ISRAELITISCH-THEOLOGISCHE LEHRANSTALT
- ISRAELITISCH-THEOLOGISCHE LEHRANSTALT
- ISRAELITISCH-THEOLOGISCHE LEHRANSTALT, leading Jewish
theological seminary in Vienna. The Israelitisch-Theologische
Lehranstalt, founded in 1893, served first the Austro-Hungarian Empire
and later its successor states. Although efforts to establish a training
school for rabbis and teachers of the Jewish religion can be traced to
the days of Emperor Joseph II (1786), the impetus to a
regular theological seminary did not come until the Viennese community
had become one of the largest in Europe, 120,000 in 1880. Then a
dramatic controversy over the Talmud between an anti-Jewish Prague
professor, August rohling , and a staunch defender of Jewish
rights, Joseph Samuel bloch , demonstrated to Jewish
philanthropists in Vienna the importance of Jewish cultural efforts
against the rising tide of antisemitism. Led by Wilhelm von
gutmann , several financiers, aided by a few major Jewish
communities and a small government subsidy, helped establish the
Lehranstalt. Among the benefactors were also such distinguished Jewish
scholars as Adolf jellinek , Joshua Heschel schorr , and
abraham epstein .
From the outset the school could boast of a remarkable array of
scholarly luminaries on its faculty and a select, if small, student
body. Under the leadership of its long-term rector adolf schwarz ,
its teachers, including david heinrich mueller ,
adolf buechler , meir friedmann (Ish Shalom),
samuel krauss , and victor aptowitzer , trained a total of
324 students, for the most part recruited from Galicia and other parts
of the empire. World War I and the dissolution of the
empire caused a major financial crisis, which was only partially
alleviated by the efforts of the Viennese chief rabbi Hirsch Perez
chajes , who succeeded in enlisting the aid of
U.S. philanthropists. The seminary survived
under somewhat reduced circumstances until the annexation of Vienna by
Hitler in 1938 and the ensuing destruction of all Jewish cultural
institutions. Its precious library was confiscated and the collections
are now widely scattered. Its alumni, however, continued to serve in
high positions in the rabbinate and schools of higher learning in Europe
and the U.S. as well as in Israel.
-ADD. BIBLIOGRAPHY:
P. Landesmann, Rabbiner aus Wien (1997).
(Salo W. Baron)
Encyclopedia Judaica.
1971.
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