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BOAS, ABRAHAM TOBIAS (1844-1923), rabbi Hebrew congregation,
Adelaide, |
was born at Amsterdam, Holland, where his father was also a rabbi, on 25
November 1844. He was educated at the local Jewish school and studied theology
under a well-known Hebraist, Delaville. In 1865 he went to England, and in 1867
became minister to the Jewish congregation at Southampton. In 1869 he was
selected as rabbi for the congregation at Adelaide, and he arrived there on 13
February 1870. He held the position for 48 years, and became a well-known figure
in all movements intended to forward the cultural and material good of the
community . Well read, a great student of Shakespeare, urbane and kind-hearted,
broad-minded and anxious to be of use to other denominations than his own, he
was a welcome visitor to the Y.M.C.A., and often lectured on aspects of Jewish
life and Old Testament history. He not only earned the affection of his own
congregation, he was generally recognized as a valuable and public-spirited
citizen. He resigned his charge in 1918 in consequence of an illness from which
he never fully recovered. He died on 20 February 1923. He married Elizabeth,
daughter of Isaac Solomon, who died in 1916, and was survived by four sons and
five daughters.
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