
Pictures - Jacobs Archive ©
1. Louis Jacobs as a boy
2. On his Wedding Day (1944)
3. Obtaining Doctorate (1953)
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Brief biography of Louis Jacobs
Rabbi Dr Louis Jacobs (1920-2006) was born in Manchester,
to Yiddish speaking parents who originated from Latvia and Lithuania.
His background was traditional rather than strictly Orthodox. He was
trained to read Jewish texts as a child, leaving school at 15 to enrol
full time at the Manchester Yeshiva. He moved in his late teens to the
Kollel in Gateshead where he met Shula Lisagorska, to whom he was
married for over 60 years. Jacobs became assistant Rabbi to Rabbi
Eliyahu Munk in Golders Green Beth Hamidrash, at the same time studying
Semitics at University College London, obtaining a BA and, in 1952, a
PhD.
In 1948 the family moved briefly back to Manchester, where
Jacobs served as Rabbi at Manchester Central Synagogue, before returning
to London he joined the New West End Synagogue in 1955. Jacobs was
widely viewed as Chief Rabbi Israel Brodie’s successor, and in a period
of absence in 1955 Jacobs deputised for Brodie. At the end of 1959
Jacobs resigned from the synagogue pulpit to become Moral Tutor and
Lecturer in Homiletics at Jews’ College, London, but when the Principal
of Jews’ College Isidore Epstein, retired in 1961, Jacobs’ formal
nomination for the position was blocked by Brodie. When Jacobs resigned
from the college later that year amid some uproar, and applied for a
vacancy at his former synagogue, the New West End, this was also vetoed
by Brodie.
Opposition to Jacobs was based on views he had published several years earlier in We have Reason to Believe (1959), arguing that the Torah was not received directly by Moses on Sinai in the exact form known today.
Once Jacobs found himself barred from United Synagogue
pulpits, a group of supporters decided to establish a new community
based in Abbey Road, St John’s Wood. In 1964 this became the New London
Synagogue.
The controversy surrounding Jacobs’ theology was a source
of dissent within the Anglo-Jewish community throughout Lord Jakobovits’
time as Chief Rabbi (1967-1991) and after.
Jacobs was Rabbi of the New London Synagogue for over 26 years writing many books, including A Tree of Life (1984), God, Torah, Israel (1990), his autobiography Helping with Inquiries (1989) and Beyond Reasonable Doubt (1999).
Jacobs also made a great contribution to the scholastic work on
Rabbinics and translated several key Hasidic texts. His community joined
the Masorti movement, which currently has thirteen synagogues in the
UK. Jacobs’s views are still regularly challenged and sidelined by other
sections of Anglo-Jewry, despite much public recognition for his
academic and pastoral work: he was a visiting professor and awarded
honorary degrees from Harvard Divinity School (1985-6) and Lancaster
University (1987), received a CBE in 1990 and was voted ‘Greatest
British Jew’ of the last 350 years in a poll in the Jewish Chronicle (2005).
Jacobs retired aged 81 in 2001, but returned to lead the New London Synagogue in 2005. In 2006 he donated his library to the Leopold Muller Memorial Library,
Yarnton. His stalwart wife died in 2005, and he died some months later,
aged 85 (2006). He had three children and several grandchildren and
great-grandchildren.
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