I have always had an interest in Judah Magnes, the iconoclastic Zionist Reform rabbi who became the first president of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, but I had never read much about him. And then a brilliant new biography of him by David Barak-Gorodetsky, a young Israeli scholar at the University of Haifa, as well as a visiting professor at the University of Chicago and an Israeli Reform rabbi, came to my attention. In the course of reading it, I learned a great deal about this unique Jewish leader, who played important roles in both American Zionism and in pre-state Israel, whom I believe is underappreciated in Israeli society and in Jewish life in the Diaspora.

Trained as a Reform rabbi, Magnes was an American Zionist leader for a while. After moving to Israel, he became a university founder and leader – the first chancellor of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem when it opened in 1925 – following his aliyah in 1922.  According to the author of this book,

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