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Shaul Shimon Deutsch (born 1966) [1] is a rabbi and author from Brooklyn, New York. [2] Originally associated with the Chabad Hasidic community, during the mid-1990s, Deutsch attempted to form a breakaway sect and named himself the Liozna Rebbe .
Moses Berlin, 19th-century British Reform rabbi; Lionel Blue, Reform rabbi and broadcaster; Shmuley Boteach, American-born Orthodox rabbi, author, and TV and radio host [271] Sir Israel Brodie, Chief Rabbi; Felix Carlebach, German-born rabbi; Eli Cashdan, rabbi; Albert Chait, rabbi and broadcaster, Leeds; Isidore Epstein, rabbi, principal of ...
The museums were founded and are operated by rabbi and author Shaul Shimon Deutsch. The first location is at 1601 41st Street in Borough Park, Brooklyn, New York, United States, and was named a Best Museum of New York by The Village Voice. [2] A second location, in the Catskill Mountains town of Fallsburg, operates during the summer season.
Michael Ber was born in Debrecen, Hungary on 25 October 1903 (4 Cheshvan 5664 on the Hebrew calendar) to Yosef Weissmandl, a shochet.A few years later his family moved to Tyrnau (now Trnava, Slovakia).
Tutored by his father in cantorial music and ministerial duties, Chait first led services age 14. At 19 he was appointed in Leeds, where he is now Senior Rabbi to the United Hebrew Congregation, the largest UK congregation outside London, as well as Jewish Chaplain to Leeds Teaching Hospital NHS Trust.
The Leeds Jewish Welfare Board has provided aid since 1878. [56] The Leeds Jewish Housing Association has 500 homes. [57] The Leeds Jewish Institute was founded in 1896, and the Jewish Young Men's Association by 1901. [18] [58] The Leeds Jewish Representative Council has been active since 1938. [59] The first Leeds Jewish trade union dates from ...
A rare gold coin was donated to a Salvation Army Red Kettle in Washington, Pennsylvania, by an anonymous good Samaritan due to holiday foot traffic. Coin expert weighs in.
Rabbi L. Graf of the Reform Synagogue in Bradford attempted to start a community of worship in Leeds, presiding over a service of six people in a house in Oakwood on 8 January 1944. [4] Numbers grew and services moved to a variety of sites, eventually buying the defunct Sephardi Synagogue building at 21 Leopold Street, Leeds 7 in November 1951 ...