Become a Member
Opinion

Miri Freud-Kandel on the Chief Rabbinate of Lord Jonathan Sacks

March 10, 2011 09:26
5 min read

Meir Persoff, Another Way, Another Time: Religious Inclusivism and the Sacks Chief Rabbinate (Academic Studies Press, Boston, 2010).

Reviewed by MIRI FREUD-KANDEL, lecturer in Modern Judaism at the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies at the University of Oxford.

[Review published by Scholars for Peace in the Middle East, 2 March, 2011. © 2011 Scholars For Peace in the Middle East. All rights reserved.]

AT THE END of 2010, it was officially announced at a United Synagogue Council meeting that Jonathan Sacks would be retiring from the office of chief rabbi in September 2013. In the weeks that followed, this spurred a multitude of newspaper articles considering the nature of his Chief Rabbinate and assessing likely candidates who could replace him in the post. The future of the office itself was also subjected to some scrutiny. This discussion has spanned both the national and the Jewish press in Britain and filtered through to international publications as well. It seems the Chief Rabbinate, a somewhat strange and contrived post in Anglo-Jewish history whose formal authority is in fact rather limited, manages to attract broad attention.