- Trude Weiss-Rosmarin
Trude Weiss-Rosmarin (
June 17 ,1908 –June 26 ,1989 ) was aJew ish-German-American writer, editor, scholar, and feminist activist. With her husband, she co-founded the School of the Jewish Woman inNew York in 1933, and in 1939 founded the "Jewish Spectator", a quarterly magazine, which she edited for 50 years.She was the author of 12 books, including "Judaism and Christianity: The differences" (1943), "Toward Jewish-Muslim Dialogue" (1967), and "Freedom and Jewish Women" (1977).
Early life
Weiss-Rosmarin was born in
Frankfurt ,Germany , the daughter of Jacob and Celestine (Mullings) Weiss. She attended the University of Berlin from 1927-8, and theUniversity of Leipzig (1929), before obtaining her PhD in Semitics, philosophy, and archeology in 1931 from theUniversity of Wurzburg for a thesis on ancient Arab history. While at university, she became active in Jewish and Zionist organizations. She emigrated in 1931 with her husband, Aaron Rosmarin (born 1904), to theUnited States , where they settled inNew York . The couple divorced in 1951.Writing and teaching
Weiss-Rosmarin and her husband opened the School of the Jewish Woman in
Manhattan in October 1933 under the auspices ofHadassah , the Women's Zionist Organization of America. The school, which closed in 1939, was modeled on the Frankfurt "Lehrhaus" created byFranz Rosenzweig andMartin Buber , and aimed to combat what Weiss-Rosmarin saw as women's poor access to education. She and her husband offered classes inTorah ,Jewish history , Hebrew, and Yiddish.Out of the school's newsletter grew the "Jewish Spectator", which described itself as a "typical family magazine with a special appeal to women." By means of her often controversial editorials, Weiss-Rosmarin sought to influence the American-Jewish community, arguing for changes in Jewish family law, Jewish-Arab co-existence in
Israel , access to a Jewish education for women, and equality for women in thesynagogue and in public life.Weiss-Rosmarin also wrote a regular column, "Letters from New York", in the "London Jewish Chronicle" and served as national co-chair of education for the
Zionist Organization of America . She taught atNew York University and theReconstructionist Rabbinical College , and published books on a variety of subjects. She died of cancer in 1989.Publications
*"Religion of Reason" (1936)
*"Hebrew Moses: An Answer to Sigmund Freud" (1939)
*"The Oneg Shabbath Books" (1940)
*"Highlights of Jewish History" (1941)
*"Judaism and Christianity: The Differences" (1943)
*"Jewish Survival" (1949)
*"Jewish Women Through The Ages" (1949)
*"What Every Jewish Woman Should Know" (1949)
*" Saadia" (1959)
*"Toward Jewish-Muslim Dialogue" (1967)
*"Jewish Expressions on Jesus: An Anthology" (1977)
*"Freedom and Jewish Women" (1977)ee also
*
Jewish feminism
*Role of women in Judaism
*Blu Greenberg References
*Hymen, E. Paula & Dash Moore, Deborah. (eds) (1997) "Jewish Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia". Routledge, ISBN 0-415-91934-7 (pp. 1463-1465)
* [http://www.americanjewisharchives.org/aja/FindingAids/weiss.htm "Inventory to the Trude Weiss-Rosmarin papers, 1931-1984"] , Jewish American Archives
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