Chaim Rapoport

Rabbi Rapoport speaking

Rabbi Chaim Rapoport (b. Manchester, England, 1963)[1] is an author, educator, lecturer and expert Judaic scholar. He lectures extensively in London and around the world on a broad range of topics pertaining to Jewish life and law and is the author of several scholarly books and articles.

Early life and education

Rapoport was born and raised in Manchester, England. After his schooling, Rapoport attended the Yeshivot of Manchester, Gateshead, Torat Emet in Jerusalem and the central Lubavitch Yeshivah in New York. After receiving his Rabbinic diplomas (semichah) and his marriage to Rachel Clara (née Elyovics) from Antwerp, Belgium, in 1984 he continued his studies in the United States.

In 1987 Rapoport and his wife joined the community Kollel in Melbourne, Australia, where, in addition to his post graduate studies, he officiated and lectured in several communities, including the far flung Launceston in Tasmania.

Career

In 1989, Rapoport took up position as head of the Lubavitch Kollel in Leeds UK, a position which he occupied until the end of 1994. In the years 1994 – 1997 Rapoport served as the Rabbi of the Birmingham Central Synagogue and the Head of the Birmingham Rabbinic Board.

In September 1997 Rapoport was appointed as Rabbi to the Ilford Synagogue, Beehive Lane. In February 2005, Rapoport and the synagogue's full-time Chazan Avrom Levin were dismissed, amid controversy about the United Synagogue withdrawing funding from its smaller Jewish communities. In a statement made by the United Synagogue, they explained that the reason behind the decision was "the dire financial position of the community".[2][3][4]

In 1998 Rapoport was appointed as a member of the Chief Rabbi's Cabinet and Advisor to the Chief Rabbi, Jonathan Sacks, on matters of Jewish Medical Ethics and served in this position until the retirement of Rabbi Sacks in 2013. In this capacity, he served as the Chief Rabbi's spokesperson to the media and as an intermediary between himself and the British medical establishment and several other prominent organisations. During this period Rapoport gave a regular lecture to the United Synagogue Rabbinate at the London School of Jewish Studies.

In 2005 Rapoport established 'Machon Mayim Chaim', an institution through which he promotes Jewish learning and disseminates his own teachings and perspectives on a broad range of subjects across the gamut of Jewish studies ranging from in-depth lectures and shiurim on the Talmud and Jewish Law, Chassidic thought and practice to addressing many contemporary, topical and controversial issues that are pertinent to the Jewish community in Israel and the diaspora. He has lectured in France, Holland, Belgium, Austria, Denmark, Switzerland, the USA, Canada, South America, Israel and Australia. Since the establishment of Machon Mayim Chaim, Rapoport has served as a ‘scholar in residence’ in a number of North West London Jewish Synagogues, including the Bridge Lane Beth Hamedrash and the Ner Yisrael Community where he currently lectures four times a week.

In 2012 the Jewish Chronicle reported that Rapoport visits Yeshivat Chovevei Torah, an Open Orthodox Yeshiva for a week every year to give classes there.[5]

Rapoport was a 2015 presenter at Limmud New York, where he spoke on a Friday night on the topic of: 'Halacha: Science or Art?'[6]

Writings on homosexuality

Rapoport is widely recognised as the only serious Torah scholar to have written comprehensively about homosexuality from an Orthodox perspective. His book, Judaism and Homosexuality: An Authentic Orthodox View (Vallentine Mitchell, 2004), was prefaced by Dayan Berel Berkowitz, a senior Judge of the Beth Din of the Federation of Synagogues, where he describes it as "the first meaningful attempt to articulate a strictly orthodox perspective on the question of Homosexuality...which is clear and uncompromising as to halachic values and norms, yet at the same time compassionate and sensitive to those who find themselves in a religious predicament because of their sexual proclivities." The book's forward was written by the then Chief Rabbi, Jonathan Sacks who described Rapoport as "a courageous figure who has written on a difficult subject that many would rather avoid" and a Rabbi who is "blessed with grace, loving kindness and compassion." The work stakes out a position on Homosexuality and Judaism designed "to mitigate the painful consequences of Orthodoxy's uncompromising rejection of homosexuality.",[7] exploring the intersection between halakhah and homosexuality.[8]

An article by Rapoport in which he further elaborated his views on this topic, was published by Hakira- The Flatbush Journal of Jewish Law & Thought, in 2012.[9]

Controversies

In 2013, Rapoport gave a positive character reference for building businessman Menachem Mendel Levy during Levy's trial for sex offences that culminated in the latter's 2013 conviction and jailing on two counts of indecently assaulting a young girl. Specifically, he called him the “embodiment of repentance”. Regarding Rapoport's comments to the court, she said: “I was mortified. I was embarrassed to be Jewish. It was the last straw for me.”[10]

In 2007 Rapoport wrote an open letter to the Yated Ne'eman newspaper calling on the editor to condemn Yeshiva University as a heretical institution just as it had Yeshivat Chovevei Torah - an Open Orthodox Yesivah where he was a visiting lecturer.[11]

Works

References

  1. http://www.yctorah.org/index2.php?option=com_content&do_pdf=1&id=165, Retrieved 1 June 2007
  2. Rocker, Simon (29 October 2004). "Outrage Over Axing Of Ilford US Ministers". Jewish Chronicle (7071). p. 1.
  3. Toffel, Seymour (28 October 2004). "Shock and uncertainty follows "redundancy" of Ilford Rov and Chazan". Jewish Tribune (1751).
  4. Cohen, Justin (29 October 2004). "Ilford Rocked: Rabbi and chazan facing redundancy.". The Jewish News (350).
  5. http://www.thejc.com/judaism/judaism-features/62939/why-a-bronx-yeshivah-a-beacon-brits
  6. https://limmudny2015.sched.org/speaker/chaimrapoport
  7. Malino, Jonathan W. and Malino, Tamar S., "Judaism, Feminism and Homosexuality," in Moshe Halbertal, and Donniel Hartman, Judaism and the Challenges of Modern Life (Continuum 2007) p.86
  8. Jordan, Mark D., Authorizing Marriage?: Canon, Tradition, and Critique in the Blessing of Same-Sex Unions (Princeton University Press: 2006), p. 186 note 1
  9. Rapoport, Chaim (2012). "Judaism & Homosexuality: An Alternate Rabbinic View" (PDF). Hakirah.
  10. Sheinman, Anna (18 July 2013). "She told the police she was abused. Her friends made her pay the price". London: The Jewish Chronicle.
  11. "Tradition Seforim Blog". seforim1.rssing.com. Retrieved 2016-03-20.

External links

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