Tony Bayfield

Tony Bayfield CBE
Born Ilford, Essex (now in Greater London), UK
Nationality British
Occupation Reform rabbi
President of the Movement for Reform Judaism
Children 3

Anthony Michael "Tony" Bayfield[1] CBE is a Reform rabbi and President of the Movement for Reform Judaism,[2] the second largest organisation of synagogues in Britain.

He was born in Ilford, Essex (now in Greater London) in 1946. He was educated at the Royal Liberty Grammar School in Romford and Magdalene College, Cambridge. He studied law and had a doctoral place at the Cambridge Institute of Criminology and then moved to the Leo Baeck College to train as a rabbi. He received rabbinic ordination (semichah) in 1972 from rabbis John Rayner, Hugo Gryn and Louis Jacobs.

He was a congregational rabbi in Surrey for a decade, then director of the Sternberg Centre for Judaism in Finchley. He was head of the Movement for Reform Judaism from 1994 (when the organisation was known as Reform Synagogues of Great Britain) until 2011.[2] He is now President of the organisation.[2]

Bayfield is a specialist in modern Jewish thought and contemporary Reform Judaism. He also specialises in Jewish-Christian and Jewish-Muslim dialogue and has published quite widely in this area. Bayfield has also written about Christian–Jewish reconciliation.[3]

He is a widower with three children and six grandchildren. His younger daughter, Miriam Berger, received semichah in July 2006 and is a respected rabbi in her own right.[4] He is a member of North Western Reform Synagogue (Alyth Gardens). He is a passionate supporter of West Ham United F.C.

Bayfield was awarded a CBE in the 2011 New Year Honours List for services to Reform Judaism.

London's National Portrait Gallery holds a photographic portrait of him by Don McCullin.[1]

Publications

Sources

References

  1. 1 2 "Tony Bayfield (1946–), Rabbi and Head of Movement for Reform Judaism". Collections. National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 4 April 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 Rocker, Simon (1 November 2010). "Reform leader Bayfield to retire early". The Jewish Chronicle. Retrieved 6 August 2013.
  3. The Vatican and Jewry
  4. Gordon, Olivia (1 July 2012). "How I make it work: Miriam Berger". The Sunday Times (London). Retrieved 4 April 2014.

External links

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