Simcha is Hebrew for happiness or joy.
Simcha may also refer to:
- A joyous event in Judaism, such as a wedding, bar mitzvah, or bat mitzvah is generally referred to as a simcha
Simcha may also refer to:
People
- Reza Simkhah (born 1970), Iranian wrestler
- Simcha Barbiro (born 1967), Israeli actor
- Simcha Blass (1897–1982), Polish-Israeli engineer and inventor
- Simcha Bunim Alter (1898–1992)
- Simcha Bunim Cohen, Orthodox rabbi and author
- Simcha Bunim of Peshischa (1765–1827), key leader of Hasidic Judaism in Poland
- Simcha Dinitz (1929–2003), Israeli statesman and politician
- Simcha Eichenstein (born 1983), American politician
- Simcha Elberg (1915–1995), Talmudic scholar
- Simcha Felder, American politician
- Simcha Friedman (1911–1990), Israeli rabbi, educator, and politician
- Simcha Holtzberg (1924–1994), Israeli activist and Holocaust survivor
- Simcha Jacobovici (born 1953), Israeli journalist and documentary filmmaker
- Simcha Krauss (born 1937), rabbi
- Simcha Leiner (born 1989), American singer
- Simcha Lieberman (1929–2009), Israeli Talmudic scholar
- Simcha of Rome, a Jewish scholar and rabbi
- Simcha Rotem (1924–2018), Polish-Israeli veteran
- Simcha Shirman (born 1947), German born Israeli photographer
- Simcha Soroker (1928–2004), Israeli economist
- Simcha Weinstein (born 1975), English author and a rabbi
- Simcha Zelig Reguer (1864–1942), chief Rabbinical judge
- Simcha Zissel Halevi Levovitz (1908–2001), rabbi
- Simcha Zissel Ziv (1824–1898), early leader of the Musar movement
- Simcha Zorin (1902–1974), Jewish Soviet partisan commander in Minsk
- Simchah Roth (died 2012), Israeli rabbi and scholar
See also
Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Simcha.If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Categories: