Maccabaeans
The Order of Ancient Maccabeans (also Maccabaeans) is an Anglo-Jewish charity.[1] The order is a friendly society, established in 1894, and registered on the 8th of May, 1901, under the Friendly Societies' Act, as amended 1896.[2] Its membership consists primarily of people in the professions, with aims to provide:
- "social intercourse and co-operation among its members with a view to the promotion of the interests of Jews, including the support of any professional or learned bodies and charities."
All persons "of the Jewish faith who declare themselves adherents to the Zionist Movement" can become members; membership also includes similarly minded, non-Jewish 'honorary' members.
When Theodor Herzl came to England before the First Zionist Congress the members of the Society, who then belonged to the "Lovers of Zion" movement, pledged their adherence to the Zionist cause. The Society is an avowedly Zionist Order, and every member on admission has to declare his willingness to be a Zionist, to pay the shekel and to assist generally through the Order in the work of resettling the Jews in Palestine.[2]
Its presidents include:
- 1891–1903 Raphael Meldola (in whose honour the society awards the Meldola medal for Chemistry)
- 1903–04 Albert Goldsmid
- 1904–27 Solomon Joseph Solomon
- 1927–32 Herbert Bentwich
- 1932–54 Selig Brodetsky
- 1982–90 Sir Alan Marre
- 1990–2000 Sir John Balcombe
- 2000– Sir Ian Gainsford
Other notable members have included:
- Bertram Abrahams
- Louis Barnett Abrahams
- Chief Rabbi Hermann Adler
- Norman Bentwich
- Sir Ernst Boris Chain
- Walter Emanuel
- Marcus Hartog
- Henry Henriques
- Delissa Joseph
- Rev. Morris Joseph
- Chief Rabbi Joseph H. Hertz
- Richard Gillis
- Waldemar Haffkine
- Sir Ian Heilbron
- David Nunes Nabarro
- Michael Samuel Rich
- Sir Bernard Rix
- Isaac Snowman
- Rev. Joseph Stern
- Rev. Charles Voysey (Not Jewish; hon. member)
- Chaim Weizmann
- Lucien Wolf
- Israel Zangwill
Notes
- ↑ Order of Ancient Maccabeans
- 1 2 Nahum Sokolow, History of Zionism 1600-1918, Appendices p.358-388, Longmans, Green and Co. (1919)
References
- Encyclopaedia Judaica, art. Maccabaeans
- Jewish Year Book, 2005, p. 104
- Who was Who