The first Tosher rebbe was Meshulam Feish Segal-Loewy I, a disciple of Rabbi David Spira of Dinov son of Tzvi Elimelech Spira of Dinov.
Meshulam Feish Segal-Lowy I of Tosh - disciple of Rabbi David Spira of Dinov
Elimelech Segal-Lowy of Tosh (1865–1942), son of Meshulam Feish and disciple of Rabbi Eliezer Tzvi Safrin
Mordechai Segal-Lowy of Demecser - son of Elimelech of Tosh
Meshulam Feish Segal-Lowy II of Tosh (1921–2015), reviver of the Tosh dynasty after the Holocaust - son of Mordechai of Demetsche and his wife Tzirl
Elimelech Segal-Lowy of Tosh - son of Meshulam Feish Segal-Lowy of Tosh
The Tosh community was revived after the Holocaust by rebbe Meshulim Feish Lowy (Hungarian form: Lőwy Ferencz), who was born in Nyirtass, Hungary, in the Jewish year 5682 (1921 or 1922 CE). He survived the Holocaust in the Hungarian Labour Service, and was liberated by the Red Army from a camp outside Marghita in October 1944. He became the rebbe of the surviving Hasidim of his father, Mordechai Márton Lőwy, who was murdered in Auschwitz with most of his extended family, and he established his court in Nyíregyháza. In 1951, fearing the Hungarian People's Republic's communist government, he told his followers to leave Hungary, and emigrated to Canada, settling in Montreal. In 1963, he and his Hasidim purchased an area in Boisbriand, Quebec, forming the enclave of Kiryas Tosh. Lőwy was married to Chava (née Weingarten), a direct descendant of Elimelech of Lizhensk, from 1946 until her death in 1996. He married Malka Hass in 2007.
He was succeeded by Elimelech Segal-Lowy.
Writings
Many of Meshulim Feish Lőwy's sermons and discourses have been written down in a series of five books entitled Avodas Avodah. Two of them are Hebrew-language books that explain the weekly Torah portions, and the Jewish holidays, with practical insights into divine service which are subtitled: Dibros Kodesh. Further two are Yiddish-language books that explain the weekly Torah portions, and the Jewish holidays, with practical insights into divine service which are entitled: Imros Kodesh. Another, mostly in Hebrew but with Yiddish segments, is a compilation of addresses that he made regarding the Yahrzeit (death anniversary) of a large number of Jewish religious figures, arranged according to the Jewish calendar. It is subtitled Sichos Kodesh. A second volumes of "Sichos Kodesh" appeared in 2009.