Jacob Samuel Minkin (1885-1962) was an American rabbi, hospital chaplain and an author on Jewish history and Hasidism.[1][2]
Overview
editMinkin was born in 1885 in Švenčionys, Lithuania (then part of the Russian Empire). He was subsequently educated in Prague and New York City. Minkin served as a congregational rabbi for Conservative Judaism and later as a chaplain at Fordham Hospital. He authored a number of works on Jewish history. He died in 1962 in Tel Aviv, Israel.[2]
In 1910, Minkin received rabbinical ordaination from the Jewish Theological Seminary of America. His congregational posts included serving in Hamilton, Ontario, Rochester, New York, and New York City.[3]
Minkin's wife, Fanny, was a graduate of the Brooklyn Law School and was actively involved in the leadership of the Women's League for Conservative Judaism (WLCJ).[3]
Works
edit- The Romance of Hassidism (1935)
- Herod: A Biography (1936)
- Abarbanel and the Expulsion of the Jews from Spain (1938)
- The World of Moses Maimonides (1957)
- The Shaping of the Modern Mind: The Life and Thought of the Great Jewish Philosophers (1963)
- Gabriel da Costa (1969)
References
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