Dayan Rabbi Yehuda Yaakov Refson, a veteran Chabad-Lubavitch emissary in Leeds, England, rabbi of the Shomrei Hadass Synagogue, director of the Leeds Menorah School and longtime head of the regional beth din, passed away on Sunday night. He was 73 years old.

Born in 1946 in Sunderland, a small town in northeast England, to his parents Reb Avrohom Abba and Chava Refson, he grew up in one of Sunderland’s few observant homes in a small Jewish community that in its heyday numbered around 1,400.

As a young man, Refson left home to Brunoy, France, to study at the Yeshiva Tomchei Temimim Lubavitch, under the tutelage of the famed Rabbi Nissan Nemanov. At that time, he pioneered the campaign in the country to Jewish men and boys to put on tefillin, an effort recognized and commended by the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory. After completing his studies in France, he joined the central Yeshiva Tomchei Temimim in Brooklyn, N.Y.

A diligent student, Refson was ordained as a rabbinic judge and rabbi at the yeshivah in Brooklyn and also received ordination from the world-renowned halachic authority Rabbi Moshe Feinstein.

After marrying Ettel Raskin, the couple settled in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn, where the young rabbi furthered his rabbinic studies. In 1973, the rabbi’s father suddenly passed away and the Refsons immediately traveled to Sunderland to care for his aging mother and settle his father’s extensive business affairs.

Soon after their return to Sunderland, Refson received a phone call from Rabbi Benzion Shemtov, director of Lubavitch U.K. Shemtov, an elder Russian Chassid and survivor of the Siberian gulags, informed Refson that he would be arriving in Sunderland the next afternoon, and asked the younger rabbi to fetch him from the railway station.

Shemtov explained that he felt the Refsons—younger than most of the aging Sunderland community, and the only Chassidic family for miles—must be a little lonely, especially Ettel, in this far-off and unfamiliar English town.

“When you greeted me at the station with such a big smile I already felt better,” said Shemtov. "Then when I entered your home which exuded true happiness and Chassidictranquility, and your wife’s smile matched your own, all my worries disappeared. From now on I will be able to keep in touch with you by phone more easily and do what I can to help you through this challenging period until another shlichut position becomes relevant.”

In 1976, the Refsons moved to Leeds, becoming leaders in its Jewish community, eventually overseeing Jewish education and kosher supervision in Leeds, as well as serving at the pulpit in Leeds' Shomrei Hadass synagogue.

Throughout the decades, the soft-spoken and unassuming rabbi led his community and inspired them to continue to build, even as the population slowly declined. Under his guidance, a number of Chabad emissaries took up key positions in the city’s Jewish community, ensuring a stable, inspired and devoted leadership.

Famed far beyond Leeds, he dispensed guidance to people from around the globe, who would seek to gain from his wealth of knowledge that encompassed both Torah matters as well as secular learning. Read more at Chabad.org