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Elie Munk

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Elie Munk
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Elie Munk (1900–1981), was a German-born French rabbi and rabbinic scholar, "a scion of a long and distinguished line of German rabbis and scholars".BOOK, Jack Cohen, Major Philosophers of Jewish Prayer in the Twentieth Century,weblink 9 December 2017, 2000, Fordham Univ Press, 978-0-8232-1957-5, 96, A number of other Jewish scholars have similar names. Eliyahu Munk translated numerous Jewish Bible commentaries to English. Eli Munk wrote the book Seven Days of the Beginning. All are members of the same extended family.Translating One Classic After Another – For 40 Years: An Interview with Eliyahu Munk

Career

From 1926 to 1936, he was district rabbi of Ansbach, Bavaria, Germany.WEB,weblink Munk, www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org, 9 December 2017, In 1936, he moved with his family to Paris,WEB,weblink Lady Jakobovits, Telegraph, 26 November 2017, where he was rabbi of the (:fr:Synagogue_Adas_Yereim|Communauté Israélite de la Stricte Observance).After the Nazi invasion of France, they moved to Switzerland in 1940, and remained there until the Liberation of Paris.

Selected publications

  • Die Welt der Gebete (2 volumes, 1938). In English, The World of Prayer (2 volumes, 1954–63)
  • Das Licht der Ewigkeit (1935)
  • La justice sociale en Israel (1947)
  • Rachel (on the duties of Jewish women, 1951)
  • a translation into French of Rashi's Pentateuch commentary (1957)

Personal life

He married Fanny Frumet Goldberger (1906–1979).WEB, Friedlander, Albert, Amélie Jakobovits [née Munk] Lady Jakobovits (1928–2010),weblink ODNB, OUP, 9 December 2017, Their children included Amélie Munk, who married Immanuel Jakobovits, who became the UK's Chief Rabbi, and Miriam Munk, who married Rabbi Abba Bronspiegel.

References

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External links

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