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Rabbinical Profiles(1) In most instances, if one clicks on the portrait of a minister below, an enlaged image will appear in a new window. Nahman ben Isaac was appointed as reader of the Plymouth Hebrew Congregation, Devon, in 1815. Although he effectively served as first reader or chazan, he was not given that title as the elderly incumbent of that position, Jacob Judah ben Benjamin was still alive. His salary was £60 per annum. He was able to augment his salary with a further £20 per annum by acting as shochet for the Dock Minyan, an offshoot of the Plymouth Hebrew Congregation in Plymouth Dock, then a separate town (now known as Devonport) to the west of Plymouth proper. (Rabbi B. Susser's thesis, "The Jews of South-West England", Chapter 6.) Rabbi Namyot Rabbi Namyot, from Antwerp, Belgium, was the rav. at Gateshead Hebrew Congregation from about 1915 until 1917. (JYB listings; The Jewish Communities of North-East England by Lewis Olsover (1980), p.229.) Simeon ben Nathan Rev. W. Neier Rev Neier was minister to the Kettering United Synagogue Members Group, Northamptonshire, from about 1942/3 until July 1945 when he was appointed minister, teacher, and secretary to the nearby Northampton Hebrew Congregation. In 1946 he was chair of the Northampton Zionist society. (JC report 27 July 1945; JYB listing.) Rev. Emil Nemeth Hungarian born Rabbi Nemeth (m. Masie Cohen), was the son of Rev Joseph Nemeth, a shochet in Leeds. He came to England in 1921 and studied at Etz Chaim yeshiva, Jews' College and obtained a BA from London University. He assisted the ministers at Bayswater Synagogue and Hampstead Synagogue, and from 1940-c.1946 was acting minister at the Central Synagogue, Great Portland Street, while Rev Philip Cohen was chaplain to the Forces. He was closely associated with welfare work for those made homeless during the blitz and during his term at Central, the synagogue building was destroyed by bombing in 1941. Rev. Nemeth, who obtained semicha from Jews' College in 1963, served as minister of Highgate Synagogue, north London from 1947 until his death 21 years later on Kol Nidre night, in hospital. Over 400 attended the memorial service at the Highgate synagogue. He was the brother of Rabbi Morris Nemeth of Liverpool and New West End synagogue and the father of Michael Nemeth, part time officiant at Highgate Synagogue. (JC obituary 11 October 1968, tribute 1 November 1968; The Lost Synagogues of London by Peter Renton, p.7; various JC reports; and JYB listings.) Rev. S. Nemeth Rev. S. Nemeth from Gateshead served as minister of Whitley Bay Synagogue, Northeast England (1930s). (The Jewish Communities of North-East England by Lewis Olsover (1980), p.261) Rabbi Shmuel Neuman Rev. Neuman served as chazan at Western Marble Arch Synagogue, London, and then at Hendon Synagogue, London (1981 to 2006). In 1996 he obtained semicha from Jews' College, London. Subsequently, Rabbi Neuman is a Jewish studies teacher at the Jewish educational charity Kisharon (2006 to present - December 2020). (JYB listings and JC reports.) Rev. (or Rabbi) Heim Neumann Rev. Neumann (m. Fanny Aarary in Dover in 1861), was resident in Dover, Kent, from on or before his marriage. From 1861 he advertised in The JC that he had taken "a COMMODIOUS HOUSE, No. 10, St. Martin's Terrace, in the most healthy part of the town, within five minutes walk of the sea, and will be most happy to accommodate those families who intend to visit Dover for the season, and will also be glad to take charge of any children whose parents may feel desirous of committing to his care." Similar adverts continue until 1866. He is assumed to have become minister of Dover Synagogue following Rev. R.I. Cohen's retirement (c.1865) and is believed to have stepped down as minister by November 1867, when the congregation advertised for a hazan, shohet and baal korah, adding that "No Cohen need apply". He served as minister at the Norwich Hebrew Congregation, Norfolk, (1874-1888), where his wife died in 1894 (she is buried at Earlham cemetery, Norwich). In July 1895 Rev. Neumann was unanimously elected first reader of the Manchester Old Hebrew Congregation (or Great Synagogue), his last known post. (JC various reports and internet research.) Rev. Abraham Newman Rev. Newman (m. Adeline Atlshuler in Leeds in 1891) was educated at yeshiva in Vilnius and came to England in the 1880s. He lived initially in Leeds working as a Hebrew teacher and in 1898 he was appointed as minister and shochet to the Blackburn Hebrew Congregation, Lancashire, serving until late 1904, during which period he founded a Society for the Study of Rabbinical Literature and took a leading part in the formation of the community’s Zionist Society. He then served as minister of the Leicester Hebrew Congregation from 1905 until his retirement in 1939, being the longest serving minister in the history of the congregation, and even following his retirement, he continued to serve in an emeritus capacity. He was also a visiting minister to the Northampton Hebrew Congregation. He died in Leicester in 1945. He was the founder and then Hon Life President of Leicester Zionist Society. ("From Poland To Paradise Lane and Other Journeys" - a history of the Jewish community of Blackburn, by Hilary Thomas, 2018, including Ch. 4 (the Newman Years) and biography, p.173; JC reports; and profile on the Leicester Jewish Gilroes website.) Rabbi Dr Eugene Newman Rabbi Newman (m. Bertha - d.2009) was born in Czechoslovakia and graduated from Prague University, the Prague Rabbinical Seminary and the yeshiva in Pressburg (today Bratislava, Slovakia). Coming to Britain as a refugee from Nazism, he was minister of the New Synagogue, Manchester (1939-1945) and of the Portsmouth and Southsea Hebrew Congregation (1945-1954) during which latter period he received semicha. He served as minister of Golders Green Synagogue from 1954 until his death in office in 1977. He was described as "a warm-hearted, kindly, gentle scholar-rabbi whose sermons were delivered with erudition and great sincerity". He was responsible for Welfare in the chief rabbi's cabinet and was honorary principal of the Marks-Kennedy Jewish Primary School in Golders Green. He authored a book on the Life and Teachings of Isaiah Horowitz (1972), the subject of his doctoral thesis. Rabbi Newman is buried at Willesden cemetery. A hall in the Netiv Meir Yeshiva in Jerusalem was dedicated in his memory. He was the father of Rabbi Michael Newman. (JC obituary 7 January 1977; JYB listings; online research.)
Rev. Gary Newman Southport-born Rev. Newman was chazan (cantor) at the Higher Prestwich Hebrew Congregation, Manchester before moving south to become assistant minister and chazan at Southend and Westcliff Hebrew Congregation (1994-2000). He then served as minister of Newbury Park Synagogue, London (c.2000-December 2014) and, following the merger of that congregation, he was appointed community welfare minister of the new entity, Redbridge United Synagogue, London (January 2015-May 2019). Following yet a further merger, he became community welfare minister of Cranbrook United Synagogue, Ilford, London, serving from May 2019 until his retirement in May 2024. (JYB listings; Cranbrook United Synagogue website; and press reports.)
Rabbi Isaac Newman London-born Rabbi I. Newman, M.Phil. (m. Rita Rubin) had served as headmaster of Notting Hill Synagogue Hebrew Classes (where his father, Rabbi Julius Newman, was minister) before becoming minister of Kingsbury District Synagogue, London (c.1948-c.1950). He subsequently served as chaplain to the Royal Air Force (1950-1956), minister of St Albans Hebrew Congregation, Hertfordshire (1956-1958), Dalston Synagogue, Poet's Road, London (from 1958 until the synagogue's closure in 1967) and Barnet & District Affiliated Synagogue, London (from 1969 until his retirement in 1989). He had also served as a senior lecturer (Judaica) and chaplain at Middlesex Polytechnic, Trent Park, honorary secretary of the Rabbinical Council and United Synagogue Chaplain to the R.A.F. Following his retirement, he settled in Jerusalem in 1989, where he was one of the founders of human rights organisation, Rabbis for Human Rights. In 2000, he received the Knesset Award for Human Rights, presented by the then Speaker of the Knesset, Shevach Weiss. (JYB listings and "Who's Who" entries and information provided by Rabbi Newman's son, Prof. David Newman, OBE.) Rabbi Newman, who was born in Pressburg, Czechoslovakia (now Bratislava, Slovakia), came to Britain as a refugee in 1939 and spent some time as a lecturer and researcher on Juvenile Delinquency at the University of Liverpool. The results of his investigations were published under the title, "Youthful Lawbreakers". He also published a book on semicha: Semikhah (ordination); a study of its origin, history, and function in Rabbinic literature (Manchester University press, 1950). From 1941 he served as minister to the war time community at Penrith, Keswick and District Hebrew Congregation, Cumbria, and later became Rabbi of the newly-formed Addiscombe and District Synagogue, Croydon (1947-1951). In 1952 Rabbi Newman was appointed Regional Rabbi to the South African Jewish Board of Deputies. (JC profile 9 February 1951 and various reports.)
Rabbi Dr. Julius Newman
Rabbi Julius Newman (m. Ida, daughter of
Rabbi Jacob Rabinowitz, in 1922) according to his obituary in the
JC,
came to Britain from Poland aged six (although other sources state that he was born, in Leeds). He studied at Etz
Chaim yeshiva London and received semicha from Rabbis Kook, Daitches and Hurwitz,
and was one of only three rabbis known to have received semicha from
Rav. Kook during the latter's stay in London during World War I.
He was awarded BA and PhD. as an external student of London University.
In 1916 Rabbi Newman was elected assistant rabbi and preacher at the
Chevra Sephard Synagogue, Bridge Street, Leeds.
He was the long serving minister of
Notting Hill Synagogue,
London (1920-c.1945) and headmaster of the Talmud Torah. Rabbi Newman was president of the Hakerem Zionist society and first hon. secretary of the Vaad Harabbanim.
He was the father of
Rabbi Isaac Newman.
(JC obituary 24 March 1950, Jewish Year listings and information provided by Rabbi Newman's grandson, Prof. David Newman,
OBE.)
Rev. M. Newman Rev. M. Newman served as Reader of St. Kevin's Parade Synagogue, Dublin, from at least 1896 until about 1901. (JYB listings.) Rabbi Michael Newman Portsmouth born Rabbi Newman, son of Rabbi Eugene Newman, was assistant minister at Hampstead Garden Suburb Synagogue, London, until 1972 when he became minister at Luton Hebrew Congregation, Bedfordshire. Rabbi Newman served there until August 1975 when he took up the post of rabbi at Herzlia Adas Yeshurun Congregation in Winnipeg, Canada. In 1978 he was appointed rabbi to the Melbourne Hebrew Congregation and from the 1980s Rabbi Newman taught Jewish history and Talmud in London. (JC reports.) Rabbi Monty Newman Rabbi Newman, served as assistant minister, shamas, secretary to the congregation, secretary for marriages, cheder teacher and youth leader at Nottingham Hebrew Congregation, from 1944 until 1947 (although it is unclear he held all positions at the same time). He also qualified as a dentist and left Nottingham for Manchester, where he practised as a dentist in conjunction with his rabbinical activities. (Nelson Fisher Eight Hundred Years. The Story of Nottingham's Jews.) Haham Rabbi David Nieto Rabbi D. Nieto (also spelled Nietto) (m. Sarah) was born in Venice, the son of Rabbi Phineas Nieto. He studied medicine in Padua and at the same time obtained semicha from a local rabbi. He graduated in Medicine and Philosophy in 1687 at the age of 33. Rabbi Nieto then moved to Leghorn, Italy to work as a physician and was appointed Dayan of the local Beth Din. There he wrote a number of works in which he dealt with the differences of calculation in the calendars of the Greek, Roman, and Jewish ecclisiastical authorities pointing out a number of errors which had crept into the Christian calendar. In 1702, Nieto was appointed Haham to the London Sephardi community, now in their recently completed Bevis Marks Synagogue. He died in office in London in 1728 and was succeeded by his son, Isaac Nieto. Nieto was one of the most accomplished Jews of his time and was equally distinguished in philosophy, physics, medicine, poetry, mathematics, astronomy and theology. (Jewish Encyclopedia article on "David Nieto" c.1906 and British Chief Rabbis 1664-2006 by Derek Taylor, 2007, Chapter 7, pp.80-99.) Haham Rabbi Isaac Nieto Rabbi I. Nieto (also spelled Nietto) (m.1. Rebecca Carion de Taiba; m.2. Leah Supino), who was born in Leghorn, Italy, succeeded his father, David Nieto, in 1733 as Haham of the London Sephardi community and rabbi of the Bevis Marks Synagogue, five years following his father's death. He resigned in 1741 and initially went to Leghorn. He returned to London in 1747 and took up the profession of a notary. In 1749, he travelled to Gibraltar and was appointed Gibraltar's first Rabbi, establishing the Shaar Hashamayim Synagogue, the oldest synagogue in Gibraltar. Following the untimely death of his successor, Haham de Mesquita in 1851, he was appointed Ab Bet Din of the London Sephardi community, resigning in 1757 as a result of a violent dispute over the titles of the members of the Bet Din and the relationship of the members to one another. He died in London. (Jewish Encyclopedia article on "Isaac Nieto" c.1906 and British Chief Rabbis 1664-2006 by Derek Taylor, 2007, Chapter 9, pp.115-134.) Rabbi Jacob Nieto Born in England, Rabbi Nieto (m. Rose) was descended from a prominent Sephardi family, including amongst his rabbinical ancestors, the eighteenth century Hachamim of the Spanish and Portuguese congregation in London, David Nieto and his son Isaac Nieto. He was the son of Rev. Abraham Haim Nieto, minister at Kingston, Jamaica. Rabbi Nieto was brought up in Kingston from the age of eight and later studied in New York. Having returned to Jamaica, he was forced to leave again because of the great fire in Kingston in 1882. He returned to London and was employed as an assistant master at Norwood orphan asylum while he continued his religious studies. Rabbi Nieto served as minister of the Sheffield Hebrew Congregation (1889-1892), then attended Jews' College, London and preached occasionally at the Spital Square Synagogue in Bishopsgate, London. On the day after he obtained his educational qualifications from Jews' College, he emigrated to California and became Rabbi of Congregation Sherith Israel in San Francisco. He served there from 1893 until 1930. Rabbi Nieto led relief efforts after the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire. He strongly opposed the Great War as an imperialist venture, sought the abolition of capital punishment and advocated for women's rights. He held senior positions in Bnei Brith and freemasonry in California. A collection of the Rabbi's papers are held by the Online Archive of California. (JC interview with Rabbi Nieto during a visit to London, 7 July 1907, internet research.) Rev. Martin (Mayer) Norden Rev. (later Rabbi) Norden (m. Ruth) was from Germany. In 1939/1940 he served as "rabbi" at the synagogue at Barham House, Claydon, near Ipswich, Suffolk, which acted as a "clearing house" for hundreds of kindertransport children following the closure of the Dovercourt camp at Harwich. He later served as reader at the Sheffield Central Hebrew Congregation (c. 1946), was appointed as reader, shochet and teacher to the Middlesbrough Hebrew Congregation from 1948 to 1951. He then moved to Canada and subsequently to the United States, where he obtained semicha under Rav Moshe Feinstein. In the 1970's Rabbi Norden made aliyah to Israel. He died in Jerusalem, aged 99. (Jewish Year listings and obituary on Kehilat Middlesbrough website.) Rev. J. Nuremberg Rev. J. Nuremberg was the reader of the Kings Lynn Old Jewish Congregation, Norfolk, in and about 1842. (The Rise of Provincial Jewry by Cecil Roth, 1950.) Rev. Michael Simon Nuremberg Rev. Nuremberg, born in the Duchy of Posen, was shochet and reader of Brighton Hebrew Congregation, Sussex from about 1843 until about 1879. (Brighton Jewry 250 - An anthology of the Brighton & Hove Jewish Community 1766-2016; JC reports.) Rabbi Shlomo Odze Rabbi Odze was youth minister at St John's Wood Synagogue, London. He studied in Israel prior to his appointment as Minister of Birmingham Central Synagogue (2005-2012). In 2012 Rabbi Odze returned to London to become associate minister at South Hampstead Synagogue. (Internet research.) Rev. Abraham Noach Oler Warsaw-born Rev. Oler (m. Rajzla) attended yeshiva and studied music at the Warsaw Conservatory. Following his move to Britain, he served as reader of the Sheffield Central Hebrew Congregation from 1927 to 1931. From about 1931 until World War II, he was first reader of the Sunderland Hebrew Congregation, also serving as acting minister until about 1934. In 1946, he moved to North America, serving congregations in New Brunswick, Canada, New York State and Connecticut. (JYB listings; Various JC reports.) Rev. S. Olive Rev. Olive, formerly known as Olwenstein, (m. Annie) served as minister, shochet, joint secretary and teacher of the Derby Hebrew Congregation (c.1912-c.1914), and then served the New Tredegar Hebrew Congregation, South Wales (1914 until at least 1916). He was later a shochet in London and died at Sandy's Row in London's East End. (JYB listings and various JC reports and death notice of 3 February 1928.)
Rev. Henry (Hanoch) Olivestone Warsaw-born Rev. Olivestone (also Olivenstein, and formerly Oliwensztejn) (m. Cina Celia Siemon) came to Britain in 1914 from Antwerp. He served as reader, shochet and teacher of the Ebbw Vale Hebrew Congregation south Wales from about 1914 and in January 1916 was appointed minister of the neighbouring Tredegar Hebrew Congregation, although it is uncertain whether he also continued to serve the Ebbw Vale congregation, until about 1918. He was later with Adath Yisroel Synagogue, London, before serving as minister of Blackpool United Hebrew Congregation, Lancashire (1920-1924), Portsmouth Hebrew Congregation, Hampshire (1924-c.1926) and Walthamstow and Leyton Synagogue, London (c.1926-c.1932). During the early years of World War II he served as a liaison officer with the Jewish community in with Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire, and was in charge of billeting for Jewish evacuees. He was later associated with the Yeshurun Synagogue, Edgware, where his son Bernard Olivestone was a founder member and long-term president. While at Tredegar in 1916, Rev. Olivestone published Zecher Ov, a memorial to his grandfather which was written by his father in Warsaw. He was also an inventor and patented a new design of a loud speaker. He died in Paris on his way to Israel and was buried at the Adath Yisroel cemetery, Enfield, London. (Jewish Year listings; and JC reports.)
Rev. Leslie Olsberg, MBE Manchester-born Rev. Olsberg (m. Golda Landsberg from London) was an early pupil of the legendary Jonah Balkind and studied at Manchester Yeshiva. He was the founding (secular) head of Manchester and Salford Jewish Grammar School (now Mesivta High School) in 1947. Headmaster of Hebrew classes of the Higher Prestwich Hebrew Congregation, Manchester, and briefly, in 1970, of the Southport Hebrew Congregation, Lancashire, Rev Olsberg decided to enter the ministry in 1971, aged almost 50. For the next 36 years he was minister at Heaton Park Synagogue, Manchester, (1971-2008) and undertook duties in the wider community. He was chaplain to Heathlands Jewish home for the aged, to King David High School and to the Scouts and Jewish Lads and Girls Brigade in Manchester, as well as President of the Council of Christians and Jews. Up to the point he retired, aged 86, he was believed to be the oldest serving Jewish minister in the country. In 1994, a road, Olsberg Close, was named after him in Salford. He was awarded an MBE in 2007 for his over 60 years of service to the community. (JC obituary, 1 August 2008 and various reports.) Rev. S. Olwenstein Rev. Abraham Opolion Rev. Opolion (m. (1) Leah, 1913, d.1940; (2) Bluma (Blanche) Kaplan, 1943) was born in Bedwellty, south Wales. He served as reader of the small Abertillery Hebrew Congregation, South Wales, from about 1914. He then served as reader of Leicester Hebrew Congregation (1916-1920) and as a teacher at its Hebrew school, and as reader of the Tonypandy Hebrew Congregation, south Wales (1921). From 1 January 1922, he served as minister of the Blackburn Hebrew Congregation, Lancashire, remaining there until late 1932 and then moved to London . He is also likely to be the Rev. A. Apolon who earlier served as minister of the Greenock Hebrew Congregation, Scotland (1913-1914). He is buried in East Ham cemetery, London (view image of gravestone). (JC reports and online articles; "From Poland To Paradise Lane and Other Journeys" - a history of the Jewish community of Blackburn, by Hilary Thomas, 2018, including biography, p.177.) Rev. E. Oppenheim Rev. Oppenheim served as the shochet and reader of the recently-established Newcastle Hebrew Congregation, then in temporary rented premises, for a short period from 1836. (The Jewish Communities of North-East England by Lewis Olsover (1980).) Rev. Jonathan Ordman, JP Manchester-born Rev. Ordman, the grandson of Rev. Menachem BenZion (Mendel) Ordman, trained at Jews' College, London and studied chazanut under under the aegis of Rev. Leo Brill at Jews' College, London. He served as second reader at the Southend and Westcliff Hebrew Congregation (1987-1988) and left to take up the post of minister of the Nairobi Hebrew Congregation, Kenya. By 1989 he had returned to the UK and was chazan at South Manchester Synagogue (1990-2003). Rev. Ordman was chair of the public relations and media committee of the Jewish Representative Council of Greater Manchester and served as a Justice of the Peace for 25 years. (Information provided by the family; JYB listing and JC various reports. See BBC spot, in which Rev. Ordman explains the place of chazanut and song in the Jewish faith.) Rev. Menachem BenZion (Mendel) Ordman Rev. Ordman (m. Molly Hinda Glickman) was born in Naveran (near Telz), Lithuania and attended the famous Telz Yeshiva until he was offered a post at Chevrah Tehillim Synagogue, Lombard Street West, Dublin, Ireland, around 1910, where he served as chazan, shochet and mohel. Moving to England, he served the Burnley Hebrew Congregation, Lancashire, from at least 1921 until 1923, followed briefly by the Coventry Hebrew Congregation (1923-c.1924), and was elected chazan and shochet (and effectively minister) of the Stockport Hebrew Congregation, Cheshire (now Greater Manchester) in July 1924, where an additional duty was acting as Investigating Officer for the Benevolent Society. In about 1928, Rev. Ordman was appointed second reader, shochet and teacher to the Edinburgh Hebrew Congregation, where he served until retirement due to ill health in April 1947. Post retirement, he purchased a farm near Peebles in Scotland and was known locally as "Rabbie Ordman". He continued to assist congregations in Dublin (in particular Lennox Street Synagogue) and in Scotland and, for a short time, acted as reader at Hounslow and District Affiliated Synagogue, West London, where his son lived. He died in Manchester. Click HERE for photographs. (JC obituary 9 June 1967 and various reports, internet research and information provided by his grandson, Michael Ordman.) Rev. Samuel Orler Polish-born Rev. Orler came to Britain in about 1873 or 1874, living initially in Stepney, London. His first known post is at Falmouth Jewish Congregation, Cornwall (1875-1880). In 1880 the Falmouth synagogue closed, following which Rev Orler was appointed chazan and shochet at Stroud Synagogue, Gloucestershire, as that congregation's first minister. In 1890 he returned to London and worked for the Shechita Board as a shochet and inspector. He was informally regarded as the spiritual head of the New Road Synagogue, Whitechapel, and for a number of years he conducted High Festival services in an honorary capacity at Redman's Road Talmud Torah, Stepney, London. His daughter Queenie married Rabbi Arnold Mishcon. ("The Hebrew Community of Cheltenham, Gloucester and Stroud", 1989, by Brian Torode; JC obituary 12 January 1924, various reports and internet research.)
Rev. Abraham F. Ornstein London-born Rev. Ornstein at eighteen (c.1854) became reader/minister to the Portsea (Portsmouth) Hebrew Congregation, Hampshire, and was then appointed headmaster of the Birmingham Hebrew National School and secretary of the Birmingham Hebrew Congregation, Singers Hill, in 1860. He resigned on 1 September 1865 to take up the post of minister of the Bourke Street Synagogue, Melbourne, Australia. Returning to Britain in 1875, the following year he became principal of Aria College, Portsea, until 1882. Rev. Ornstein emigrated to South Africa where he was minister of the synagogue at Cape Town and later established a college there. He died in Cape Town. (JC obituary 3 January 1896.) Rabbi Shalom Osdoba
Rabbi Osdoba (m. Sarah), was born in Denmark, the son of Rabbi Avraham Osdoba
(a Lubavitch shaliach in Copenhagen who became the senior member of the Crown Heights Bet Din in New York)
and educated in Chabad yeshivot.
He was appointed full-time rabbi of the new
Hull Hebrew Congregation,
formed following the merger of Hull's
Old Hebrew Congregation
and Hull's Western Synagogue,
which took effect on 1 January 1994.
He was responsible for the construction of a purpose built Mikveh in Hull in 2004. Rebbetzin Sarah Osdoba taught at the Leeds Jewish High School for Girls.
Rabbi Osdoba served for some 18 years as the Hull community's last
full-time rabbi, but in 2011 the community could no longer afford a full-time rabbi and the Osdobas moved to
north west London (for a short period, until about June 2012, continuing
to serve the Hull community on a part-time visiting basis). Rabbi Osdoba was director of the Chabad Israeli Centre in north west London from 2020 until 2022.
(JC press reports and internet research.)
Rev. B. Ostroff Rev. B. Ostroff served as reader and hon. secretary to the Barking Hebrew Congregation, London from at least 1928 to at least 1936. (JYB listings.) Rev. Isaac Ostroff Rev. I. Ostroff was born in Bauska, Latvia (m. Bluma or Bloomah Levy from Stroud, on 22 May 1904, and had 10 children). He served as reader, teacher and shochet at Stroud Synagogue, Gloucestershire (c.1902-c.1904), Aberdare Synagogue, south Wales (until at least 1906), and the Aberdeen Hebrew Congregation (c.1909-c.1911). From 1911 he was resident in London where his posts included teacher at Kilburn and Brondesbury Talmud Torah. In 1913 he inaugurated the Hebrew and religion classes at Wandsworth and Balham Synagogue, south London. Active for the rest of his life in south and south west London, he was, at the time of his death, aged 52, chazan at South-West London Associate Synagogue (by which name Wandsworth and Balham Synagogue was then known). He was a noted worker for the South West London Aid Society (Home for Aged Jews) and President of the South West London Jewish Literary and Social Society. (JC tributes 17 February 1933 and reports; JYB listings.) Rev. Moshe David Ovici Romanian born Rev. Ovici in his early years sang in various choirs under famous chazanim and at the age of 18, he was appointed chazan in Arad, western Romania. He later served as chazan at the Great Synagogue in Bucharest, Romania. He moved to Israel and served as chazan at the Mea Shearim Synagogue in Tel Aviv and at the Nachlat Avoth Synagogue. In 1958, he was appointed chazan at the Cathedral Road Synagogue of the Cardiff United Synagogue, serving until about 1960. (JYB listings; and Jolles's Encyclopaedia, p. 876.) Footnotes (↵returns to main text)
Other Orthodox Rabbinical Profiles: A; B; C; D & E; F; G; H; I & J; K; L; M; P & Q; R; S; T to V; W to Z. Non-Orthodox Rabbinical Profiles: A to D; E to H; I to L; M to R; S to Z. Rabbinic Profiles Contents Page Research by David Shulman and Steven Jaffe Formatted by David Shulman
Page created: 30 March 2020
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