Gur

Gur or GUR can refer to:

People

  • Mordechai Gur (1930–95), Israeli politician and the 10th Chief of Staff of the Israeli Defense Forces
  • Places

  • Gur, Iran, a village in Kerman Province, Iran
  • Gur, Tibet, a village
  • GUR, airport code of Gurney Airport, serving Alotau in the Milne Bay Province of Papua New Guinea
  • Other

  • Gur-e Amir, tomb of Tamerlane
  • Gur-e Dokhtar, tomb of Cyrus I
  • Gur languages, a group of West African languages
  • Gur, another term for jaggery, a sugar product of Bangladesh, India, Pakistan
  • GUR, "ground under repair", as applied to a golf course
  • Gur or Ger (Hasidic dynasty), from Góra Kalwaria
  • Gur, an Ancient Mesopotamian unit of measurement for grain
  • Gur or Persian onager, Equus hemionus onager, a subspecies of Asiatic wild ass (donkey)
  • Gur, the ROT13 encryption of the
  • Gurúè

    Gurúè (also spelt Gurué; known before independence as Vila Junqueiro) is a town located in the northern part of Mozambique, near the center of the province of Zambezia. It is the country's largest tea estate. Population as of the 1997 census was 99,325, but current estimates are 116 922.

    History

    Portuguese rule

    Ger (Hasidic dynasty)

    Ger, or Gur (or Gerrer when used as an adjective) is a Hasidic dynasty originating from Ger, the Yiddish name of Góra Kalwaria, a small town in Poland. The founder of the dynasty was Rabbi Yitzchak Meir Alter (1798–1866), known as the Chiddushei HaRim after his primary scholarly work by that title.

    Prior to the Holocaust, followers of Ger were estimated to numbered in excess of 100,000, making it one of the largest and most influential Hasidic groups in Poland. Today the movement is based in Jerusalem and its membership is estimated at 13,000 families, most of whom live in Israel, making the largest Hasidic dynasty in Israel. However, there are also well established Ger communities in Brooklyn NY and London UK, and minor Ger communities in Toronto Canada and Los Angeles CA.

    History

    After the death of the Kotzker Rebbe in 1859, the vast majority of his Hasidim chose Rabbi Yitzchak Meir Alter, the Kotzker Rebbe's brother-in-law and his closest disciple, as their new rebbe. At the time, Rabbi Yitzchak Meir lived in Warsaw and led the main Kotzker shtiebel there (on ul. Zelazna). Shortly after accepting the leadership of the Kotzker Rebbe's Hasidim, Rabbi Yitzchak Meir was appointed as Rav and Av Beit Din (head of the rabbinical court) of Ger. Relocating to Ger, he became the founding rebbe of the Gerrer dynasty. During his seven years of leadership, the Chassidus flourished, causing it to be known as the "seven years of plenty".

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