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This great Rav's final gift to his
beloved people: In the last few years of his long, distinguished, and productive
life, Rabbi Shimon Schwab, the famed and beloved spiritual leader of Khal
Adath Jeshurun in Washington Heights, NY, taught Siddur to his
congregants.
He was officially retired, but his mind and conscience
never rested. Always a great thinker and teacher, he turned his attention to the
Siddur, and drew his congregants along with him. A lifetime of learning,
thought, piety, and perspective were poured into these stimulating and inspiring
lectures. Rabbi Schwab was a product of two worlds: the Franfurt-am-Main of
Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch and the Lithuanian Yeshivah. He absorbed both,
blended both, molded them with his great intellect, profound faith, vibrant
heart, and charismatic personality.
He was a rabbi in Nazi Germany until it became impossible
for him to function. He was called to serve the German kehillah in
Baltimore during an era when rabbis in America were expected to accommodate
themselves to the times, but he did the opposite. He forced the times to
accommodate themselves to the Torah -- and became a heroic figure in the
American rabbinate. After a long and successful career in Baltimore, he joined
Rabbi Joseph Breuer in the rabbinate of Khal Adath Jeshurun. History has come a
full circle, as the scion of Frankfurt became the Rav of Khal Adath Jeshurun in
New York, the successor of the famed Frankfurt kehillah.
He became the moral voice of American Orthodoxy,
eloquently demanding integrity and idealism -- and succeeding because he made
the same demands of himself. He always went upward, and drew his listeners after
him.
Thanks to the diligence and devotion of Moshe Schwab
-- the eldest son of the Rav, a talmid of Yeshivah Torah Vodaath, and a
musmach of Rabbi Yitzchok Yaakov Ruderman ztl of Yeshivas Ner Israel,
Baltimore -- his father's last teachings become the legacy of us all in this
magnificent volume. Our daily conversations with the Creator will be
immeasurably enriched, thanks to this book. No thinking Jew should be without
it.