Arthur Löwenstamm (also spelt Loewenstamm) (20 December 1882– 22 April 1965) was a Jewishtheologian, writer and rabbi in Berlin and in London, where he came in 1939 as a refugee from Nazi Germany.
He was the last rabbi of the Jewish community of Spandau, Germany, which comprised 600 members in 1933.[1]
Early life and education
Arthur Löwenstamm was born on 20 December 1882 in Ratibor, Upper Silesia,[2]German Empire, which is now Racibórz in southern Poland. His parents were Natan Löwenstamm (1856–1937), a shopkeeper, and his wife Johanna Zweig (1851–1936).[3] He was the eldest in the family and had a brother, Kurt (1883–1965, whose son Heinz A. Lowenstam became a noted paleoecologist and great-granddaughter Lisa Goldstein also became a rabbi), a sister, Gertrud, and another brother, Ernest (1887–1888).
After passing his rabbinical examinations in 1910,[3] Löwenstamm served as rabbi (from 1911 to 1917) with the Jewish community in Pless (now Pszczyna) in Upper Silesia.[3] On 6 December 1916 he was appointed as Spandau Synagogue's first permanent rabbi. Löwenstamm took up his duties on 1 April 1917 and continued until the autumn of 1938. In this role he also gave religious instruction at Spandau's Kant-Gymnasium. He was a member of the Union of Liberal Rabbis in Germany.
After the Second World War, Löwenstamm gave private lessons to several students, including Jakob Josef Petuchowski[11] and Hugo Gryn.[12] From May 1945, he was Research Director at the Society for Jewish Studies[2] and a member of the Association of Rabbis from Germany to London.
Personal life
In Breslau in 1911, he married Gertrud Modlinger (born 14 February 1887 in Gleiwitz; died 3 January 1952 in Richmond, Surrey),[2][3] the daughter of Markus Modlinger and his wife Recha (née Freund). They had two daughters, Erika who moved to London in 1936 and Gerda who emigrated to Britain in 1938.[3][10] Their grandchildren and great-grandchildren live in the United Kingdom and in Israel.
At the initiative of the Spandau Borough Council, a memorial tablet was unveiled in 1988 on the site of the former synagogue.[14][better source needed] A memorial plaque was placed on the pavement in front of Löwenstamm's former home at Feldstraße 11, in Spandau, on 9 November 2005.[15]
On 15 August 2002 a street in Spandau was named Löwenstammstraße ("Löwenstamm Street").[16]
"Hugo Grotius' Stellung zum Judentum (Hugo Grotius's attitude toward Judaism)" in Festschrift zum 75-jährigen Bestehen des jüdisch-theologischen Seminars Fraenkelscher Stiftung, Vol. II. Breslau: Verlag M. & H. Marcus, 1929; pp. 295–302. ASINB005HKEZA4
"Jüdischer Lebinsstil", Gemeindeblatt für die jüdischen Gemeinden Preussens: Verwaltungsblatt der Preussischen Landesverbandes jüdischer Gemeinden, 1 November 1934 (cited on p. 229 in Rebecca Rovit: The Jewish Kulturbund Theatre Company in Nazi Berlin). Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 2012. ISBN978-1-60938-124-0
"The Society for Jewish Studies" in Festschrift zum 80. Geburtstag von Rabbiner Dr. Leo Baeck am 23. Mai 1953, London: Council for the Protection of the Rights and Interests of the Jews from Germany, 1953; pp. 98–106.[17]
He also co-wrote a history commemorating 50 years of B'nai B'rith in Germany:[18]
Alfred Goldschmidt, Arthur Löwenstamm and Paul Rosenfeld: Zum 50 jährigen bestehen des Ordens Bne Briss in Deutschland: UOBB. Frankfurt am Main: Kauffmann, 1933, 203 pages. OCLC2976130
Further reading
Ernst Gottfried Lowenthal (1982). Juden in Preussen. Ein biographisches Verzeichnis (Jews in Prussia. A biographical directory). Berlin: Dietrich Riemer Verlag. p. 143. ISBN3-496-01012-6.
Carsten Wilke; Katrin Nele Jansen (2009). Die Rabbiner im Deutschen Reich 1871–1945 (The rabbis of the German Reich 1871–1945). Munich: K. G. Saur Verlag. ISBN978-3-598-24874-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Alois Kaulen; Joachim Pohl (1988). Juden in Spandau vom Mittelalter bis 1945 [Jews in Spandau from the Middle Ages until 1945]. Edition Hentrich Berlin. pp. 108–109. ISBN978-3926175595.
^Alois Kaulen; Joachim Pohl (1988). Juden in Spandau vom Mittelalter bis 1945 [Jews in Spandau from the Middle Ages until 1945]. Edition Hentrich Berlin. p. 167. ISBN978-3926175595.
^Hans Herman Henrix, "Jakob J Petuchowski (1925–1991): Rabbi, Scholar, Ecumenist" in: Albert Gerhards and Clemens Leonhard (editors), Jewish and Christian Liturgy and Worship: New Insights Into Its History and Interaction (2007), p. 8, Brill, Leiden; Boston, ISBN978-90-04-16201-3