Nahum Rabinovich

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rabbi Dr. Nahum Eliezer Rabinovich (1928-) is a prominent Israeli Orthodox rabbi, and head of Yeshivat Birkat Moshe in Maale Adumim. He was born in Montreal, Canada. His late daughter is Dina Rabinovitch.

Contents

[edit] Studies

Rabbi Rabinovich started his Jewish studies age 14 at Rabbi Pinchas Hirschprung, which ordinated him to a Rabbi. At age 20 he learnt in Yeshivas Ner Israel, Baltimore, where he received Semicha from Rabbi Yaakov Yitzchok Ruderman. He also obtained a masters degree in mathematics from Johns Hopkins University. In 1951 he married Rachel Malka Shachtovitz, the niece of Rabbi Yaakov Yitzchok Ruderman.

[edit] Public Life

Rabbi Rabinovich taught Judaism in several places and served as a congregational rabbi: Between 1952 -1963 he was the Rabbi of the Jewish Community in Charleston, South Carolina. In 1963 he has been called to serve as a community Rabbi in Toronto. In the 1970s, he completed a Ph.D. in the field of statistics and probability in the Talmud at the university of Toronto; the results are in his book which is highly cited: "Probability and Statistical Inference in ancient and medieval Jewish Literature" (Toronto, 1973). At that time he also gave lectures at the University and was an editor of the Rabbinical Council of America's journal "Hadarom".

Rabbi Rabinovich also lived in London (1971-1982), where he served as dean of Jews' College and had a reputation as an influential scholar. He later agreed to be a head of the yeshiva Birkat Moshe in Ma'ale Adummim, Israel, a Hesder institution.

[edit] Philosophy and major works

Rabbi Rabinovich is a world renowned expert on Maimonides; he published scientific, theological and halachic books and essays to Maimonides' writings. His philosphical approach is influenced by Maimonides Logic and Rationalism. It emphasizes the connection between philosophy and halacha, between Torah and scientific studies and between theoretical learning and practical application in life. In a recent interview [1] (in Hebrew), Rabbi Rabinovich said that he backed religious studies for women and did not see a problem in Halachic decisions taken by women. Jewish law has always spoken of monarchy as an ideal, but Rabbi Rabinovitch said that it might not be dictatorial, and draws a picture of constitutional society, where the law is above all else.

On January 21, 2008, Rabbi Dov Lior of Hebron, Rabbi Ya'acov Shapira of Jerusalem's Mercaz haRav Yeshiva, Rabbi Elyakim Levanon of Elon Moreh, and Rabbi Nahum Rabinovitch met at Beit HaShalom to declare the government's policies on Israeli settlements to be "worse than the British Mandate's White Paper."[1]

[edit] Works by Rabbi Rabinovich

[edit] Hebrew

  • Yad Peshuta (יד פשוטה) Commentary on Maimonides' halachic book "Mishne Torah" - 14 volumes.
  • Melumdei Milchama (מלומדי מלחמה) - Responsa on halachic questions about military service
  • The way of the Torah (דרכה של תורה) - halachic-philosophical actual essays
  • Hadar Itamar (הדר איתמר) - Finis on the Talmud
  • Insights to Maimonides' work (עיונים למשנתו של הרמב"ם)
  • Nahums speecj (שיח נחום) - Responsa on halachic questions


[edit] Englisch

  • Rabbi Hasdai Crescas (1340-1410) on Numerical Infinities - Isis, Vol. 61, No. 2 (Summer, 1970), pp. 224-230
  • Studies in the History of Probability and Statistics. XXII: Probability in the Talmud - Biometrika, Vol. 56, No. 2 (Aug., 1969), pp. 437-441
  • Torah and Science: Conflict or Complement - Challenge: Torah Views on Science and its Problems, Feldheim Publishers pp.44
  • Torah and the Spirit of Free Enquiry - Challenge: Torah Views on Science and its Problems, Feldheim Publishers pp. 54
  • The one and the many: Early stochastic reasoning in philosophy - Annals of Science, Volume 34, Issue 4 July 1977 , pp. 331 - 344
  • Early antecedents of error theory - Archive for History of Exact Sciences, Volume 13, Number 4 / December, 1974 pp. 348-358
  • Halachah and Technology - Proceedings of the Associations of Orthodox Jewish Scientists 2 (1969) pp. 129–149
  • All Jews Are Responsible for One Another - Jewish Tradition and the Nontraditional Jew. Ed.Jacob J. Schacter. Northvale, NJ.: Aronson, 1992 pp. 177-204
  • Probability and statistical interference in ancient and medieval Jewish literature - University of Toronto Press, 1973



[edit] References

Languages