
Contents
Preface
Introduction By Robert Weltsch
I. In Memoriam Leo Baeck
S. Moses: The Impact Of Leo Baeck's Personality On His Contemporaries
H. Liebeschutz: Judaism And The History Of Religion In Leo Baeck's Work
Eva Reichmann: Symbol Of German Jewry
Wolfgang Hamburger: Teacher In Berlin And Cincinnati
Excerpts From Baeck's Writings
(A) The German Jews
(B) A Light Breaks Forth
(C) On Moses Hess
(D) A Letter
II. Organization Of Jewish Life In Pre-nazi Germany
Kurt Wilhelm: The Jewish Community In The Post-emancipation Period
Ahron Sandler: The Struggle For Unification
Max Gruenewald: The Modern Rabbi
A. Kober: 150 Years Of Religious Instruction
E. D. Goldschmidt: Studies On Jewish Liturgy By German Jewish Scholars
S. Adler-rudel: East European Jewish Workers In Germany
Walter Schwab: Some Aspects Of The Relationship Between The German And The Anglo-jewish Community
III. The Interrelation Of German And Jewish Thought
Hanns Reissner: Rebellious Dilemma: The Case Histories Of Eduard Gans And Some Of His Partisans
Immanuel Wolf: On The Concepts Of A Science Of Judaism (1822)
David Baumgardt: The Ethics Of Lazarus And Steinthal
George L. Mosse: The Image Of The Jew In German Popular Culture
Felix Dahn And Gustav Freytag
Ernst Kahn: The Frankfurter Zeitung
Moritz Goldstein: German Jewry's Dilemma Before 1914
Heinrich Strauss: On Jews And German Art (The Problem Of Max Liebermann)
Ernst Simon: Sigmund Freud, The Jew
IV. Documents
Letters From Berlin 1942 (The Last Days Of The Reichsvertretung)
V. Post-war Publications On German Jewry
VI. List Of Contributors
VII. Index To Volumes I And II
Illustrations
Leo Baeck. with Martin Buber
Oskar Wolfsberg
Facsimile of Leo Baeck's Letter
M. Lazarus and Ch. Steinthal
Leopold Zunz with Jewish scholars
Max Liebermann (self-portrait)
Sigmund Freud