Jules Harlow

Jules Harlow (born June 28, 1931) is a rabbi and liturgist; son of Henry and Lena Lipman Harlow. He was born in Sioux City, Iowa. In 1952 at Morningside College in Sioux City he earned a B.A., and from there went to New York City to study in the Jewish Theological Seminary of America; here he became ordained as a rabbi in 1959. He then became a member of the Rabbinical Assembly, the organized body of rabbis in Conservative Judaism. He soon began work as a liturgist on the RA's prayerbook committee, working with Rabbi Gershon Hadas on new siddurim (Jewish prayerbooks) for use in Conservative congregations. Under the editorship of Rabbi Hadas, they succeeded in printing the widely used Weekday Prayer Book in 1961. He took a greater role in working on the movement's mahzor (prayerbook for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kipur) which was published in 1972. He soon became the chief liturgist for the Conservative movement, and was the editor in the groundbreaking Siddur Sim Shalom in 1985. See also: Conservative Judaism Harlow, Jules Harlow, Jules

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
fetch
declaration of the independence of new zealand
camera raw
peter robinson (speechwriter)
airail service
aerobic exercise
xo sauce
list of supermarket chains in germany
jack the giant killer
sora
pulau tekong
rainer rupp
arthurlie f.c.
the goal
neilston f.c.
pollok f.c.
troon f.c.
streetwise
shrew opossum
maxwell's theorem
buachaille etive mor
mauser
payload fraction
kollywood
gina lynn
phosphorescence
whistler, british columbia
nonlinear dimensionality reduction
empty function
universidad tcnica federico santa mara
trivial ring
andrej amalrik
bylaugh park
polish september campaign
waits
ntl:hell
colin fox
albany, western australia
blue tailed day gecko
english rugby union teams
christian marclay
mass fraction
bobby jordan
siglufjrur