Category
page 1Shelichei derabonan (rabbis)
Akiva ben Joseph
Jewish scholar and sage (c. 50 – c.135)
Sabbatai Zevi
Sephardic Rabbi
Moshe Alshich
Ottoman rabbi and kabbalist
Chaim Joseph David Azulai
Jerusalem rabbi and kabalist.
Eliezer ben Hurcanus
late 1st/early 2nd century Judean rabbi and tannaim (sage)
Jacob Saphir
Romanian Meschulach (1822–1885)
Amram ben Diwan
Moroccan rabbi (1743-1782)
David Reubeni
Jewish political activist
Rabbi Ammi
rabbi
Makhlouf Eldaoudi
Ottoman rabbi
Yoel Moshe Salomon
Jewish Zionist diaspora activist and co-founder of the first Zionist settlements in Israel/Palestine
Jacob Meir
former chief rabbi of HaYeshuv
Rabbi Joseph Schwarz
Jewish geographer
Yisroel ben Shmuel of Shklov
Lithuanian rabbi
Meshulach
thumb|Rabbi Yosef Schwartz
A meshulach (; plural: meshulachim), also known as a shaliach () or SHaDaR (, acronym for ), was an emissary sent to the Diaspora to raise funds (ḥalukka) for the existence of the Jewish settlement in the Land of Israel. The institution of the Emissaries of the Land of Israel, which began in ancient times, developed and contributed greatly to the connection between Diaspora Judaism and the Jews in the Land of Israel, and to the cultural life of the Jewish communities.
Amram Aburbeh
Chief Rabbi of Petah Tikva (1892-1966)
Bezalel Ashkenazi
rabbi and Talmudic scholar (1520-1591)
Samuel Salant
Polish rabbi (1816-1909)
Raphael Meir Panigel
rabbi (1804–1893)