Your son's bris is his foundation as a member of Klal Yisrael. You deserve a mohel who brings absolute technical precision, deep halachic integrity, and a gentle, reassuring presence to your family — in your home, in your community, on the eighth day.
I am a dedicated father, community leader, and certified mohel. My life's work is centered on serving the Jewish community with a unique blend of professional expertise and warm, personal care.
In a fast-paced world, I strive to provide families with a sense of profound calm. Beyond my technical role as a mohel, I serve as a trusted address for guidance on Torah, personal growth, and relationships. With roots in Manhattan, years building Torah and community in Baltimore and Atlanta, I'm proud to now call Bet Shemesh home.
Whether learning, teaching, or performing a bris, my goal is always to support, inspire, and elevate those around me.
Every bris is a moment your family will remember for a lifetime. Here's what I bring to every one.
Surgical-level confidence during the bris, paired with a sensitive, gentle approach for the baby and the parents. Every motion intentional. Every word reassuring.
Every bris performed with halachic precision and respect for your family's minhagim. Familiar with the customs of every kehilla I serve.
Deeply attuned to the feelings of the room, creating a spacious, stress-free environment for your bris. The space holds itself when the person leading it knows how to listen.
Authentic warmth, song when it's called for, and a sense of celebration that meets the moment. Your bris should feel like a real simcha.
The bris experience should never feel uncertain. It should be a special family event — before, during, and after.
My path took me from a Manhattan childhood, to years in the yeshivos of Baltimore, to building Torah and community in Atlanta, and now home to Bet Shemesh. The lesson of those years has been simple: every family has its own way of holding a child, singing a niggun, and welcoming a son into the bris of Avraham Avinu. The mohel's role is to honor that — to bring precision and reverence in equal measure, and then to step gently into the pace of your home.
You shouldn't have to explain yourself. You shouldn't have to ask twice.
From the moment you call to the days that follow, here's what to expect.
Mazel tov. Call, text, or WhatsApp as soon as you're ready. We'll talk through any questions — minhagim, concerns, logistics — and find a time. There's no rush in the conversation itself.
I'll send you a clear, friendly preparation guide: six diapers, wipes, two receiving blankets, a pillow. I bring everything else.
I arrive early and set up quietly. The bris itself is smooth and inspiring; the simcha around it is what fills the room.
Call any time — day or night, weeks or even months later. I check in personally that evening and the next morning, and you always have a mohel you can reach.
He didn't just perform the bris — he walked our entire family through the morning with such calm, such warmth, and such song. By the time he left, our son had a mohel, and we had a rabbi.
Whether the bris is in eight days or eight weeks, reach out. I answer my own phone, return every message, and treat every conversation with the time it deserves.