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  1. Moshe Leib Lilienblum ( Yiddish: משה לייב לילינבלום; October 22, 1843, in Keidany, Kovno Governorate – February 12, 1910, in Odesa) was a Jewish scholar and author.

  2. yivoencyclopedia.org › article › Lilienblum_Mosheh_LeibYIVO | Lilienblum, Mosheh Leib

    Translation. (1843–1910), Hebrew, Yiddish, and Russian writer; maskil. Mosheh Leib Lilienblum was born in Kaidan (Kedainiai), Lithuania, where he received a Talmudic education. His father married him off at the age of 13 to a girl of 11, and he moved into his father-in-law’s house in Wilkomir (Ukmergė). In addition to his intense Torah ...

  3. A scholar and author born in Lithuania, Lilienblum embraced the Hibbat Zion (Lovers of Zion) movement in Russia after the pogroms of 1881 and served as secretary of an Odesa committee on Palestine settlement. His memoir “Sins of My Youth” detailed his shaky faith as an Eastern European Jew.

  4. MOYSHE-LEYB LILYENBLUM (MOSHE-LEIB LILIENBLUM) (November 3, 1843-February 12, 1910) He was born in Kaidan ( Kėdainiai ), Kovno district, Lithuania. He father was a cooper, but also a well-educated and pious man.

  5. 25 de ene. de 2018 · Moshe Leib Lilienblum in an undated photo. (Wikipedia.) Lilienblum managed to stake out a tenable position for himself, in which labor and a brave new worldly Torah could coexist.

  6. Moses Leib Lilienblum began as a moderate religious reformer but later became absorbed by social problems, and in Mishnat Elisha ben Abuyah (1878; “The Opinions of Elisha ben Abuyah”) he preached Jewish socialism.

  7. Moshe Leib Lilienblum (Yiddish: משה לייב לילינבלום ‎; October 22, 1843 in Keidany, Kovno Governorate – February 12, 1910 in Odessa) was a Jewish scholar and author. He also used the pseudonym Zelaphchad Bar-Chuschim (Hebrew: צלפחד בר־חושים ‎).