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Solomon Goldman (August 18, 1893 – March 14, 1953) was an American Conservative rabbi. A noted orator, community leader and scholar, he was especially known for helping to popularize the cause of Zionism in the United States.[1]
As he completed his studies at Jewish Theological Seminary, Goldman served as the rabbi of B'nai Israel Congregation in Brooklyn, New York from 1917 until 1918. From 1919 until 1922, Goldman worked as the rabbi of B'nai Jeshurun Congregation in Cleveland, Ohio (a synagogue which Goldman is credited for "making [...] Conservative"),[3] before switching to the Jewish Center, also of Cleveland, where he stayed until 1929.
As of 1941, Goldman—writing to Rabbi Morris A. Skop—indicated that the community regularly permitted the playing of music on an organ during Simchat Torah and Confirmation services, and, in later years, Goldman permitted the organ to be played on all Shabbat and Yom Tov services. Goldman's further Jewish legal liberalism may be evident in his recalling in 1943 to Rabbi David Goldstein of Omaha, Nebraska that "Jewish services... are not characterized by a proper devotional mood... largely due to their length" and, in consonance with an approach inspired by Jacob Mann, incorporated a triennial cycle in Anshe Emet. Indeed, in writing to Rabbi Albert I. Gordon of Minneapolis, Minnesota, Goldman referenced (again in 1943) that Anshe Emet was accustomed to reading 7 aliyyot of 3 verses each, in addition to an abbreviated haftarah, on a regular Shabbat.
Goldman is also recalled as being "the first Conservative rabbi [to] call women up to recite Torah blessings" for aliyyot.[4] At Goldman's funeral, Israel H. Levinthal of Brooklyn, NY eulogized.[5]
A scholar—and a patron of scholarship and the written word, having for some time given over $8000 annually to Jewish scholars and authors[4]—Goldman, a recipient of the Phi Beta Delta Award in 1938 and a Ginzberg Citation in 1943, served as a joint editor of the Brooklyn Jewish Forum in 1909 and 1910 and as an associate editor of the Journal of Religious Education.[citation needed] Goldman habitually invited Hebrew and Yiddish poets to speak on Friday evenings at Anshe Emet in Chicago to help his community gain familiarity with these artists.[4]
Goldman wrote letters in Hebrew, Yiddish, German and English.[4] Goldman's many recorded correspondences—preserved in the American Jewish Archives, with thanks to his daughter Naomi's contributing of the collection in 1984—include Rabbi David Aronson and other Jewish leaders.[6]
Meyer Weisgal (who would later become the private secretary of Chaim Weizmann) commissioned Goldman to be, alongside Maurice Samuel (and possibly other writers), an author of the script of the pageant The Romance of a People, which debuted on Jewish Day—July 3, 1933 in Chicago—celebrated in tandem with "A Century of Progress," celebrating a century of the city of Chicago.[7]