Talk:Yehuda Halevi
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Judah ben David ha-levi of Cologne became "Hermannus quondam Idueus" (Hermann the erstwhile Jew) when he approached the baptismal font in 1129 at the age of twenty. He soon became a Premonstratensian canon, rose to the priesthood, and ultimately was chosen abbot of the Premonstratensian cloister at Scheda. Like Peter Alfonsi, Hermann authored a book to explain his apostasy, although his Opusculum de conversione sua concerns the events leading up to his conversion rather that the substantive differences between Judaism and Christianity. Hermann's interesting treatise has been termed the most compelling autobiographical account of religious conversion since Augustine's Confessions, and it provides us with the only source for evaluating his departure from the Jewish community.
The above seems to refer to someone else — this page is for Judah ben Samuel Halevi of Toledo. I don't know anything about Judah ben David Halevi and don't have an EJ handy, so it's up to someone else (or User:66.185.252.134) to make a new page and a disambiguation between the two. I won't have an EJ again until August 2006. --Mgreenbe 19:24, 1 December 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Terrible and Inconcievable Mistakes in the Most Obvious of Things
I was enraged to find that someone has mistakingly written that the birthplace of our great and most noble philosopher Rabbi Yehuda Halevi, writer of that most revered of texts, the Book of the Khazari, was Toledo. It is an outrage! the Rihal was born in Tudela, and in 1075 (NOT 1085) by most acounts, this all from the Encyclopedia Judaica. I can scarce believe that the wrath of god has not incinerated this misleading webpage yet, and it is through my fix to the page that I intend to mend the evil done to our great scholar and thus assist in educating the small-minded. Bold text