Berlin and Rav Hutner’s revolutionary vision. The rosh yeshiva, he explained, transformed the yeshiva into a family. A bochur did not merely attend classes there; he became part of a mishpacha. Rav Hutner often pointed to the words “mishpacha umishpacha” in Megillas Esther, teaching that the unity of a family rooted in kedushah could withstand even the corrosive influence of Amalek. Yeshivas Rabbeinu Chaim Berlin was built around that concept.
At a time when the American Torah community was still in its infancy and talmidim arrived from vastly different backgrounds, Rav Hutner understood that Torah education required more than transmitting information. It demanded shaping the entire person. He created an environment in which talmidim felt they belonged to something larger than themselves.
The Yomim Tovim reflected that philosophy. Rav Alster would later describe the unforgettable Pesach sedorim that Rav Hutner conducted through the night until vasikin. Bochurim flocked to the yeshiva from across New York to participate.
Central to Rav Hutner’s influence were the legendary maamarim. Rav Alster described them as masterpieces that combined Chazal, Rishonim, the Maharal, and the Vilna Gaon into a coherent worldview that taught talmidim not only how to learn but how to think, feel, and experience Yiddishkeit.
Rav Alster often quoted Rav Hutner’s insistence that these were not intellectual luxuries, but essential foundations of Jewish life.
Rav Alster explained that his rebbi sought to implant within every talmid an appreciation for penimiyus. Superficiality was anathema to him.
He once compared the challenge to crossing a large puddle. Sometimes, he taught, there is no way through except by making a great leap. The maamarim gave talmidim the ability to make that leap — to transcend the limitations of their surroundings and elevate themselves to a higher plane of avodas Hashem.
Rav Alster would later remark that while many sought prose, Rav Hutner spoke poetry. The four sections of Shulchan Aruch represented the prose of Torah, while the world of hilchos deios and Chovos Halevavos revealed its poetry. Few talmidim absorbed that lesson as deeply as Rav Alster himself.
Rav Hutner’s impact on him was so profound that Rav Alster remained his talmid for life. Even after leaving the yeshiva, he maintained a close relationship with his rebbi, regularly returning for Yom Tov and seeking guidance in major decisions.
When Rav Alster founded the Yeshiva of Pittsburgh in 1967, he brought with him the educational philosophy he had absorbed in Chaim Berlin. The yeshiva became an important Torah institutions in the city and helped shape generations of bnei Torah.
In 1985, he established Kollel HaTorah in New York, creating a framework through which businessmen and professionals could maintain serious Torah learning alongside their careers. Long before such programs became commonplace, Rav Alster recognized the need to provide opportunities for baalei batim to remain connected to sustained growth in Torah.
Yet another dream remained unfulfilled. For decades, Rav Alster longed to settle in Eretz Yisroel. In 2004, that aspiration became reality when he moved to Yerushalayim and established Kollel Nachlas Tzvi in Har Nof. There, as rosh kollel, he continued teaching and inspiring until his final years, bringing the spirit of Chaim Berlin and the teachings of Rav Hutner to a new generation.
Alongside his accomplishments in Torah, Rav Alster possessed another extraordinary gift. He was a uniquely talented composer of music.
Rav Alster’s melodies became woven into the soundtrack of yeshivos, batei medrash, and Jewish homes. His stirring composition “Vahaviyosim” first appeared on the iconic Chaim Berlin album Torah Lives and Sings. The album also featured some of his other beloved niggunim, including Heviani, Pischu Li, Dovko Nafshi, and his celebrated Yedid Nefesh, which is sung in homes across the Jewish world. You can listen to some of his niggunim here.
Many listeners never realized – and still don’t know – that Rav Alster was not only one of the album’s principal composers but also its producer. Through those recordings, he helped preserve and transmit the unique spirit of Chaim Berlin and Rav Hutner to audiences far beyond the walls of the yeshiva.
Those who knew Rav Alster understood that his music was not separate from his Torah. The same yearning for penimiyus that animated his learning found expression in his melodies. His niggunim carry depth, longing, warmth, and dignity, reflecting the inner world he spent a lifetime cultivating.
In speaking about his rebbi, Rav Alster often quoted Rav Yaakov Kamenetsky’s description of Rav Hutner as “the mechanech of the dor.” He marveled at Rav Hutner’s ability to understand each talmid individually and tailor his guidance to the needs of every soul.
Over time, many came to see that Rav Alster himself had inherited much of that gift. Whether through his yeshiva, his kollelim, his conversations, his shiurim, or his music, he possessed an unusual ability to uplift people and connect them to something deeper.
The generation of talmidim who heard him teach, learned under his guidance, sang his melodies, and absorbed the worldview he faithfully transmitted have lost a treasured link to one of the great chains of mesorah of the last century.
With the petirah of Rav Alster, the Torah world loses a talmid chochom of distinction, a master educator, a builder of institutions, a composer whose melodies continue to inspire, and a lifelong ambassador of Rav Hutner’s vision.
He is survived by his choshuve family, who continue his derech. One of Rav Alster’s daughters is married to Rav Chaim Yitzchok Kaplan, venerated mashgiach of Yeshivas Chevron and Yeshivas Pachad Yitzchok.
Yehi zichro boruch.
{Matzav.co m}