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  1. David Einhorn (November 10, 1809 – November 2, 1879) was a German rabbi and leader of Reform Judaism in the United States. In 1855, he became the first rabbi of the Har Sinai Congregation in Baltimore, the oldest Jewish-American congregation affiliated with the Reform movement since its inception.

  2. David Einhorn was born in Bavaria in 1809. He studied rabbinics and philosophy. He was one of the early Reformers and was greatly influenced by both Abraham Geiger and Samuel Holdheim. In 1842, he supported Geiger and publicly stated that there the Talmud had no divine authority.

  3. German rabbi, preacher, and theological writer; leader of the Reform movement in America; born at Dispeck, Bavaria, Nov. 10, 1809; died in New York Nov. 2, 1879. A disciple of R. Wolf Hamburger and R. Joshua Moses Falkenau in Fürth, he received the Morenu title in his seventeenth year, and pursued his philosophical studies in Würzburg and Munich.

  4. Nov 30, 2016 · He was targeted by a mob, rioters destroyed his printing press, and his life was threatened. He fled to the North and never returned to Baltimore. Rabbi Einhorn spoke out against racial and ethnic discrimination for the rest of his career in New York and Philadelphia. Meet other inspiring heroes!

  5. 1861-1866 Senior Rabbi at Keneseth Israel. David Einhorn born in Diespeck, Germany, November 10, 1809 became one of the most prestigious Rabbis of his time. At the age of 17, he earned his Rabbinic ordination from the Rabbinic school of Fürth in Bavaria, Germany; which the center of Jewish learning at the time.

  6. R abbi David Einhorn, a prot g of Rabbi Abraham Geiger, served in several German communi - ties before emigrating to the United States in 1855 to take up the pulpit of Congregation Har Sinai of Balti-more, Mayland. He immediately became the most outspoken oppo-nent of slavery in the American rab-binical community. Not only did he

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  8. David Einhorn [1] (īn´hôrn), 1809–79, Jewish theological writer and leader of the Reform movement in Judaism in the United States [2]. Born in Bavaria, he studied philosophy at Munich and was influenced by the ideas of Friedrich Schelling.

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