Simon Brainin

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Simon Brainin (July 15, 1854, Riga, Russian Livonia - ) was a Russian physician.

He graduated from the gymnasium in Riga; studied medicine at the universities of Dorpat and Berlin; held the position of physician of the Jewish community of Riga; and was one of the directors of the community, the last independent Jewish "kahal" in Russia, until this institution was abolished by the government. He was a member of the committee of the government to investigate the rights of the Jews of the city of Riga, 1885; delegate from the government of Poltava to the rabbinical conference at St. Petersburg, 1892; and a member of the Society for the Promotion of Culture Among the Jews of Russia. In 1895 he emigrated to New York, where he is now (1902) a practising physician, and member of the county medical and German medical societies, of the Harlem Medical Association, and of the New York Historical Society.

[edit] Literary works

Brainin is the author of:

  • "Oraḥ la-Ḥayyim", a work on popular medicine, in Hebrew, Wilna, 1883;
  • "Der Aerztliche Führer", Riga, 1885;
  • "Ueber Kefyr," Vienna, 1886;

and many articles in various periodicals.

[edit] References

This article incorporates text from the 1901–1906 Jewish Encyclopedia, a publication now in the public domain.
([1])
By Herman Rosenthal
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