|
Jonathan Sacks has been Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew
Congregations of the Commonwealth since September 1991, the sixth incumbent
since the role was formalized 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 14 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 in
partnership with the United Synagogue. 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.
The Chief Rabbi has received a number of prizes, including
the Jerusalem Prize 1995 for his contribution to diaspora Jewish life and The
Ladislaus Laszt Ecumenical and Social Concern Award from Ben Gurion University in
Israel in 2011. He was knighted by Her Majesty The Queen in 2005 and made a
Life Peer, taking 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 the
BBC.
He has written 24 books, his most recent being The Great Partnership: God, Science and the
Search for Meaning which was published in July 2011. A number of his books have
won literary awards, including the Grawemeyer Prize for Religion in 2004 for The Dignity of Difference, and a
National Jewish Book Award in 2000 for A
Letter in the Scroll. Covenant &
Conversation Volume 1 also won a National Jewish Book Award in 2009.
Born in 1948 in London, he has been married to Elaine since
1970. They have three children, Joshua, Dina and Gila and five grandchildren.
To download a CV, please click on the link below.
|