Zilberstein was born in Bendin, Poland to Rabbi Dovid Yosef and Rachel Zilberstein. The family emigrated to Palestine while he was a young boy, and he studied in the Etz Chaim Yeshiva in Jerusalem under Rabbi Aryeh Levin. In his teen years Zilberstein studied in the Slabodka yeshiva in Bnei Brak, where he became a student of Rabbi Yehezkel Abramsky, who gave him rabbinic ordination. He married Aliza Shoshana Eliashiv, a daughter of Rabbi Yosef Shalom Eliashiv and granddaughter of Rabbi Aryeh Levin. She assumed full responsibility for the material management of her household and encouraged him to continue studying Torah. They began their married life in Bnei Brak, where Zilberstein studied in the kollel attached to his alma mater and received another rabbinic ordination by the leading posek of Bnei Brak, Rabbi Shmuel Wosner. Subsequently, Zilberstein moved his family to Switzerland, where he served as a rosh mesivta and maggid shiur in the Yeshiva of Lucerne for several years. Upon their return to Israel, Zilberstein headed the Bais David Institutions in Holon, a largely secular city where he exerted a great influence over the entire community through his shiurim, including a monthly shiur which he gave to religious and secular doctors on the topic of healing and halacha. In 1981 he was appointed Rav and av beis din of the Ramat Elchanan neighborhood of Bnei Brak.
Family
After the death of his first wife at the age of 63 in 1999, he remarried Toby Tiberger and moved to her home in Ramat Gan. His sons, Avraham and Aryeh, are well-known rabbis and rosh yeshivas in Israel; his daughter, Leah, is married to Rabbi Dov Kook.
Current activities
Zilberstein is an acknowledged halachic authority and is renowned as an expert in medical issues related to halacha, including organ transplant, abortion, in vitro fertilization, and multi-fetal pregnancy reduction. He is a regular speaker at the annual Jerusalem Center for Research Yarchei Kallah on Medicine and Halacha. In 1999 Zilberstein was appointed to a special beis dincomposed of leading Orthodox halachic authorities who convened to study the effects of the Internet on Orthodox families and students. This beis din issued a daas Torah against the use of the computer for entertainment — such as video games and films — rather than for business purposes. In 2009 Zilberstein was a member of a committee which investigated conversion and civil marriage in Israel and gave its recommendations to Rabbi Yosef Shalom Eliashiv prior to his rendering a psak on the issue.
Popular appeal
Zilberstein's teachings have gained popular appeal with the publication of books containing stories and advice, organized according to the weekly Torah reading. These are: Aleinu L'Shabayach: Pirkei Chizuk V'Emunah, Tuv'cha Yabi'u: Ma'amarei Chizuk, Hashkafa Umussar, and Barchi Nafshi: Pirkei Chizuk V'Emunah. Vehaarevna Na: "Halachic Challenges" and "What If". Aleinu L'shabayach, compiled by Zilberstein's student, Rabbi Moshe Michael Tzoren, is based on the Rav's private writings, shiurim and conversations; it includes a wealth of stories based on unusual she'eilos received by the Bnei Brak posek. The Hebrew-language series sold in the tens of thousands, becoming one of the best-selling titles on the market. In 2009, the first English translation of the Book of Genesis was published by ArtScroll; it was followed by volumes on the Book of Exodus and Book of Leviticus as of March 2010. Tuvcha Yabi'u, a 2-volume set, and Barchi Nafshi, are also edited by Tzoren.
Selected bibliography
Aleinu L'shabayach
Tuvcha Yabi'u, Hebrew, 2-volume set
Barchi Nafshi, Hebrew, 3 volumes published to date