Löw Schwab

1815–1891

Löw Schwab was a controversial Hungarian rabbi, the first rabbi in Moravia to preach in German. He advocated both for moderate reforms of Jewish practice and of Austro-Hungarian law, with the dual goals of reviving of the Jewish faith and state emancipation. Schwab’s reformist desires were narrow: he stressed modernization while hoping that educated, increasingly assimilated Jews would stay within the fold. He worked tirelessly to close the radical Reform congregation in Budapest, succeeding in 1852.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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The Jews

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In the supplement of Sürgöny, a certain…