The Teachings of Maimonides by Rabbi Abraham Cohen, London 1927.

Maimonides01Reverend Dr. Abraham Cohen was born in Reading, Berkshire, in 1887.  He was a notable Anglo-Jewish clergyman, scholar, and communal leader. He was brought up in the East End of London, and educated at the Jews’ Free School and the Central Foundation School before going to Jews’ College.  He went to Cambridge University and later received his Ph.D. from London University. He became a minister in Manchester in 1909 and in 1913 minister to the Birmingham Hebrew Congregation, at the historic Singers Hill Synagogue, where he remained for 36 years.  I have previously written about the stained glass windows at Singers Hill.

As the spiritual head of the Birmingham Jewish community, he cooperated closely with the city’s clerical and civic leaders, and was said to have encouraged his congregants to play a full part together with their fellow-citizens in worthy causes.

As well as being a scholar, Abraham Cohen was active in the World Jewish Congress and in the Zionist movement. In 1949 he resigned from Singers Hill and moved to London following his election as President of the Board of Deputies (the first minister of religion to become the “lay leader” of Anglo Jewry). He accepted the position of emeritus minister at Birmingham.

This volume, in English, explaining the teachings and philosophy of the Rambam (Maimonides) was published by Shapiro Valentine in 1927, when they were at 81 Wentworth Street.

Cohen edited the Soncino Books of the Bible, himself translating the Psalms, and participated in  the Soncino translation of the Talmud and Midrash. In 1949 he published “Everyman’s Talmud”.

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