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Alan Kimche

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Rabbi Dr.
Alan Kimche
רב אברהם בן ישראל קמחי
Rabbi Alan Kimche
TitleRabbi
Personal life
Born
Alan Abraham Kimche

February 10, 1952
Melbourne, Australia
NationalityBritish-Israeli
SpouseVia Kimche
Parent(s)James and Sybil Kimche
Alma materUniversity College London, Birkbeck, University of London
OccupationRabbi, teacher, writer, lecturer
Religious life
ReligionJudaism
Jewish leader
SuccessorEliezer Zobin

Alan Abraham Kimche (Hebrew: רב אברהם בן ישראל קמחי) is a British-Israeli Orthodox rabbi and community leader. He was the rabbi of the Ner Yisrael Synagogue in Hendon, London, until his retirement in 2019.[1] He currently works as a teacher, writer, and lecturer in Israel.[2]

Early life and education

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Kimche was born in Melbourne, Australia, on 10 February 1952. His parents, James and Sybil Kimche, were both Orthodox Jews who had fled Europe due to Nazi persecution immediately prior to World War Two. At the age of five, his parents resettled the family in Stamford Hill, London. Kimche grew up attending Avigdor Primary School and Hasmonean High School, and was a congregant in the synagogue of Rabbi Josef Hirsch Dunner.

Kimche left school at the age of sixteen to study at Orthodox Yeshivot in Israel. He first studied at the Kol Torah Yeshivah in Bayit Vegan, Jerusalem, under the tutelage of Rabbi Shlomo Zalman Auerbach. Kimche grew close to him, and served as his personal driver for a short period. Three years later, Kimche moved to the Mir Yeshiva in Meah She'arim, where he attended the class of Rabbi Chaim Shmuelevitz and eventually gained rabbinic ordination from two prominent rabbinic authorities: Rabbi Yaakov Fink and Rabbi Yehoshua Neuwirth.[1]

In 1975 Kimche enrolled in University College London to study philosophy. After a meeting with Isaiah Berlin, he was granted support from the Wolfson Foundation to pursue his undergraduate studies, which he completed in 1978.[citation needed]

Throughout the earlier half of his rabbinic career, Kimche worked intermittently on his doctoral thesis at Birkbeck, University of London, under the direction of David-Hillel Ruben. He submitted his thesis in February 2006, which was titled 'The concept of human dignity (Kevod Haberiyot) in Jewish law'.[3] He has since published on this topic in essay form.[4]

Kimche also contributed articles to the Orthodox Journal Le'ela, including two essays on the thought of the Maharal of Prague.[5][6] He also contributed some letters to the editor in the Jewish Chronicle.

Personal life

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During his time at university, on a trip through Amsterdam, Kimche met Via Evers, the daughter of Hans Evers and Bloeme Evers-Emden. The two were married in Jerusalem in 1976. The couple have seven children.[citation needed] During their thirty-five year tenure in the rabbinate, Via Kimche worked alongside her husband as the Rebbitzen and spiritual leader of the Ner Yisrael community, in addition to her roles as a high school teacher, counsellor, and birth coach.[7]

Ner Yisrael Community

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In 1983, Kimche and his family moved from Jerusalem back to London. He began his fledgling rabbinic career by directing a series of adult educational initiatives called Da'at,[8] which involved giving classes to Jewish employees of corporations located in London's financial district. Within a year, Kimche was approached to become the founding rabbi of a small new synagogue in Hendon called Ner Yisrael. It swiftly grew to from ten families to over a hundred, and within two years outgrew its location in the LSJS building on Albert Road, and moved to its current premises on The Crest, Hendon.[9] Ner Yisrael grew further, and soon became the flagship Modern-Orthodox Synagogue in the United Kingdom, with a strong emphasis on Religious-Zionism, cultural engagement, and universal learning.[10] It currently counts approximately 400 families among its members.

Kimche gave a wide array of classes in his own synagogue and beyond on topics in Jewish philosophy, Halacha, Jewish history, Talmud, and the Bible.[11] His grand sermons, delivered on two Sabbaths every year (Shabbat HaGadol and Shabbat Shuva) routinely attracted hundreds of attendees.[citation needed]

North West London Eruv

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In 1987, responding to the requests of his congregants, Kimche formed a committee to construct an Eruv for the North-West London Jewish community.[12] The purpose of the Eruv was to allow observant Jews to carry within its boundaries on the Sabbath, and to allow those with limited personal mobility – such as families with young children, the elderly, and the handicapped – to enjoy unfettered mobility on the Sabbath. After encountering stiff opposition from some elements within London's Ultra-Orthodox community, Kimche and the Eruv Committee enlisted the support of Dayan Chanoch Ehrentreu and the London Beth Din, under whose auspices the Eruv currently operates.[13]

Over the following fifteen years, the Eruv Committee, under Kimche's leadership, succeeded in constructing the Eruv despite intense opposition from elements both within and without the Jewish community.[14] In 1991 the committee applied for planning permission from Barnet Council,[15] engendering fierce debates on the subject which dragged on for several years. On February 24, 1993, Barnet Council's Town Planning and Research Committee rejected the proposal by a vote of 11–7, a decision that was eventually overturned by a representative of the Secretary of State for the Environment, whose report recommended the granting of permission to the Eruv Committee.[16] However, due to a variety of technicalities, the installation of the Eruv was postponed numerous times.

On February 28, 2003, the London Beth-Din leased the six-mile tract of land from the London Metropolitan Police for one pound and proceeded to officially complete the construction of the Eruv, thereby bringing the fifteen year saga to its end.[17] The following day, on the first Sabbath in which the Eruv was in use, Ner Yisrael synagogue hosted a large celebration, during which there was a spontaneous outbreak of singing and dancing.

In the two decades since, several other Eruvs have been constructed both in London and throughout the United Kingdom,[18] most of which were granted comparatively swift and unobstructed approval.

Later career and retirement

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Kimche served as the principal of the Independent Jewish Day School in Hendon throughout his tenure in London. He also served on the board of directors of the UK branch of the Jewish National Fund from 2014 to 2020, and on the board of directors of Bayis Sheli, a residential home for disabled children, from 2013 to 2018.[19]

In November 2013, Kimche penned a widely circulated letter that denounced the annual conference Limmud as an 'aberration',[20] and stated that the topics and ideas discussed in the conference '[are] not Judaism'. Kimche argued that religious Jews should not attend a conference in which orthodox and non-orthodox views were given an equal platform. This caused a minor furore in the London community and beyond, with several prominent figures, such as Rabbis Samuel Lebens, Nathan Lopes Cardozo, Michael Harris, and Binyamin Lau all writing rebuttals to Kimche's views.[20] Other public figures, such as Rabbi Zvi Lieberman and the journalist Jonathan Rosenblum, wrote in support of Kimche's letter.[21] Three years later, Kimche wrote another letter strongly discouraging his congregants from participating in a partnership minyan. He stated that while those who participate in such gatherings generally do so for the right reasons, such a minyan is "sadly... not a Kosher experience" as it is "in violation of the spirit of the law".[22]

In 2016, Kimche publicly denounced the controversial preacher Yosef Mizrachi, whose views on topics such as the Holocaust and Down Syndrome had sparked anger during his visit to London. Kimche went on record calling his brand of Judaism "popularised Kabbalah which appeals to gullible people."[23]

In 2016, Kimche was named in the press as a possible candidate to succeed Jonathan Sacks as the Chief Rabbi of the United Kingdom.[24] While Kimche himself confirmed that he was being considered as a candidate by the Chief Rabbinate Trust, the position was eventually filled by Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis.

In April 2019, at the age of 66, Kimche retired from his role at Ner Yisrael Synagogue, and moved to Israel with his wife. Kimche's associate rabbi, Eliezer Zobin, was appointed as his successor.[11]

Upon his retirement, Kimche was honoured with a personal Sefer Torah donated by his synagogue. He was also honoured with a Festschrift, which included essays from prominent colleagues such as Rabbis Raphael Evers, Chanoch Ehrentreu, Mosheh Lichtenstein, and Shlomo Riskin.[25]

After two years in Jerusalem, Kimche and his wife moved to Efrat in 2021.[citation needed]

As of March 2023, Rabbi Kimche has been appointed interim Rabbi of Mizrachi Hebrew Congregation in Melbourne Australia, a position that he intends to fill for two years.[26]


References

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  1. ^ a b "Our Professional Team". Ner Yisrael Synagogue Website.
  2. ^ "Rabbi Dr. Alan Kimche". World Mizrachi.
  3. ^ "Rabbi Dr. Alan Kimche". RabbiKimche.com.
  4. ^ Kimche A (2014). Pollack, Michael, Simons, Shmuel (eds.). "A Talmudic Discourse in 'Kevod Habriyot'", in: Morasha Kehillat Yaakov; Essays in Honour of Chief Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks. Maggid Books.
  5. ^ Kimche, Alan. "The Maharal of Prague on Combining Torah learning with Secular Study". Le'ela. 14 (1999): 15–20.
  6. ^ Kimche, Alan. "Spiritual Growth in an Imperfect World: Advice from the Maharal of Prague". Le'ela. 38 (1994): 29–32.
  7. ^ "Rebbitzen Via Kimche". JLE Website.
  8. ^ "Rabbi Dr. Alan A Kimche". Jewish Community and Records UK.
  9. ^ "Ner Yisrael Community". Jewish Communities and Records UK.
  10. ^ Rocker, Simon (November 24, 2016). "Long-serving Rabbi to Quit NW London Community for New Life in Israel". Jewish Chronicle.
  11. ^ a b "Our Professional Team". Ner Yisrael.
  12. ^ Jennifer Ann, Cousineau (2006). Making the Northwest London Eruv, 1988–2003: The Construction, Representation and Experience of a Sabbath Space. (Doctoral Dissertation) University of California, Berkeley. p. 28.
  13. ^ Cousineau, Making, p. 29
  14. ^ Darnton, John (February 22, 1993). "In London, a Jewish Ritual Fence Is Becoming a Thorn Bush". The New York Times.
  15. ^ The civil authority under which most of the Eruv would be constructed.
  16. ^ Report by Inspector David Bushby to Secretary of State John Gummer MP, 30 November 1993. File No(s). App/N5090/A/93/224571 and App/N5090/A/93/229477.
  17. ^ Cousineau, Making, p. 1
  18. ^ "Home Page". KLBD Eruv.
  19. ^ "Alan Abraham Kimche". Gov.uk.
  20. ^ a b "Post about Rabbi Kimche's Letter". Modern/Open Orthodoxy (Facebook Group).
  21. ^ JC, The (November 25, 2016). "'A Mitzvah to go to Limmud'". The Jewish Chronicle.
  22. ^ JC, The (November 25, 2016). "Chief Rabbi Candidate Attacks 'Chic but not Kosher' Partnership Minyans". The Jewish Chronicle.
  23. ^ JC, The (November 25, 2016). "'Jews Brought Holocaust on Themselves' Rabbi Visits UK". The Jewish Chronicle.
  24. ^ JC, The (November 24, 2016). "Could Kimche be Chief Rabbi to Replace Lord Sacks?". The Jewish Chronicle.
  25. ^ Ner L'Ehad, Ner L'Meah: Essays in Honour of Rabbi Alan Kimche. Ner Yisrael. 2019.
  26. ^ "Rabbi Dr. Alan Kimche – World Mizrachi". World Mizrachi. February 6, 2023.