fiction.wikisort.org - WriterRabbi Professor Anthony Michael "Tony" Bayfield[3][4] CBE is a Reform rabbi and former President of the Movement for Reform Judaism,[5] the second largest organisation of synagogues in Britain.
Tony Bayfield CBE |
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Born | Anthony Michael Bayfield 1946
Ilford, Essex (now in Greater London), UK |
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Nationality | British |
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Education | Royal Liberty Grammar School, Romford |
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Alma mater | Magdalene College, Cambridge and Leo Baeck College, London |
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Occupation | Reform rabbi President of the Movement for Reform Judaism 2011–16 |
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Spouse(s) | Linda Rose (died 2003)[1] Jacqueline Fisher (m. 2021) |
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Children | Three children, including Rabbi Miriam Berger[1][2] |
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Early life and education
Bayfield was born in 1946[4] in Ilford, Essex (now in Greater London), the elder son of Sheila (née Mann) and Ron Bayfield, a head teacher.
He was educated at the Royal Liberty Grammar School in Romford and Magdalene College, Cambridge. He studied law and had a doctoral place at the Cambridge Institute of Criminology and then moved to the Leo Baeck College to train as a rabbi. He received rabbinic ordination (semichah) in 1972[2] from rabbis John Rayner, Hugo Gryn and Louis Jacobs.
Career
After ten years as a congregational rabbi at North West Surrey Synagogue, Bayfield became director of the Sternberg Centre for Judaism in Finchley in 1985.[2] He was head of the Movement for Reform Judaism from 1994 (when the organisation was known as Reform Synagogues of Great Britain) until 2011.[5] From 2011 to 2016 he was President of the organisation.[5][6]
Honours and awards
Bayfield was awarded a CBE in the 2011 New Year Honours List for services to Reform Judaism.
London's National Portrait Gallery holds a photographic portrait of him by Don McCullin.[4]
Personal life
Tony Bayfield married Linda Rose, a teacher and Jewish educator in 1969; she died in 2003. In 2011, he met Jacqueline Fisher, whom he married in a small ceremony in June 2021.
Bayfield has three children[1] and six grandchildren. His younger daughter, Miriam Berger, received semichah in July 2006 and is a respected rabbi in her own right.[7]
Bayfield is a member of Finchley Reform Synagogue (FRS).
Publications
Bayfield is a specialist in modern Jewish thought and contemporary Reform Judaism. He also specialises in Jewish-Christian and Jewish-Muslim dialogue and has published quite widely in this area. Bayfield has also written about Christian–Jewish reconciliation.[8]
Works
- Prejudice (Jewish responses) (1973). London: Michael Goulston Educational Foundation
- Churban: The murder of the Jews of Europe (Jewish responses) (1981). London: Michael Goulston Educational Foundation ISBN 978-0-907372-00-4
- Sinai, Law and Responsible Autonomy: Reform Judaism and the Halakhic Tradition (1993). London: Reform Synagogues of Great Britain ISBN 978-0-947884-09-3
- (with Sidney Brichto and Eugene Fisher) He Kissed Him and They Wept: Towards a Theology of Jewish-Catholic Partnership (2001). London: SCM Press ISBN 978-0-334-02826-0
- (with Tony Brayfield and Marcus Braybrooke) Dialogue With a Difference: Manor House Group Experience (1992). London: SCM Press ISBN 978-0-334-01980-0
- "September 11: The Case Against Us All" in Roger Boase (ed.) Islam and Global Dialogue – Religious Pluralism and the Pursuit of Peace (2005), Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978-075465307-3
- (with Alan Race and Abdullah Siddiqui, eds.) Beyond the Dysfunctional Family: Jews, Christians and Muslims in Dialogue With Each Other and With Britain (2012) London: CreateSpace ISBN 978-1-468-16747-4
- Being Jewish Today – Confronting the Real Issues (2019). London: Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978-1-472962-08-9
Sources
- The Movement for Reform Judaism: )
- The Guardian: )
References
External links
Reform Judaism in the United Kingdom |
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Rabbis | Living |
- Tony Bayfield
- Miriam Berger
- Barbara Borts
- Helen Freeman
- Laura Janner-Klausner
- Deborah Kahn-Harris
- Nicholas de Lange
- Jonathan Magonet
- Nancy Morris
- Julia Neuberger
- Jonathan Romain
- Sylvia Rothschild
- Sybil Sheridan
- Jackie Tabick
- Mark Winer
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Historical |
- Leo Baeck
- Charles Berg
- Lionel Blue
- Curtis Cassell
- Albert Friedlander
- Hugo Gryn
- Arthur Löwenstamm
- Philip Magnus
- Ignaz Maybaum
- Harold Reinhart
- Sheila Shulman
- Werner van der Zyl
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Lay leaders | |
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Communities and synagogues in the Movement for Reform Judaism | London |
- Bromley
- Edgware
- Finchley
- Hendon
- Hatch End (Kol Chai)
- Harrow (Mosaic)
- Ilford
- Redbridge (Sukkat Shalom)
- Temple Fortune (North Western/Alyth)
- West Hampstead (Shir Hayim)
- West London
- Whetstone (Sha'arei Tsedek: North London)
- Wimbledon
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Manchester |
- Jackson's Row (Manchester Reform)
- Whitefield (Sha'arei Shalom)
- Sharston (Menorah)
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Elsewhere |
- Blackpool
- Bournemouth
- Bradford
- Brighton and Hove
- Cambridge
- Cardiff
- Cornwall
- Coventry
- Darlington
- Glasgow
- Harlow
- Hull
- Isle of Wight
- Leeds
- Liverpool
- Maidenhead
- Milton Keynes
- Newcastle
- Radlett
- Ramsgate
- Sheffield
- Shenfield and Brentwood (Tikvah Chadasha)
- Southend
- South Hampshire
- Southport
- Totnes
- Weybridge
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Independent communities and synagogues | |
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Organisations |
- Leo Baeck College
- Sternberg Centre
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Authority control  |
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General | |
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National libraries | |
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