Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 46. Chapters: German Orthodox rabbis, Samson Raphael Hirsch, Jacob Ettlinger, Herman Berlinski, Moses Sofer, Eliezer Berkovits, Yom-Tov Lipmann Heller, Azriel Hildesheimer, Shimon Schwab, Mayer Amschel Rothschild, Joseph Samuel Bloch, Joseph Breuer, Yechiel Yaakov Weinberg, Felix Carlebach, Zvi Hirsch Kalischer, Nathan Marcus Adler, Malbim, Benjamin Hirsch Auerbach, Nechama Leibowitz, Isaac Breuer, Seligman Baer Bamberger, Ludwig Lewisohn, Pinchas Kohn, Chanoch Ehrentreu, Pinchas Horowitz, Naftoli Carlebach, Pinchas Biberfeld, Joseph Chayyim ben Isaac Selig Caro, Marcus Lehmann, Hosea Jacobi, Alexander Suslin, Benjamin Wolf Low, Joseph Perles, Baruch ben Samuel, Lazar Horowitz, David ben Naphtali Frankel, Ephraim Carlebach, Michael Sachs, Naftali Hertz ben Yaakov Elchanan, Abraham Bing, Shimon Wincelberg, Magnus Davidsohn, Eliezer Lazi, David Tebele Scheuer, Shabtai Sheftel Horowitz, Bezalel Ronsburg, Eliezer Lob, Baruch ben Isaac, Yaakov ben Yakar, Abraham ben Joseph ha-Levi, Levi Pante. Excerpt: Herman Berlinski (Leipzig, Germany, 18 August 1910 - Washington D.C., 27 September 2001) was a German-born American composer, organist, pianist, musicologist and choir conductor of Polish descent. Herman Berlinski's parents, Boris and Deborah Wygodzki Berlsinski, were Jews who lived originally in od (then located in the Russian Empire following the 1815 Congress of Vienna, and now a city of Poland). With civil and political unrest well underway in Russia by 1905, growing discontent in Poland against the Russian rule led to many uprisings, the largest of which, commonly called the June Days Uprising or the od insurrection, took place in that same year. At that point, the Berlinskis fled to Leipzig, where they remained after the end of World War I, for although Poland was reconstituted in 1918, turmoil between Poland and the Soviet St...