Rabbi Joshua O. Haberman
Rabbi Joshua Haberman, champion of
adult Jewish education, dies at 98
Washington,
DC rabbi is remembered for bringing 'the light of Torah to countless followers'
during his 72-year rabbinic career.
Joshua O. Haberman. (Screen capture: YouTube)
Rabbi Joshua Haberman, rabbi emeritus of the Washington Hebrew
Congregation and founder of the Foundation for Jewish Studies, died this week
at 98.
Haberman, who represented the Jewish community during the
memorial service for the victims of 9/11 held at the National Cathedral, died
Sunday at his home in Washington, DC, following a rabbinic career of 72 years.
Haberman “brought the light of Torah to countless followers not
only as a rabbi, but also as a brilliant visionary in the field of Jewish Adult
Education,” Elaine Amir, president of The Foundation for Jewish Studies, said
in a statement. “His leadership, kindness and humanity will be long
remembered.”
Haberman, a Vienna native, was enrolled at the Vienna Jewish
Theological Seminary when the Nazis annexed Austria in 1938. An invitation by
the Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati, Ohio, enabled him to come to the United
States, where he received ordination from HUC in 1945. Haberman earned a
bachelor’s degree from the University of Cincinnati the same year and went on
to earn two doctorates.
He served as clergy in several Reform synagogues before becoming
senior rabbi at the Washington Hebrew Congregation in 1969. He retired in 1986,
becoming rabbi emeritus, and remained active in the congregation as a teacher
and spiritual leader until his death.
In 1983, he created the Foundation for Jewish Studies, a
nonsectarian organization offering scholarly lecture series and tours for adult
Jews, using startup money donated by an anonymous congregant.
Haberman was also active in interfaith dialogue with Christians
and Muslims, and spoke at both the White House and in Congress.
He taught as an adjunct professor at Rutgers, American, George
Washington and Georgetown Universities, as well as at The Washington
Theological Union (Catholic) and the Wesley Theological Seminary (Methodist).
He was a past president of the National Association of Retired Reform Rabbis,
and served on the board of fellows of the Jewish Policy Center. He was the
author of several books.
Accepting an award in 1987, Haberman lamented a “spiritual
malaise” among American Jews.
“We Jews have an incredible advantage,” he said. “In the Western
world we have learned important lessons and gained deep insights in
world-saving truths from our historical experience of nearly 4,000 years. But a
time such as this, when we could be a light unto the nation, most of our
people, so brilliantly educated in all the secular branches of learning, are
Jewishly illiterate. We are messengers who have forgotten the message.”
Haberman is survived by his wife of 73 years, Maxine Rudin
Haberman, as well as four children, 15 grandchildren and 22
great-grandchildren.
Rabbi Haberman earlier photos, as we might remember him
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