Samuel Jacob Rabinowitz
Born 1857 (1857 ) Died 1921 (aged 63–64) Religion Judaism
Samuel Jacob Rabinowitz (Yiddish : שמואל יעקב בן שמעון מאיר ראבינאוויץ ; 1857–1921) was a Lithuanian rabbi, writer, and Zionist leader. He has been described as the "greatest spokesman of religious Zionism before Reines ."[ 1]
Rabinowitz was born in Kelme , Kovno Governorate , in 1857. He became rabbi at Ivye in 1887, and was called in the same year to Aleksot . He was an early member of Ḥovevei Zion ,[ 2] and was a delegate to the Second Zionist Congress at Basel .[ 3] He became rabbi of Sopotkin in 1900, and of Liverpool in 1906.[ 3]
Work
Rabinowitz contributed a number of articles to Ha-Melitz , which later were published under the title Ha-Dat veha-Le'ummiyyut (Warsaw, 1900). A collection of his responsa and novellae were published as Sefer Oraḥ Yashar in Vilna in 1903.[ 3]
Selected publications
Ha-Dat veha-Le'ummiyyut [Religion and Nationalism ]. Warsaw. 1900.{{cite book }}
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Sefer Oraḥ Yashar . Vilna. 1903.{{cite book }}
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Li-Tekufot ha-Yamim [The Cycle of Seasons ]. 1918.
Sefer Yashresh Ya'akov . Liverpool: Rabbi S. J. Rabinowitz Memorial Publication Fund. 1925.
References
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain : Rosenthal, Herman; Eisenstadt, Benzion (1905). "Rabinovitz, Samuel Jacob" . In Singer, Isidore ; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia . Vol. 10. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. p. 302.
^ Salmon, Yosef (1996). "Tradition and Nationalism" . In Reinharz, Jehuda; Shapira, Anita (eds.). Essential Papers on Zionism . New York: New York University Press. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-8147-7449-6 .
^ Manor, Alexander, ed. (1960). Sopotkin: In Memory of the Jewish Community . Translated by Kramer, Alfred Neil. Tel Aviv. pp. 41–48 – via JewishGen . {{cite book }}
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^ a b c Silverman, Godfrey Edmond (2007). "Rabinowitz, Samuel Jacob" . In Berenbaum, Michael ; Skolnik, Fred (eds.). Encyclopaedia Judaica (2nd ed.). Detroit: Macmillan Reference. ISBN 978-0-02-866097-4 .