Shlomo Harkavy (c. 1890 – c. 1942), also known as Rav Shlomo Grodner, was an Orthodox Jewish rabbi in Grodno, Poland. He served as mashgiach ruchani of the Grodno Yeshiva under Shimon Shkop, until he was murdered the Holocaust.
Biography
Early life
Shlomo Harkavy was born c. 1890 in
Grodno,
Russian Empire (present-day
Belarus). He studied at the
Radin Yeshiva, where Yeruchom Levovitz served as
mashgiach, and in 1908, when Levovitz was appointed
mashgiach of the Mir Yeshiva, a number of his students from Radin transferred to Mir with him, Harkavy included. He stayed in the Mir for several years before going to learn in the Kelm Talmud Torah. He later married Freida Baila Gringas of
Kremenchug.
Rabbinic career
In the early 1920s, Harkavy was appointed
mashgiach ruchani at Yeshiva Shaar HaTorah in Grodno, where
Shimon Shkop served as
rosh yeshiva. As part of his role as mashgiach ruchani, he was supposed to give his students
mussar (rebuke) when they did something wrong. He did this in a unique way. As opposed to confronting a student and rebuking him for a specific act, he would instead discuss that type of wrongdoing with somebody else, in earshot of the student.
The Holocaust
At the outbreak of World War II and the Soviet takeover of Poland, many yeshivas fled to Vilna, the Grodno Yeshiva included. While the
rosh yeshiva Shkop was not up to journey, Harkavy joined his students and escaped to Vilna. After the Nazi invasion of Lithuania, the Jews of Vilna were rounded up into two
ghettos, where many Jews were killed or deported to Nazi concentration camps; both ghettos were later liquidated by the Nazis.
Harkavy was murdered around that time. He was the last mashgiach of the Grodno Yeshiva in Europe.