|
Chief Rabbi Lord Sacks
Jonathan Sacks has been Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth since September 1991, the sixth incumbent since the role was formalised in 1845.
Prior to taking up his current post, Rabbi Sacks was Principal of Jews' College, as well as rabbi of the Golders Green and Marble Arch synagogues.
Educated at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, where he obtained first class honours in Philosophy, Jonathan Sacks pursued postgraduate studies at New College, Oxford, and King’s College London, gaining his PH. D in 1981 and rabbinic ordination from Jews' College and Yeshiva Etz Chaim. The Chief Rabbi has been a visiting professor at several universities in Britain, the United States and Israel, and is currently Visiting Professor of Theology at Kings’ College London. He holds many honorary degrees, including a Doctor of Divinity conferred to mark his first ten years in office, by the Archbishop of Canterbury.
At the time of his installation, the Chief Rabbi launched a ‘Decade of Jewish Renewal’. This led to a series of innovative communal projects including Jewish Continuity, a national foundation for Jewish educational programmes and outreach; the Association of Jewish Business Ethics; the Chief Rabbinate Awards for Excellence; the Chief Rabbinate Bursaries, and Community Development, a national scheme to enhance Jewish community life. The Chief Rabbi began his second decade of office with a call to ‘Jewish Responsibility’ and a renewed commitment to the ethical dimension of Judaism.
?xml:namespace>
The Chief Rabbi received the Jerusalem Prize 1995 for his contribution to diaspora Jewish life, and was knighted by Her Majesty The Queen in 2005. He was made a Life Peer and took his seat in the House of Lords on 27th October 2009, where he sits on the cross benches as Baron Sacks of Aldgate in the City of London.
The Chief Rabbi is a frequent contributor to radio, television and the national press. He regularly delivers BBC RADIO 4’s Thought for the Day, writes a monthly CREDO column for THE TIMES and broadcasts an annual Rosh Hashanah message on BBC 2. In 1990 he was invited by the BBC Board of Governors to deliver the annual Reith Lectures which were then published as The Persistence of Faith. The Dignity of Difference was awarded the 2004 Grawemeyer Prize for Religion, and A Letter in the Scroll a National Jewish Book Award 2000.
Born in 1948 in London, he has been married to Elaine since 1970. They have three children, Joshua, Dina and Gila and four grandchildren.
Many of his books have been translated into French, Italian, Dutch, German, Portuguese, Korean and Hebrew. Those of his titles currently in print in English, include:
Community of Faith
Peter Halban London 1995
One People: Tradition, Modernity and Jewish Unity
The Littman Library
London 1993
The Persistence of Faith
Continuum London 2005
The Politics of Hope
Vintage London 2000
‘Morals and Markets (Occasional Paper 108)’
Institute of Economic Affairs
London 1998
Celebrating Life
Continuum London 2006
Radical Then, Radical Now
Continuum
London
published in the
USA as:
A Letter In the Scroll
The Free Press New York 2000
The Dignity of Difference
Continuum
London
New York Toronto 2003
Rabbi Jonathan Sacks’s Haggadah
Continuum New York 2007
From Optimism to Hope
Continuum London 2004
To Heal A Fractured World
Continuum London 2006
Schocken New York 2007
The Home We Build Together
Continuum
London
New York Toronto 2009
The Authorised Daily Prayer Book
HarperCollins London 2006
The Koren (Sacks) Siddur
Koren Publishers Jerusalem 2009
Future Tense
Hodder London 2009
Schocken New York 2010
Covenant and Conversation: Genesis
Koren Publishers Jerusalem 2009
Covenant and Conversation: Exodus
Koren Publishers Jerusalem forthcoming
?xml:namespace> ?xml:namespace> ?xml:namespace> |