Moshe Aberbach (1924-2007) was a leading educator and scholar in
Jewish studies, specialising in the field of Jewish education in
the talmudic period. This book draws on a representative selection
of his writings over a fifty year period, and includes essays on
Saadia Gaon and Maimonides, coverage of biblical and talmudic
studies, and discussions of the roots of religious anti-Zionism and
of the Lubavitch messianic movement in the context of similar
movements in Jewish history.
Focusing on the history of Jewish education and linking the
Roman destruction of the Jewish state in 70 CE with Jewish survival
after the Holocaust, and how survival of both depended on a strong
system of education and the moral example set by teachers, the book
explores the vital importance of education to Jewish survival from
biblical times to the present. The book includes an
autobiographical memoir of Moshe Aberbach s childhood in Vienna, as
well as a biographical Foreword by his son, David. It will be of
great interest to Bible scholars and students of Jewish Studies,
History, the Holocaust and Jewish social psychology.
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