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Menachem Hacohen

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1974–1988
  
Alignment

Name
  
Menachem Hacohen

Role
  
Politician


Menachem Hacohen httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediahethumb1

Date of birth
  
(1932-07-26) 26 July 1932 (age 83)

Place of birth
  
Jerusalem, Mandatory Palestine

Knessets
  
Israeli legislative election, 1973

Menachem Hacohen (Hebrew: מנחם הכהן‎‎, born 26 July 1932) is an Israeli rabbi, writer, thinker and former politician. He headed the Religious Worker faction in the Histadrut trade union, was member of the Knesset for the Alignment between 1974 and 1988, and also served as chief rabbi of the Moshavim Movement and the Histadrut. Between 1997 and 2011 he held the post of chief rabbi of Romanian Jewry.

Menachem Hacohen ftpmirroryourorgpubwikimediaimageswikipedia

Biography

Born in Jerusalem during the Mandate era, Hacohen was educated in the Slabodka yeshiva, before being certified as a rabbi. He began his military service in 1951 in the Nahal brigade, and held the post of chief editor of the Army Rabbi's publications from 1951 until 1955. Between 1952 and 1954 he also served as the Religious Ceremonies Officer in the General Staff. He went on to work as a rabbi in the navy from 1955 until 1956.

In 1967 he became the rabbi of the Moshavim Movement, before serving as the Histadrut's rabbi from 1968 until 1979. While serving as rabbi of the Moshavim, he met the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, who gave him four Torah Scrolls as a donation. In 1973 he was elected to the Knesset. He was re-elected in 1977, 1981 and 1984, before losing his seat in the 1988 elections.

Hacohen has also written several books, including The Stones Speak: History and Folklore about the Holy Places Liberated by the IDF (1967), Book of the Life of Man: Weddings (1986), Book of the Life of Man: Birth (1991), The Belief of a Nation (1996) and From Year to Year (1996).

He is also interested in interfaith dialogue, and currently sits on the Board of World Religious Leaders for The Elijah Interfaith Institute.

References

Menachem Hacohen Wikipedia