Leopold Treitel

Leopold Jakob Jehuda Treitel (3 January 1845 4 March 1931) was a German Jewish classical scholar in the late 19th and early 20th century, and the last rabbi of the Jewish community in the town of Laupheim, then Württemberg, Southern Germany.

Life

Leopold Treitel's father Joseph (originally Josephson) (1816 1886 ) was born in Wronke (now Wronki), in the Prussian province of Posen, and later moved to Breslau in the Prussian province of Silesia to become a leather merchant. In 1843, Joseph Treitel married Johanna Falk (1818 1874), daughter of the famous rabbi Jacob Jehuda Löbel Falk of Dyhernfurth. Jacob Jehuda Löbel Falk was a distinguished Talmud scholar,[1] and later became dayan (religious judge) in Breslau.[2] Together they had six children. Leopold, born in Breslau, was the eldest.[3]

Leopold Treitel grew up in Beslau, and started to learn Hebrew at a very young age. He attended Elisabet-Gymnasium in Breslau. His father had wanted him to join his commercial enterprise. However, due to Leopold Treitel's affinity and aptitude for learning, the headmaster of his school advised his father to let Leopold Treitel remain at school after the Mittlere Reife (GCSE) since he thought that Leopold Treitel would be more suited to become a scholar rather than a businessman.[4] After taking his Abitur (GCE Advanced Level), he enrolled at the University of Breslau to study Classical Philology, Philosophy and History[5] whilst also attending the Jewish Theological Seminary of Breslau.[6] At the university and the seminary he studied under scholars such as Zacharias Frankel, one of the ideological fathers of present-day Conservative Judaism, Marcus Brann and Heinrich Graetz, the latter eventually supervising Treitel's PhD thesis on the language of Philo.[7] Treitel obtained his PhD from the University of Breslau in December 1870, but continued his studies at the Jewish Theological Seminary of Breslau where, in 1876, he was ordained as a rabbi.[8]

Former Rabbi's office in Laupheim

Following his ordination, Treitel worked as a rabbi in Koschmin in the Prussian province of Posen from 1878 until 1881[9] when he moved to Briesen in the Prussian province of West Prussia to become rabbi there, a function he fulfilled until 1884.[10] In May 1882, he married Rebecca Brann from Schneidemühl, whose brother Marcus had also been a student at Breslau Jewish Theological Seminary. Together they had three children.[11] In 1884, he became deputy town rabbi (2. Stadtrabbiner) in Karlsruhe in the Grand Duchy of Baden[12] where he was also employed as teacher for religious education at state schools. He also functioned as director of the Jewish seminary for teacher training which was founded in 1886.[13]

In 1895, Treitel moved to Laupheim to assume the office of District Rabbi in the small Upper Swabian town whose Jewish population at that time was about 500 strong,[14] having been the largest Jewish community in the Kingdom of Württemberg in the middle of the 19th century.[15] He was rabbi in Laupheim until retirement in 1922.[16] No successor to Treitel as rabbi was appointed. As a consequence the office of district rabbi, established in 1832, ceased to exist on 1 April 1923.[17] Leopold Treitel died on 4 March 1931 surrounded by his family, having suffered a stroke a few days earlier. He was interred at Laupheim Jewish Cemetery.[18] When his wife Rebecca died in 1936, she was buried alongside him, a first on the cemetery where men and women had usually been buried separately.[19][20]

Gravestone of Leopold Treitel and his wife Rebekka

Scholar

Treitel's main academic and scholarly interest revolved around the Hellenistic Jewish philosopher Philo of Alexandria. Starting in 1870 with his PhD thesis, De Philonis Judaei Sermone Dissertatio, written in Latin, he published a number of books and articles on Philo and his philosophy, culminating in his magnum opus Die gesamte Theologie und Philosophie Philos von Alexandria (The complete theology and philosophy of Philo of Alexandria), published in 1923. In the first century CE, Philo had attempted to merge Greek thinking and Judaism by using allegory.[21] According to Treitel, Philo employed "rabbinic methods and patterns of interpretation, although Greek methodology did make a deep impact upon the content."[22] Philo's works were rejected by contemporary Judaism. Influenced by Frankel and Graetz, Treitel attempted to demonstrate the importance of Philo's philosophy to Jewish thinking, particularly because of Philo's emphasis on the social order of Jewish life and the universal interpretation of the Jewish scriptures.[23] Philo's appeal lay in the fact that he "did not imply an abrogation of the law, but rather to the contrary its wider dissemination and thus affirmation."[24]

Treitel not only wrote on philosophical subjects. He was also interested in educative youth literature, and wrote a novel, Rahab, die Seherin von Jericho (Rahab, the Seeress of Jericho), whose aim it was to make religion and religious topics more accessible to young adults.[25]

During his time as District Rabbi in Laupheim, Leopold Treitel became involved in local Jewish history. He made an inventory of the Laupheim Jewish cemetery by deciphering the inscriptions on the headstones and compiled a list of all persons buried in the graveyard until 1916. The original of this list was confiscated by the Reich Ancestry Office (Reichsstelle für Sippenforschung) after 1933, and put onto film between October 1944 and March 1945. The original list was consequently lost and presumed destroyed, but the film is now in the possession of the Baden-Württemberg Main State Archives in Stuttgart. A copy of this film was used by Nathanja Hüttenmeister for her documentation on the Laupheim Jewish cemetery.[26]

Cover of Treitel's PhD dissertation from 1870

Selected publications

Books

Articles

See also

Notes

  1. Westerholz, S. Michael (24 July 2012). "Dr. Richard Treitel und seine ansehnliche Familie" (in German). HaGalil Online. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  2. "Dyhernfurth". Jewish Encyclopedia. 1906. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  3. R. Emmerich, " Philo und die Synagoge - Dr. Leopold Treitel, der letzte Rabbiner von Laupheim ", p. 13
  4. Hertha Nathorff Collection, 1813–1967, "Gedenk-Blätter für Rabbiner Dr. Leopold Treitel", p. 3
  5. R. Emmerich, " Philo und die Synagoge - Dr. Leopold Treitel, der letzte Rabbiner von Laupheim ", p. 13
  6. Hertha Nathorff Collection, 1813–1967, "Gedenk-Blätter für Rabbiner Dr. Leopold Treitel", p. 3
  7. R. Emmerich, "Die Rabbiner-Familie Treitel", p. 521
  8. R. Emmerich, " Philo und die Synagoge - Dr. Leopold Treitel, der letzte Rabbiner von Laupheim ", p. 13
  9. J. Hahn, Erinnerungen und Zeugnisse jüdischer Geschichte in Baden-Württemberg, p. 590
  10. "Treitel, Leopold, Dr." (German). In: Michael Brocke and Julius Carlebach (Eds.), Die Rabbiner im Deutschen Reich, 1871-1945. Walter de Gruyter, 2009. Vol. 2 (L-Z), entry 2623, p. 610-612; here, p. 610.
  11. R. Emmerich, "Die Rabbiner-Familie Treitel", p. 521
  12. N. Hüttenmeister, Der jüdische Friedhof Laupheim, p. 504
  13. R. Emmerich, "Rebecca Treitel in Laupheim - wohltätige Jüdin und Intellektuelle", p. 42f.
  14. G. Schenk, "Die Juden in Laupheim", p. 215, 239, 292
  15. P. Sauer, Die jüdischen Gemeinden in Württemberg und Hohenzollern, p. 118
  16. G. Schenk (a), "Die Juden in Laupheim", p. 113f; W. Kohl, Die Geschichte der Judengemeinde in Laupheim, p. 52; R. Emmerich, "Philo und die Synagoge", p. 13; A. Köhlerschmidt & K. Neildinger (Hrsg.), Die jüdische Gemeinde Laupheim und ihre Zerstörung, p. 524; H. Säbel, "Hundert Jahre Synagoge Laupheim", p. 3, in: Hertha Nathorff Collection, 1813–1967. Schenk dates Treitel's rabbinate from 1895 to 1925 whereas Kohl says that with the retirement of Treitel on 1 April 1923, the office of rabbi in Laupheim ceased to exist. This is confirmed by Emmerich who indicates that Treitel was rabbi for more than 28 years and retired in the year of the publication of his monograph on Philo of Alexandria in 1923. However, during a speech held in 1937 the last teacher of the Laupheim Jewish school, Heinz Säbel, dated the end of Treitel's rabbinate to 1922. Furthermore, in an obituary dated 20 March 1931 published in the C.V.-Zeitung, the weekly newspaper of the Central-Vereins deutscher Staatsbürger jüdischen Glaubens, upon the death of Treitel the dates for his rabbinate are given as 1985 to 1922.
  17. A. Hoffmann, Schnittmengen und Scheidelinien: Juden und Christen in Oberschwaben, p. 12
  18. R. Emmerich, "Philo und die Synagoge - Dr. Leopold Treitel, der letzte Rabbiner von Laupheim", p. 19
  19. R. Emmerich, "Die Rabbiner-Familie Treitel", p. 526
  20. R. Emmerich, " Philo und die Synagoge - Dr. Leopold Treitel, der letzte Rabbiner von Laupheim ", p. 19
  21. S. Michael, Westerholz; . (24 July 2012). "Dr. Richard Treitel und seine ansehnliche Familie" (in German). hagalil.com. Retrieved 25 March 2013.
  22. P. Borgen, "Bread from Heaven", p. 59f.
  23. R. Emmerich, "Philo und die Synagoge - Dr. Leopold Treitel, der letzte Rabbiner von Laupheim", p. 15
  24. Maren R. Niehoff, "Alexandrian Judaism in the 19th Century Wissenschaft des Judentums", p. 25
  25. A. Völpel, Religion, German Jewish Children's and Youth Literature and Modernity, p. 119
  26. "Treitel". Beschreibung der Dokumentationsprojekte - Baden-Württemberg (in German). University of Heidelberg. Retrieved 25 March 2013.

Further reading

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.