Joseph B. Soloveitchik Biography
(Rabbi)Birthday: February 27, 1903 (Pisces)
Born In: Pruzhany
Advanced SearchJoseph B. Soloveitchik was a major American Orthodox rabbi and Modern Jewish philosopher. He served as an advisor, guide, mentor, and role model for many Modern Orthodox Jews as their favorite Talmudic scholar and religious leader. Born into a rabbinical dynasty, he was destined to become supreme leader from an early age and received his Jewish education alongside a systematic secular teaching. After his graduation, he went to Berlin from where he received his doctoral degree, also undertaking a rigorous schedule of Talmud studies. Then he traveled to the United States and founded one of the first Hebrew day schools in the country which later promoted co-education. Subsequently, he succeeded his father as the head of the rabbinical school at Yeshiva University and also served as the chief decision-maker of Modern Orthodoxy in America. He was an acknowledged rabbinic leader and leading ideologue of American Modern Orthodoxy for much of the 20th century. He also made a great impact through his theological works such as ‘Halakhic Man’ and ‘Lonely Man of Faith’ which presented a sophisticated religious anthropology. Through public lectures, writings, and his policy decisions for the Modern Orthodox world, he emerged as the spiritual leader of Modern Orthodoxy in America and one of the 20th century's greatest Jewish thinkers Quick FactsAlso Known As: Joseph Soloveitchik
Died At Age: 90
Family:father: Moshe Soloveichik
siblings: Ahron Soloveichik
children: Haym Soloveitchik
Born Country: Belarus
Spiritual & Religious Leaders American Men
place of death: Boston
Founder/Co-Founder: Maimonides School
More Factseducation: Humboldt University of Berlin
awards: National Jewish Book Award for Modern Jewish Thought & Experience
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American CelebritiesBelarusian CelebritiesBelarusian MenAmerican Spiritual & Religious LeadersPisces Men Childhood & Early LifeJoseph Ber Soloveitchik was born on February 27, 1903 in Pruzhany, then Russia, to Rabbi Moshe Soloveichik, and his wife, Rebbetzin Pesia. He had four siblings: Samuel, Shulamith, Anne, and Ahron.His family belonged to a rabbinical dynasty which dated back two centuries. His father was the head of the RIETS rabbinical school at Yeshiva University who bestowed upon him an intellectual-moral tradition of discipline while his mother exposed him to science and non-Jewish culture.He received his education at a Talmud Torah, an elementary yeshiva, and also from private tutors. In 1922, he completed his graduation from the liberal arts Gymnasium in Dubno.In 1924, he entered the Free Polish University in Warsaw where he studied political science for three terms.During his years in Berlin, he also became an ardent devotee of Rabbi Hayyim Heller, who established an institute for advanced Jewish Studies from an Orthodox perspective in the city.In December 1932, he obtained his PhD with his doctoral thesis on the epistemology and metaphysics of the German philosopher Hermann Cohen.