Joseph Carlebach
Joseph Hirsch Carlebach was a German Orthodox rabbi, natural scientist, and
scholar of the history of the Jews in Germany.
Early life and family
Carlebach was the eighth child of Esther Adler, daughter of the former rabbi of Lübeck, Rabbi Alexander Sussmann Adler, and Lübeck's then-Rabbi Salomon Carlebach.In 1919, Joseph Carlebach and his former pupil Charlotte Preuss married. They had nine children. One of them is rabbi Shlomo Carlebach.
Education and early career
Joseph Carlebach became a rabbi, as did several of his brothers, to wit David Carlebach, Emanuel Carlebach, Hartwig Naftali Carlebach, and Ephraim Carlebach. Initially, however, Joseph Carlebach completed extensive studies in natural sciences. From 1901 on he studied at Friedrich Wilhelm Universität in Berlin natural sciences, mathematics, astronomy, philosophy and history of art. The quantum physicist Max Planck and the philosopher Wilhelm Dilthey were among his teachers. In 1908 he graduated as high school teacher of natural sciences. In the same time Carlebach attended the orthodox Rabbinical Seminary in Berlin. In 1905 to 1907 Carlebach interrupted his studies in Germany and taught at the Lämel School in Jerusalem. There Carlebach made the acquaintance of a number of eminent rabbis.In 1909 Carlebach obtained degrees in mathematics, physics and Hebrew at Ruprecht Karl Universität in Heidelberg. There he also was awarded his doctorate on the mathematician Levi ben Gershon. Carlebach gained an academic reputation by books on Levi ben Gershon as well as on Albert Einstein's relativity theory in 1912. From 1910 to 1914 Carlebach enrolled in the rabbinical seminary under Rabbi David Zvi Hoffmann, receiving his semikhah in 1914.
World War I service
During World War I Carlebach served in the imperial German Army, at the beginning as telegraphist. In 1915 he was assigned as educator - after recommendation by his brother-in-law Leopold Rosenak, a German Army Field Rabbi active in promoting German culture among the Jews of Lithuania and Poland during the German occupation.Erich Ludendorff's intention was to evoke pro-German attitudes among Jews and other Poles and Lithuanians, in order to prepare the installation of a Polish and a Lithuanian state dependent on Germany. Part of the effort was the establishment of Jewish newspapers, of Jewish organisations and of modern educational institutions of Jewish alignment. Joseph Carlebach founded the partly German-language Jüdisches Realgymnasium גימנזיום עברי in Kaunas and directed it until 1919. The school was based on the German Torah im Derech Eretz model. The school provided both Jewish and secular studies both for men and women and was the model for the Yavneh network that Carlebach later founded in collaboration with Leo Deutschlander. In 1925, Yavneh was taken over by Joseph Leib Bloch, who relocated it to Telšiai and incorporated it into the Rabbinical College of Telshe, which managed to re-establish in 1942 in the USA.
From 1919 to 1921 he was rabbi of his native home town Lübeck. In 1921, Carlebach became headmaster of the Talmud Torah high school in Hamburg. Between 1925 and 1936 he served as chief rabbi of the Hochdeutsche Israeliten-Gemeinde zu Altona, after which he changed as chief rabbi to the Deutsch-Israelitische Gemeinde zu Hamburg, where he served until his deportation into death in 1941. Israeli jurist Haim Cohn described the effect Carlebach had on his students :
He spent a full day with the boys in the Cologne Cathedral, expertly explaining every detail of the statues, the glass windows, the ornaments, and the intricacies of the Catholic faith and ritual; but I was not allowed to participate, being a Cohen who may not be under the same roof with a corpse or with tombs, lest he become impure; and although, according to the letter of the Law, it is only the Jewish dead the contact with whom renders impure, and not the non-Jewish dead, still Carlebach held that the least possibility that among the dead buried in the cathedral may have been a person of Jewish origin, sufficed to make the place taboo to me.
Persecution and murder under the Nazi regime
After Nazi Germany banned Jewish students from attending German schools together with "Aryan" German children, Rabbi Carlebach set up a number of schools throughout Germany to educate Jewish children. His schools bore his name and were known as Carlebach-Schulen.He was deported to the Nazi concentration camp Jungfernhof by the Nazis, where he was murdered on March 23, 1943 during the mass shooting of approximately 1600 Jews, mostly older people and children, that became known as the Dünamünde Action. This occurred in the Biķerniecki forest, near Riga, Latvia, which was the site of numerous other shootings perpetrated by the Nazis and their Latvian collaborators, in particular, the Arajs Kommando.
His wife and younger children were also killed during the Holocaust. Of his surviving children, Rabbi Shlomo Carlebach became the mashgiach ruchani at the Yeshiva Rabbi Chaim Berlin in Brooklyn, New York City after the war. Joseph Carlebach's other son, Julius Carlebach, became a renowned academic and Jewish communal leader in the UK, and was the author of Karl Marx and the Radical Critique of Judaism, among other books, while his third daughter became Professor Miriam Gillis-Carlebach, who emigrated to Israel in October 1938. She taught Education and Hebrew reading at Bar Ilan University in Ramat Gan. In 1992, she became the head of the Joseph Carlebach Institute at Bar Ilan University and has dedicated herself to researching her father's writings as well as the writing of other Jewish leaders of the same time period.
Rabbi Joseph Carlebach's wife managed to send her elder children to England, and they survived the war.
Image:Carlebach-Platz.JPG|thumb|right|150px|Carlebach Square
Commemoration and legacy
On 18 August 1954 Jerusalem honoured Carlebach's work, among others at the local Lämel School, by naming a street after him, Rekhov Carlebach/Karlibakh, in the Talpiot neighbourhood.The memory of Joseph Carlebach is held in great honor by the City of Hamburg and its Jewish community. In 1990, part of the University Campus, the Bornplatz Synagogue, the former location of the Main Synagogue of Hamburg and Carlebach's last pulpit, was named as the "Joseph-Carlebach-Platz", 'Joseph Carlebach Square'. In honor of his 120th Birthday in 2003, the "Joseph-Carlebach-Preis" for Jewish studies was established, awarded every two years, by the State University of Hamburg.
Works
- Carlebach, Joseph. Die drei grossen Propheten Jesajas, Jirmija und Jecheskel; eine Studie. Pp. 133. Frankfurt am Main: Hermon-Verlag, 1932
- Carlebach, Joseph. Les trois grands prophetes, Isaie, Jeremie, Ezechiel. Traduit de l'allemand par Henri Schilli. Pp. 141. Paris: Editions A. Michel, 1959
- Carlebach, Joseph. Moderne paedagogische Bestrebungen und ihre Beziehungen zum Judentum. Pp. 19. Berlin, Hebraeischer Verlag "Menorah", 1925
- Carlebach, Joseph. Mikhtavim mi-Yerushalayim : Erets Yi'sra'el be-reshit ha-me'ah be-`ene moreh tsa`ir, ma'skil-dati mi-Germanyah.. Pp. 141, ill. Ramat Gan: Orah, mi-pirsume Mekhon Yosef Karlibakh; Yerushalayim: Ariel, c1996
- Carlebach, Joseph. Ausgewählte Schriften mit einem Vorwort von Haim H. Cohn; Miriam Gillis-Carlebach. 2 vols. Hildesheim; New York: G. Olms Verlag, 1982
- Carlebach, Joseph. Lewi ben Gerson als Mathematiker; ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Mathematik bei den Juden. Von Dr. phil. 238, . Berlin: L. Lamm, 1910
- Carlebach, Joseph. Das gesetzestreue Judentum. p. 53. Berlin: Schocken Verlag, 1936.
- Carlebach, Joseph. Jüdischer Alltag als humaner Widerstand: Dokumente des Hamburger Oberrabiners Dr. Joseph Carlebach aus den Jahren 1939-1942. Miriam Gillis-Carlebach. p. 118. Hamburg: Verlag Verein für Hamburgische Geschichte, 1990
- Gerhard Paul; Miriam Gillis-Carlebach. Menora und Hakenkreuz: zur Geschichte der Juden in und aus Schleswig-Holstein, Lübeck und Altona . p. 943. Neumünster: Wachholtz Verlag, 1998