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・ Moshe Reuven Azman
・ Moshe Revach
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・ Moshe Ronen
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・ Moshe Rosenstein
・ Moshe Rubashkin
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Moshe Schick
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・ Moshe Selecter
・ Moshe Shahal
・ Moshe Shaked
・ Moshe Shalit
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・ Moshe Sharett
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Moshe Schick : ウィキペディア英語版
Moshe Schick
:''For "Maharam Shiff" see Meir Shiff.''
Moshe Schick (1 March 1807 – 25 January 1879; , alternatively spelled as ''Shick'', ''Shik'', ''Shieck'') was a prominent Hungarian Orthodox rabbi.
==Biography==
Schick was born in Birkenhein, Kingdom of Hungary (contemporary Brezová pod Bradlom, Slovakia), the son of Rabbi Joseph Schick. The family were descended from Rabbi Hanoch Heinich Schick of Shklov.
At the age of 11, Moshe Shik was sent to study with his uncle, Rabbi Yitzchak Frankel, the ''Av Beth Din'' in Regensdorf. When he was 14, he was sent to learn under Moses Sofer in Pressburg, where he stayed for six years. Sofer called his prodigious student "a treasure chest full of holy books". When he was 20, Moses Shik married his cousin, Gittel Frankel. They had several children. He was appointed Rabbi of Yeregin in 1838, where he opened a yeshiva. He taught students there for three decades. In 1861 he became Rabbi of Huszt, present-day Ukraine, and moved his 800-student yeshiva with him.
Schick was a leading figure in the Orthodox camp during its struggle with the Neologs, who promoted educational, social and moderate religious reform and embraced the Magyarization policy of the government. On 28 December 1867, shortly after the Austro-Hungarian Compromise, the Jews of Hungary were legally emancipated. Minister of Religion József Eötvös sought to establish a national Jewish organization which would represent the various communities before the government. The Orthodox, fearing the institution will be dominated by their rivals, held a rabbinical assembly in Pest between 24 November and 3 December 1868. Samuel Benjamin Sofer was elected president, and Schick had no official position, yet he emerged as leader. It was he who decided to send Eötvös a letter declaring that the Orthodox will not accept the resolutions of the upcoming National Jewish Congress – which was convened in Pest, between 10 December and 23 February 1869, to form the new organization – unless it would conform with their rabbis' opinions. Schick and Sigmund Kraus, a lay activist, led the Orthodox campaign to secede from the directory.〔Jacob Katz. ''A House Divided: Orthodoxy and Schism in Nineteenth-Century Central European Jewry''. Brandeis University Press, 1998. ISBN 978-1584652953. pp. 131-133.〕 On 15 November 1871, the new Minister of Religion Tivadar Pauler recognized the Central Bureau of the Autonomous Jewish Orthodox Communities in Hungary (Magyarországi Autonóm Orthodox Izraelita Hitfelekezet Központi Irodája), which was separate and independent from the Neolog-oriented National Jewish Bureau (Az Izraeliták Országos Irodája).〔Margit Balogh, Jenő Gergely. ''Egyházak az újkori Magyarországon, 1790-1992: kronológia''. MTA Történettudományi Intézete, 1993 .ISBN 9789638311214. p. 94.〕
In rabbinical commentary Shik is commonly known as the Maharam Schick (מהר"ם שיק); ''Maharam'' is the acronym for ''Moreinu Harav Moses'', which means "Our Teacher Rabbi Moshe" in Hebrew. He died in 1879.

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