Jacob J. Schacter
Jacob J. Schacter (born 1950) is an American Orthodox rabbi. Schacter, a historian of intellectual trends in Orthodox Judaism, is University Professor of Jewish History and Jewish Thought and Senior Scholar at the Center for the Jewish Future at Yeshiva University.
Biography
Schacter, the son of Pnina Gewirtz Schacter and Rabbi Herschel Schacter, grew up in New York City's Bronx neighborhood.[1]
Schacter holds a Ph.D. in Near Eastern Languages from
According to Jacob Katz, Schacter's thesis, "Rabbi Jacob Emden: Life and Major Works" (unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Harvard University, 1988), "supplanted" Mortimer J. Cohen's 1937 book Jacob Emden: A Man of Controversy, as the most authoritative source on Emden.[3]
Schacter is an historian of intellectual trends in Orthodox Judaism.[4] Schacter is regarded as following "the ideological tradition" of Joseph B. Soloveitchik.[5] His 1997 book, A Modern Heretic and a Traditional Community: Mordecai M. Kaplan, Orthodoxy and American Judaism, was about the "complicated relationship" between Mordecai Kaplan, an Orthodox rabbi who left that movement to found Reconstructionist Judaism.[4] Before leaving Orthodoxy, Kaplan had been Rabbi of the Jewish Center (Manhattan), the congregation that Schacter would later lead.[4]
While still a graduate student, Schacter became the first Rabbi of
In 2000, he moved to Massachusetts where he became dean of the Rabbi Joseph B Soloveitchik Institute in Brookline,[2][7][8] a position he held until 2005, when he left to become Senior Scholar and University Professor at Yeshiva University's new Center for the Jewish Future (initially called the Center for the Jewish People).[5][9][10]
As author
- "A Modern Heretic and a Traditional Community: Mordecai M. Kaplan, Orthodoxy, and American Judaism." Coauthor with Jeffrey S. Gurock, Columbia University Press (1997)[11][12][13][14]
As editor
- "Reverence, Righteousness and Rahamanut: Essays in Memory of Rabbi Dr. Leo Jung" (1992)
- "Jewish Tradition and The Nontraditional Jew" (1992)
- "Judaism's Encounter with other Cultures: Rejection or Integration?" (1997)
- "The Complete Service for the Period of Bereavement" (1995)
References
- ^ Fox, Margalit (26 March 2013). "Rabbi Herschel Schacter Is Dead at 95. Cried to the Jews of Buchenwald: 'You Are Free'". New York Times. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
- ^ ProQuest 319272228.
- ^ Katz, Jacob (1988). Tradition and Crisis: Jewish Society at the End of the Middle Ages. unpublished PhD thesis. p. 357.
- ^ ProQuest 367733521.
- ^ ProQuest 319472733.
- ProQuest 205196082.
- ProQuest 367702121.
- ProQuest 405352634.
- ^ "Rabbinical Council of America (RCA)". www.rabbis.org. Archived from the original on 2007-10-23.
- ^ http://www.yu.edu/faculty/pages/Schacter-Jacob>
- S2CID 162229017.
- S2CID 162231756.
- JSTOR 25834422.
- S2CID 170371494.