- Benjamin Hirsch Auerbach
Benjamin Hirsch Auerbach (born at
Neuwied in 1808; died atHalberstadt ,September 30 1872 ) was a Germanrabbi and one of the most prominent leaders of modernOrthodox Judaism .Benjamin received his first instruction from his father, subsequently studying at the "
yeshibot " ofKrefeld andWorms . Well equipped with Talmudic learning he entered theUniversity of Marburg , where he studied from 1831 to 1834. Immediately afterward he was called to the rabbinate ofHanau , but declined, preferring the call toDarmstadt , as chief rabbi (Landesrabbiner) of theGrand Duchy of Hesse , for which office no less a personage thanZunz was his competitor. His position was, however, very difficult, as he was strictly Orthodox, while the majority of the congregation were Liberal. He remained for twenty-three years, but was forced to resign in 1857. He went toFrankfort-on-the-Main , where he busied himself with literary work until, in 1863, he was called as rabbi to Halberstadt, in which post he served until his death.As a scholar and author, Auerbach ranks among the first in his party. He was among the first Orthodox rabbis that preached in pure German; and his text-book for religious instruction enjoys deserved popularity. In the controversy aroused by the publication of
Zacharias Frankel 's "Darke ha-Mishnah," he naturally sided with Frankel's opponents, defending the view of the divine origin of the rabbinical law.Besides numerous sermons, he published: (1) "Lehrbuch der Israelitischen Religion," 1839, 3d ed., by his son Selig Auerbach, Giessen, 1893; (2) "Berit Abraham, oder die Beschneidungsfeier und die Dabei Stattfindenden Gebete und Gesänge. In's Deutsche Uebersetzt und mit einer Ausführlichen Literarhistorischen Einleitung Versehen," Frankfort-on-the-Main, 1869, 2d ed., 1880; (3) "Ha-Ẓofeh 'al Darke ha-Mishnah," a criticism of Frankel's "Introduction to the Mishnah," Frankfort-on-the-Main, 1861; (4) "Mishnat R. Nathan," notes on the Mishnah, written by Nathan Adler of Frankfort, who had been Abraham Auerbach's teacher, Frankfort-on-the-Main, 1862; (5) "Sefer ha-Eshkol,"an edition of the ritual code of Abraham of Narbonne, Halberstadt, 1863; and (6) "Geschichte der Israelitischen Gemeinde Halberstadt," Halberstadt, 1866.
Family
His father,
Abraham Auerbach , a descendant of an old rabbinical family which traced its origin back toMenahem Auerbach , one of the exiles of Vienna, was on the maternal side a nephew ofJoseph David Sinzheim , the first president of the French Sanhedrin, and after having held various rabbinical positions became rabbi of the consistory of Bonn.References
*Geiger's Jüd. Zeit. i. 127, 195, 253;
*Allg. Zeit. d. Jud. 1857, pp. 269, 282;
*Dr. B. H. Auerbach, ein Lebensbild, in Meyer's Kalender for 5645, Halberstadt, 1884; various reports in the newspapers of his time; also private communications from his grandson, Dr. Isaac Auerbach, at Leipzig.
*Julius Fürst , Bibl. Jud. i. 72;
*Isaak Markus Jost , "Annalen", 1839, Nos. 33, 37, 43;
*Jost, "Neuere Geschichte der Israeliten von 1815 bis 1845", i. 17, iii. 160;
*Fuenn , Keneset Yisrael, p. 279;
*William Zeitlin , Kiryat Sefer, 8.External links
* [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=2111&letter=A Source]
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