Toronto, Canada – Canadian businessman, activist and philanthropist Paul (Moshe) Reichmann passed away this morning in Toronto at the age of 83.
Join our WhatsApp groupSubscribe to our Daily Roundup Email
Mr. Reichmann had been in poor health and wheelchair bound for the past several years.
Born to Samuel and Rene Reichmann in Vienna, Reichmann was the son of a successful Hungarian egg merchant. The Reichmann family narrowly escaped Nazi occupation, leaving Austria for Hungary on the day it was annexed by the Germans. Traveling first from Hungary to France, the Reichmanns finally settled in Tangier, where the senior Reichmann became a prosperous currency trader.
According to a New York Times article reporting on Anthony Bianco’s book, “The Reichmanns: Family, Faith, Fortune and the Empire of Olympia & York”, Reichmann’s mother sent thousands of packages of food to Auschwitz inmates and was responsible for having visas issued to several thousand Jews in Budapest.
After World War II, Reichmann studied in several yeshivos including Gateshead and the Mir in Jerusalem, leaving to become the educational director of Morocco’s Ozar Hatorah in 1953 at the request of Rabbi Avraham Kalmanowitz. Reichmann was instrumental in overhauling the curriculum of the school which served 1000 students and upgrading its staff. Reichmann also traveled all across the country creating additional schools for thousands of Jewish children in Morocco.
Reichmann’s married his wife Lea Feldman in 1953 and made his first foray into the business world that same year when he began selling shirts. The couple left Morocco in 1956 and traveled to New York, eventually settling in Toronto, soon to be joined by other family members.
In 1964, Reichmann and his three brothers founded their legendary property development firm Olympia and York, which built major financial complexes including the World Financial Center in New York and First Canadian Place in Toronto.
The Reichmanns were well known for their integrity and despite their financial success, they lived relatively modestly and never apologized for their religious observances, wearing yarmulkas openly and shutting down their construction sites on Shabbos and Jewish holidays.
Reichmann was once quoted as having told a relative, “What multiplied my initial success by a factor of a hundred had nothing to do with my own efforts. It was Hashem’s will that I was successful on such a scale.”
While Reichmann was forced to resign from Olympia and York after it went bankrupt in 1992 he successfully rebuilt a portion of his empire. Reichmann announced his retirement in 2005 at age 75 and just eighteen months later reversed his decision, setting up a $4 billion fund and new offices in Great Britain and the Netherlands.
Together with his brothers, Reichmann had a reputation for his generosity, donating hundreds of millions to yeshivos in Israel, Canada and the United States. While Reichmann was known for living relatively simply, he had a passion for collecting rare and valuable seforim.
Brooklyn, residence David Moscovits, who founded the Masores Avos American Endowment School, an institution that was funded substantially by the Reichmann family, had an extremely close relationship with Reichmann and remembered him warmly.
“If anyone would like to see an example of Torah, avoda and kiddush Hashem, this is what R’ Moshe was,” Dr. Moscovits told VIN news. “His eidelkeit, his neimus, his respect for another human being was indescribable. When it came to ahavas Hashem, avodas Hashem, he never stopped.”
The Funeral is said to take place this Motzi Shabbos 9:00 PM EST, in Toronto at Bais Yaakov Girls school – 15 Saranac st.
Ovad Chosid Min Haoretz, he was a REAL chosid Hamischased Im Kono! Chaval Al Deavdin Velo Mishtakchin, Yehi Zichroino Baruch!
May his huge heart of generosity & love be a Zchus for all his Children, Grandchilren, Great -Grand Children and all of Klal Yisrael.
BD”E he will now take his seat in the Yeshiva Shel Maalah next to the Gedolim of the last 40 years who are already there to greet him. TNTBH.
B.D.E. He will be a Mylitz Yosher for all of us.
BD”E, He was legendary! May he be a ‘maylitz yoisher’ for Am Yisroel.
He was arguably the greatest benefactor of Sephardic Torah institutions in the world, in the last 100 years. BD”E.
His passing is a tremendous loss to the Jewish poeple and to all mankind. As the saying goes; they just don’t make ’em like that anymore.
He was a source of pride to anyone in business that is frum. There he stood at the epicenter of international business with a big yarmulkah on his head and an un-trimmed beard on his face and told anyone that would listen that his success was not his own but, “zeh keili v’anveihu” that it is only HaShem’s brocho, these were not only words, but action too he gave Hashem his “distribution” with all the hundreds of millions dollars to yeshivas and other yiddishe institutions. He should be a gute better for his family and for all of the Jewish nation.
B’DH , he was a real pioneer, he was the 1st to show for the other rich people what means giving Tzedukeh , he gave with an open hearth, all the tzedukehs from the other people, to his credit,
BD”E
He was a good man.
May his family continue his way!
(And let many gvirim learn from him as well!)
He was a source of pride to anyone in business that is frum. There he stood at the epicenter of international business with a big yarmulkah on his head and an un-trimmed beard on his face and told anyone that would listen that his success was not his own but, “zeh keili v’anveihu” that it is only HaShem’s brocho, these were not only words, but action too he gave Hashem his “distribution” with all the hundreds of millions dollars to yeshivas and other yiddishe institutions. He should be a gute better for his family and for all of the Jewish nation.
He was truly remarkable. Let’s hope that the klal will also merit a pioneer in grammar and language so that all such comments can be articulate, clear to understand and offer the full level of honor that the recipient deserves.
He was also very personable and could talk to anyone. Once, many years ago, I was waiting to see a doctor at Mount Sinai hospital. He came into the waiting room and sat down beside me. He said Sholoim Aleichem and started a conversation with me as if he’d known me for many years. We’d never met before.
I just had a thought.
What I just found amazing about this individual (whom I never met) is that all the comments about him are positive!
Nobody seems to have anything negative to say about him.
And THAT’S what I call a “Legacy”!
BD’E
BDE we lost another holy soul
A legend. A person to learn from in every way. A man who taught the world how to give tzedaka and was totally disconnected from his money. The last couple years of his life , he was tottaly immersed in Torah Study and even let his beard grow long and untrimmed like a real oived hashem and ben torah. Ovad chosid min haaretz. Yehi zichro boruch and may he be a meilitz yosher for all of us.
A great Jew is gone from us. I have nothing but great respect for him and everything he did.
But I don’t understand something the article.relates from the book by Bianco. Reichmann’s mother sent thousands of packages of food to Auschwitz??? How? FedEx, UPS? Am I the only one who finds that statement astonishing? I believe completely that his mother was a great tzadekis, but Jews weren’t getting deliveries in gehenim.