-
Hamnuna - Several rabbis
in the Talmud had this name.
-
Hillel, son of Gamaliel III, 3rd century, in Judea,
grandson of Judah ha-Nasi, and younger brother of
Judah Nesiah
-
Hillel II, 4th century creator of the Hebrew calendar,
in Judea, son of Judah Nesiah, grandson of Gamaliel IV
-
Judah II, 3rd century sage, sometimes called Judah
Nesi'ah and Rebbi like his grandfather
-
Judah III, 4th century scholar, son of Gamaliel IV,
and grandson of Judah II
-
Rabbah bar Nahmani
-
Rav Ashi, 5th century Babylonian Talmudic sage -
primary redactor of the Babylonian Talmud
-
Rav Nachman
-
Rav Papa
-
Rav Yosef
-
Rava, important Amora
-
Ravina, primary aide to Rav Ashi in the redaction of
the Babylonian Talmud
-
Resh Lakish
-
Shmuel (Talmud), rabbi of Nehardea, physician
-
Yochanan, primary author of the Jerusalem Talmud
-
Rav Jonah
Rabbis: Middle Ages
See: Geonim and Rishonim.
-
Abba Mari, (Minhat
Kenaot), 13th century French Talmudist
-
Don Isaac Abravanel, (Abarbanel), 15th century
philosopher and Torah commentator
-
Jacob Berab, 15th-16th century proponent of Semichah
(Ordination)
-
Abraham ibn Daud, (Sefer HaKabbalah), 12th century
Spanish philosopher
-
Obadiah ben Abraham of Bertinoro, (Bartenura) 15th
century commentator on the Mishnah
-
Abraham ben David of Posquières, 1100s, France.
-
Abraham ibn Ezra, (Even Ezra), 12th century
Spanish-North African Biblical commentator
-
Amram Gaon, 9th century organizer of the siddur
-
Asher ben Jehiel, (Rosh), 13th century German-Spanish
Talmudist
-
Bahya ibn Paquda, (Hovot ha-Levavot), 11th century
Spanish philosopher and moralist
-
Chananel Ben Chushiel (Rabbeinu Chananel), 10th
century Tunisian Talmudist
-
Dunash ben Labrat, 10th century grammarian and poet
-
Eliezer ben Nathan, 12th century poet and pietist
-
Hasdai Crescas, (Or Hashem), 14th century Talmudist
and philosopher
-
Rabbenu Gershom, 11th century German Talmudist and
legalist
-
Gersonides, Levi ben Gershom, (Ralbag), 14th century
French Talmudist and philosopher
-
Hillel ben Eliakim, (Rabbeinu Hillel), 12th century
Talmudist and disciple of Rashi
-
Ibn Tibbon, a family of 12th and 13th century Spanish
and French scholars, translators, and leaders
-
Isaac Alfasi, (the Rif), 12th century North African
and Spanish Talmudist and Halakhist; author of "Sefer
Ha-halachot".
-
Jacob ben Asher, (Baal ha-Turim ; Arbaah Turim), 14th
century German-Spanish Halakhist
-
Joseph Albo, (Sefer Ikkarim), 15th century Spain
-
Joseph ibn Migash 12th century Spanish Talmudist and
Rosh Yeshiva; teacher of Maimon, father of Maimonides
-
Maimonides, Moshe Ben Maimon, (Rambam), 13th century
Spanish-North African Talmudist, philosopher, and law
codifier
-
Mordecai ben Hillel, (The Mordechai), 13th century
German Halakhist
-
Nahmanides, Moshe ben Nahman, (Ramban), 13th century
Spanish and Holy Land mystic and Talmudist
-
Nissim Ben Jacob (Rav Nissim Gaon) 10th century
Tunisian Talmudist
-
Nissim of Gerona, (RaN), 14th century Halakhist and
Talmudist
-
Rashi, (Solomon ben Yitzchak), 11th century Talmudist,
the primary commentator of Talmud
-
Elazar Rokeach, (Sefer HaRokeach) 12th century German
rabbinic scholar
-
Saadia Gaon, (Emunoth ve-Deoth ; Siddur) 10th century
Exilarch and leader of Babylonian Jewry
-
Samuel ben Judah ibn Tibbon, 12th-13th century French
Maimonidean philosopher and translator
-
Tosafists, (Tosfot) 11th, 12th and 13th century
Talmudic scholars in France and Germany
-
Yehuda Halevi, (Kuzari), 12th century Spanish
philosopher and poet devoted to Zion
Rabbis: 16th - 18th centuries
See: Acharonim.
Rabbis: 16th - 17th centuries
-
Isaac Abendana, 17th century Sephardic scholar in
England
-
Jacob Abendana, 17th century Sephardic rabbi in
England
-
Isaac Aboab da Fonseca, 17th century Dutch scholar and
Kabbalist, first Rabbi in the Americas
-
Bezalel Ashkenazi, ( Shittah Mekubetzet), 16th century
Talmudist
-
Yair Bacharach, (Havvot Yair), 17th century German
Talmudist
-
Moses ben Jacob Cordovero (RaMaK) 16th century Holy
Land Kabbalistic scholar
-
Hillel ben Naphtali Zevi, (Bet Hillel), 17th century
Lithuanian scholar
-
Samuel Edels, (Mahrsha), 16th century Talmudist
-
Kalonymus Haberkasten 16th century Polish rabbi; Rosh
Yeshiva of many great Rishonim
-
David HaLevi Segal,(Taz)16th century Halakhist, major
commentatry on the Shulchan Aruch
-
Isaiah Horowitz (Shlah) 16th century Kabbalist and
Author - Eastern Europe and Israel
-
Moshe Isserles, (Rema), 16th century Polish legal
scholar, author of Ha-mappah (component of the
Shulchan Aruch)
-
Yosef Karo, (Mechaber), 16th century Spanish and Land
of Israel legal codifier of the Shulchan Aruch - code
of Torah Law
-
Meir of Lublin, (Maharam), 16th century Posek and
Talmudist
-
Isaac Luria, (Ari), 16th century Holy Land mystic,
founder of Lurianic Kabbalah
-
Solomon Luria, (Maharshal), 16th century Posek and
Talmudist
-
Menasseh Ben Israel, 17th century Dutch rabbi and
advocate of resettlement in England
-
Shalom Shachna, 16th century Polish Talmudist; Rosh
Yeshiva of several great Rishonim
-
Judah Low ben Bezalel, (Maharal), 16th century Prague
mystic and Talmudist
-
Obadiah ben Jacob Sforno, (Sforno), 16th century
Italian scholar and rationalist
-
Sforno, 15th, 16th, and 17th century family of Italian
Torah scholars and philosophers
-
Shlomo Ephraim Luntschitz, 16th-17th century Torah
commentator
-
Herschel ben Avram, 16th century Torah and Talmud
commentator
-
Hayyim ben Joseph Vital, 16th Kabbalist
-
Mordekhai Yaffe ("Levush") , 16th-17th century Polish
rabbi, codifier of halakha
-
Menahen Ben Elhanan Rizzolo ("Levush") , 16th-17th
century French rabbi, manuscript of Rizzolo containing
halakic decisions
Rabbis: 18th century
-
Chaim Joseph David Azulai (Hida), Sephardi rabbi and
bibliographer
-
Raphael Berdugo, rabbi in Meknes
-
Haim Isaac Carigal, rabbi in Newport, Rhode Island in
1773 who became great influence on Reverend Ezra
Stiles, and therefore on Yale University
-
Dovber of Mezritch, (Maggid), 18th century Eastern
European mystic, primary disciple of the Baal Shem Tov
-
Elijah ben Solomon (the Vilna Gaon or Gra), 18th
century Talmudist and mystic, Lithuanian leader of the
Mitnagdim, opponent of Hasidim
-
Jacob Emden, 18th century German Talmudist and mystic
Israel ben Eliezer, (Baal Shem Tov), 18th century
mystic, founder of Hasidic Judaism
-
Aaron Hart, Chief rabbi of Great Britain
-
David Hassine, Moroccan Jewish poet
-
Yechezkel Landau, (Noda Bihudah), 18th century Posek
and Talmudist
-
Moshe Chaim Luzzatto, (Ramchal), 18th century Italian
ethicist, philosopher, and mystic.
-
Hart Lyon, Chief rabbi of Great Britain
-
David Nieto, English rabbi
-
Isaac Nieto, English rabbi
-
Shneur Zalman of Liadi, (Alter Rebbe of Chabad), 18th
century mystic and Talmudist, founder of Chabad
Hasidism and first Chabad Rebbe
-
Akiva Eiger, 18th century Talmudist, and communal
leader
-
Elimelech of Lizhensk, (Noam Elimelech) 18th century
Polish mystic and Hasid
-
Levi Yitzchok of Berditchev, (Kedushas Leivi) 18th
century Polish Hassidic Leader
-
Shalom Sharabi, Yemenite rabbi and Kabbalist
Orthodox rabbis
See Orthodox Judaism.
Orthodox rabbis: 19th century
Barnett Abrahams, dayan, Principal of Jews' College,
London
Nathan Marcus Adler, Chief Rabbi of the British Empire
Yehudah Aryeh Leib Alter Sfas Emes Gerrer Rebbe
Benjamin Artom, Haham of the Spanish and Portuguese
Jews
Joshua Berdugo 19th century Rabbi in Meknes
Salomon Berdugo 19th century Rabbi in Meknes
Naftali Zvi Yehuda Berlin, (Netziv ; Ha'emek Davar)
19th century head of Volozhin yeshiva in Lithuania
Avrohom Bornsztajn Avnei Neizer Sochatshover Rebbe
Zvi Hirsch Chajes (Maharatz Chayes) Galician talmudic
scholar
Yosef Chayim, the Ben Ish Hai, Iraqi halakhist and
preacher
Yehoshua Leib Diskin, Rabbi in Shklov, Brisk and
Jerusalem
Yechiel Michel Epstein, (Aruch ha-Shulchan) 19th-20th
century halakhist and posek (decisor)
Jacob Ettlinger, 19th century German scholar and
opponent of Reform
Jacob of Lissa Galician Halakhist
Azriel Hildesheimer, 19th century German rabbi and
philosopher
Samson Raphael Hirsch, 19th century German rabbi,
founder of the Torah im Derech Eretz movement
Solomon Herschell, 19th century British Chief rabbi
Chaim Zundl Maccoby, the Kamenitzer Magid
Malbim, Meir Lob ben Jehiel Michael, (The Malbim),
19th century Russian preacher and scholar
Pele Yoetz, Rabbi Eliezer Papo, Rabbi of the community
of Selestria, Bulgaria
Raphael Meldola, Sephardic rabbi in London
Frederick de Sola Mendes, Sephardic rabbi in London
and America
Nachman of Breslav, (Reb Nachman), 19th century
Ukrainian Hasidic rebbe and mystic
Yisrael Lipkin Salanter, 19th century Lithuanian
ethicist and moralist
Dovber Schneuri, 19th century Russian second Rebbe of
Chabad
Menachem Mendel Schneersohn, (Tzemach Tzedek), 19th
century Russian third Rebbe of Lubavitch
Shmuel Schneersohn, 19th century Russian fourth Rebbe
of Lubavitch
Yaakov Chaim Sofer, Baghdadi rabbi, author of Kaf ha-Chaim
Moses Sofer, (Chatam Sofer) 19th century Hungarian
rabbi
Chaim Soloveitchik ("Brisker Rov" 19th century Eastern
European rabbi
Abraham b. Eliezer Lipman Liechtenstein Rabbi of
Plotsk
Orthodox rabbis: 20th century
Chareidi leaders
Yehezkel Abramsky, author of Chazon Yehezkel
Yisrael Abuhatzeira, 20th century Kabbalist
Avrohom Blumenkrantz, posek and kashrut authority
Eliyahu Eliezer Dessler, (Michtav Me'Eliyahu) 20th
century religious philosopher and ethicist
Baruch Epstein, (Torah Temimah), 20th century
Lithuanian Torah commentator
Moshe Mordechai Epstein, ( Levush Mordechai), 20th
century Talmudist and co-head of Slabodka Yehiva
Moshe Feinstein, (Igrot Moshe), 20th century
Russian-American legal scholar and Talmudist
Tzvi Hirsch Ferber, (Kerem HaTzvi), 20th century
author, leader and renowned scholar
Nosson Tzvi Finkel, (Alter / Sabba), early 20th
century founder of Slabodka Yeshiva, Lithuania.
Disciples opened major yeshivas in US and Israel
Rogatchover Gaon (Rav Yosef Rosen), Talmudist and
Hasidic leader
Boruch Greenfeld, (Reb Boruch Hermenshtater), 20th
century Hasidic mystic and scholar, author of Ohel
Boruch
Yitzchok Hutner, (Pachad Yitzchok), 20th century
European-born, American and Israeli Rosh Yeshiva
Yisrael Meir Kagan, (Chofetz Chaim), 20th century
Polish legalist and moralist
Aryeh Kaplan, (Living Torah) 20th century writer and
mystic
Avraham Yeshayahu Karelitz, (Chazon Ish) 20th century
Haredi leader in Israel
Aharon Kotler, 20th century Lithuanian scholar,
founder of Lakewood Yeshiva in US
Chaim Kreiswirth, long-time Chief Rabbi of Antwerp
(Belgium)
Isser Zalman Meltzer, renowned Lithuanian Rosh Yeshiva
Shraga Feivel Mendlowitz, (Mr. Mendlowitz) 20th
century European-born head of Yeshiva Torah Vodaath in
the US
Shulem Moshkovitz, Hasidic rebbe in London
Chanoch Dov Padwa, (Cheishev Ho'ephod), rabbinical
head of UOHC, London
Sholom Dovber Schneersohn, 20th century Russian fifth
Rebbe of Lubavitch
Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn, 20th century sixth Rebbe
of Lubavitch
Menachem Mendel Schneerson, (Lubavitcher Rebbe), 20th
century Hasidic mystic and scholar, seventh Chabad
Rebbe
Joseph ben Yehuda Leib Shapotshnick, 20th century
British rabbi
Shimon Shkop, famed Rosh Yeshiva in Telz and Grodno
Meir Simcha of Dvinsk, (Ohr Sameiach ; Meshech
Chochmah) Lithuanian-Latvian Talmudist and communal
leader
Joel Teitelbaum, (Satmar Rebbe), 20th century Hasidic
Hungarian-American rebbe known for anti-Zionism
Chaim Michael Dov Weissmandl, (Min HaMeitzar) 20th
century European scholar involved in rescue efforts
during the Holocaust
Modern and Zionist leaders
Hermann Adler, Chief Rabbi of the British Empire
Meir Berlin, (Bar Ilan) 20th century religious Zionist
leader
Israel Brodie, Chief Rabbi of the United Kingdom and
Commonwealth
Isidore Epstein, Principal of Jews' College, London
Moses Gaster, Haham of the Spanish and Portuguese Jews
of Britain
Sir Hermann Gollancz, British rabbi and professor
Meir Kahane, founder of the American Jewish Defense
League and the Israeli Kach party
Joseph H. Hertz, Chief Rabbi of the British Empire
Shmuel Yitzchak Hillman, British rabbi and dayan
Moses Hyamson, British rabbi
Binyamin Ze'ev Kahane, Israeli leader of Kahane Chai
party
Abraham Isaac Kook, 20th century philosopher and
mystic, first chief rabbi of Palestine
Immanuel Jakobovits, Chief Rabbi of the United Kingdom
and Commonwealth, medical ethicist
Chalom Messas, chief Rabbi of Morocco and Jerusalem
David Messas, chief Rabbi of Paris.
Jonathan Sacks, Chief Rabbi of the United Kingdom and
Commonwealth
David Silverman, Outreach Rabbi with the Atlanta
Scholars Kollel
Simeon Singer, editor of the United Synagogue prayer
book
Joseph Soloveitchik, 20th century European-born
Talmudist and philosopher
Selig Starr, Chicago Rabbi
Orthodox rabbis: Contemporary
Haredi
Gerrer Rebbes, (Gerrer), Polish Hasidic dynasty now in
Israel, followers also in the US and UK
Vizhnitzer Rebbes, (Vizhnitzer), Romanian dynasty of
Hasidic rebbes in Israel and the US
Shlomo Amar, Sephardic Chief Rabbi of Israel
Arie Zeev Raskin, Chief Rabbi of Cyprus
Meir Brandsdorfer, member of the Badatz (rabbinical
court) of the Edah HaChareidis
Yosef Shalom Eliashiv, Israeli rabbi and de facto
rabbinical leader of the chareidi world
Menachem Genack, OU
Yitzchak Kadouri, leading 20th century Kabbalist
(deceased)
Yaakov Kamenetsky, rabbinical leader and
educationalist
Nissim Karelitz, respected Israeli chareidi leader
Yona Metzger, Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi of Israel
Israel Meir Lau, former Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi of
Israel and current Chief Rabbi of Tel Aviv
Moshe Chaim Ephraim Padwa, rabbinical head of the UOHC,
London
Yissachar Dov Rokeach (II), Belzer Rebbe
Moshe Sacks, Satmar posek.
Chaim Pinchas Scheinberg, dean of Torah Ohr Yeshiva,
Jerusalem
Adin Steinsaltz, 21st century Israeli Talmud scholar
and philosopher
Moshe Teitelbaum, Satmar Rebbe (deceased)
Avraham Yitzchak Ulman, member of the Badatz
(rabbinical court) of the Edah HaChareidis
Ovadia Yosef, 21st century Iraqi-Israeli former Israel
Sephardic Chief Rabbi, legal scholar, "de facto"
leader of Sephardic Jewry
Amnon Yitzhak, leading Sephardic "baal teshuva Rabbi"
in Israel
Avigdor Nebenzahl, Chief Rabbi of the old city of
Jerusalem
Hardal
Mordechai Eliyahu - former Sephardic Chief Rabbi
Avraham Shapira - former Ashkenazic Chief Rabbi, the
head of Mercaz haRav yeshiva
Dov Lior - rabbi of Hebron
Modern Orthodox
David Bigman, Rosh Yeshiva of Yeshivat Maale Gilboa
Levi Brackman, British-born rabbi
David Bar Hayim, founder of Machon Ben Yishai,
Proponent of Nusach Eretz Yisrael [1]
Mordechai Breuer, Israeli rabbi, descendant of Samson
Raphael Hirsch
Barry Freundel, rabbi of Kesher Israel congregation in
Washingon DC.
James Kennard, British educationalist
Norman Lamm, 20th century American modern Orthodox
thinker, head of Yeshiva University
Aharon Lichtenstein, American-born head of an Israeli
yeshiva
Yosef Mendelevitch former Soviet "Refusenik" and
Zionist activist
Shlomo Riskin
Shalom Rosner, Rav, Congregation Bais Ephraim Yitzchok
Hershel Schachter, leading posek for the modern
orthodox community.
Andrew Shaw, British rabbi and youth leader
Shmuel Silber, Rabbi of Suburban Orthodox Congregation
Toras Chaim in Baltimore, Md., Member of Baltimore's
Vaad HaRabonim, Rosh Kollel of the Torah Mitzion
Kollel of Baltimore
Joseph Telushkin author.
Moshe David Tendler, son-in-law of Moshe Feinstein,
and noted bioethist.
Mordechai Willig, Rosh Yeshiva at Yeshiva University,
prominent Posek for the Modern Orthodox community.
Avi Weiss, activist and founder of Yeshivat Chovevei
Torah
Dov Zakheim, non-practicing modern Orthodox rabbi,
economic and political leader in US government
Joseph Kelman, Toronto rabbi
Alfredo Goldschmidt, chief rabbi of Colombia
See also article Modern Orthodox for a list of rabbis.
Conservative rabbis
See: Conservative Judaism.
Conservative rabbis: 19th century
Zecharias Frankel, 19th century critical historian,
founder of the "Positive Historical" school, the
progenitor of Conservative Judaism.
Yosef Guttmann, 19th century Polish rabbi
Levi Herzfeld, 19th century german rabbi, proponent of
moderate reform
Nachman Krochmal, 19th century Austrian philosopher
and historian
Conservative rabbis: 20th century
Abraham Joshua Heschel, 20th century Conservative
Judaism philosopher and scholar of Hasidism
Solomon Schechter, 20th century scholar and a founder
of Conservative Judaism
Saul Lieberman, 20th century rabbi and scholar
Marshall Meyer, 20th century American Conservative
rabbi and human rights activist, founded a Rabbinical
school and synagogue in Argentina
Louis Finkelstein, 20th century Conservative Talmud
scholar
Louis Ginzberg, 20th century American Conservative
Talmud scholar
Wolfe Kelman, 20th century Conservative rabbi
Robert Gordis, 20th century leader in Conservative
Judaism
Isaac Klein, 20th century American Conservative rabbi
and scholar
Samuel Schafler, 20th century American Conservative
rabbi and historian
Conservative rabbis: Contemporary
Menachem Creditor, Conservative rabbi, activist, and
founder of the Shefa Network
Elliot N. Dorff, Conservative rabbi and bioethicist
Neil Gillman, Conservative philosopher and theologian
David Golinkin - Masorti rabbi and halakhist
Joshua Hammerman, Conservative rabbi of Temple Beth El
in Stamford, Connecticut
Jules Harlow, 20th century Conservative Judaism
liturgist
Louis Jacobs - Founder of the Masorti movement in the
United Kingdom, theologian
William E. Kaufman - Advocate of process theology
Harold Kushner, 21st century American Conservative
rabbi, theologian, and popular writer
William H. Lebeau, Conservative rabbi and Dean of
Rabbinical School at Jewish Theological Seminary
Aaron L. Mackler, Conservative rabbi and bioethicist
Jason Alan Miller, Conservative rabbi of Congregation
Agudas Achim in Columbus, Ohio
Jacob Neusner, Conservative trained scholar and
prolific writer
Daniel Nevins, Dean of JTS Rabbinical School and
author of inclusive teshuvah on homosexuality in
Judaism.
Joel Roth, Conservative scholar and rabbi
Ismar Schorsch, Conservative educator and leader
Harold M. Schulweis, Conservative rabbi of Valley Beth
Shalom, Encino, CA and founder of the Jewish World
Watch
Alan Silverstein, Conservative rabbi of Congregation
Agudath Israel in Caldwell, New Jersey and former
President of the Rabbinical Assembly
Arnold Stiebel, Conservative rabbi and author
Gordon Tucker, Conservative rabbi and leader
Stewart Vogel, Conservative rabbi of Temple Aliyah,
Woodland Hills, CA
David Wolpe, Conservative rabbi of Temple Sinai in Los
Angeles, California
Conservative rabbinical organizations
Rabbinical Assembly
United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism
Committee on Jewish Law and Standards
Union for Traditional Judaism
David Weiss Halivni, Hungarian-American Talmudist of
Union for Traditional Judaism (UTJ)
Reform rabbis
See Reform Judaism.
Reform rabbis: 19th century
Samuel Adler, 19th century German-American rabbi of
Temple Emanu-El
Emil Hirsch, 19th century American Reform rabbi and
scholar
David Einhorn, 19th century American Reform rabbi
Samuel Hirsch, 19th century German-American
philosopher of the Reform Movement
Abraham Geiger, 19th century German Reform ideologist
Samuel Holdheim, 19th century German rabbi and founder
of classic German Reform Judaism
Leopold Zunz, 19th century German scholar, founded
Science of Judaism school
Isaac Mayer Wise, American Reform rabbi
Reform rabbis: 20th century
Paula Ackerman, 20th century Reform rabbi (first woman
to perform rabbinical functions in the United States,
not ordained)
Leo Baeck, 20th century Reform rabbi
Lionel Blue, British rabbi, writer and broadcaster
Julia Neuberger, British Reform rabbi
Sally Priesand, 20th century Reform rabbi, first
ordained female rabbi in the United States
Abba Hillel Silver, 20th century Reform rabbi and
Zionist leader
Gabriel Farhi, 20th century French Reform rabbi and
broadcaster.
Stephen S. Wise, 20th century Reform rabbi and Zionist
activist
Arnold Stiebel, 20th century rabbi and author
Benjamin Constine, 20th century Reform rabbi
Gerald J. Klein, 20th century Reform rabbi
Laszlo Berkowitz, 20th century Reform rabbi, Temple
Rodef Shalom
Gunther Plaut, 20th century Reform rabbi and author,
Holy Blossom Temple
Maurice Davis, 20th century Reform rabbi, past
Chairman, President's Commission on Equal Opportunity
Levi Kelman, Reform Rabbi, Kol Haneshama, Jerusalem
Susan Abramson, Reform Rabbi, Shalom Emeth,
Burlington, MA, one of the first 50 women rabbis.
Author of the Rabbi Rocketpower children book series.
Reform rabbinical organizations
Union for Reform Judaism
Central Conference of American Rabbis
Movement for Reform Judaism (UK)
Reconstructionist rabbis
See:
Reconstructionist Judaism.
Reconstructionist rabbis: 20th century
Mordecai Kaplan, 20th
century founder of the Reconstructionist movement in
America
Reconstructionist rabbis: Contemporary
Carol Harris-Shapiro,
modern author
Other rabbis
See Jewish Renewal ;
Humanistic Judaism
Zalman Schachter-Shalomi, leader of the Jewish Renewal
movement
Sherwin Wine, US founder of Society for Humanistic
Judaism
Michael Lerner founder/editor of Tikkun magazine
External links |