Detailed Description |
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Adopted by the Consistoire, and approved by the Chief Rabbi of Belgium, this booklet contains guidelines for how the services will be conducted at this congregation. The introduction is signed by the Chief Rabbi E. Carmoly, and by the president, A. Oppenheim.
Written in French, with many words and phrases in Hebrew. The final four pages contain prayers for the Neilah prayer of Yom Kippur.
R. Eliakim Carmoly (August 5, 1802, Sulz, France—February 15, 1875, Frankfort-on-the-Main) was a French-Jewish scholar. He was born at Sulz, then in the French department of the Upper Rhine. His real name was Goschel David Behr (or Baer); the name Carmoly, borne by his family in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, was adopted by him when quite young. He studied Hebrew and Talmud at Colmar; and, because both French and German were spoken in his native town, he became proficient in those languages.
R. Carmoly went to Paris, and there assiduously studied the old Hebrew manuscripts in the Bibliothèque Nationale, where he was employed. Several articles published by him on various subjects in scientific papers made him known; and on the establishment of a Jewish consistory in Belgium, he was appointed rabbi at Brussels (May 18, 1832). In this position R. Carmoly rendered many services to the newly founded congregation, chiefly in providing schools for the poor. Seven years later, having provoked great opposition by his new scheme of reforms, R. Carmoly resigned the rabbinate and retired to Frankfort, where he devoted himself wholly to Jewish literature and to the collection of Hebrew books and manuscripts, in which he was passionately interested.
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