I have always had an interest in Judah Magnes, the iconoclastic Zionist Reform rabbi who became the first president of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, but I had never read much about him. And then a brilliant new biography of him by David Barak-Gorodetsky, a young Israeli scholar at the University of Haifa, as well as a visiting professor at the University of Chicago and an Israeli Reform rabbi, came to my attention. In the course of reading it, I learned a great deal about this unique Jewish leader, who played important roles in both American Zionism and in pre-state Israel, whom I believe is underappreciated in Israeli society and in Jewish life in the Diaspora.

Trained as a Reform rabbi, Magnes was an American Zionist leader for a while. After moving to Israel, he became a university founder and leader – the first chancellor of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem when it opened in 1925 – following his aliyah in 1922.  According to the author of this book,

Magnes’s involvement in founding and overseeing the Hebrew University was the crowning glory of his activity in Palestine during the 1920s, as well as the basis for his authority among the public. Magnes saw the Hebrew University as the cultural center for the Jewish people with a unique and vital role to play: to build a moral society in the spirit of the prophets of Israel.

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