Aryeh Newman Explained

Aryeh Newman (Hebrew: אריה ניומן; born Leonard Newman, 1924 – 20 October 2021) was an Israeli scholar and an expert on Judaica and linguistics. He was a Cambridge University alumnus and an ordained rabbi. He worked many years at the Jewish Agency of the World Zionist Organization, and served as a Senior Lecturer and Head of Department of English as a Foreign Language at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Newman conducted extensive research and teaching in the field of linguistics, and was known for his translation and adaptation of the writings of Nehama Leibowitz.

Early life

Newman was born in Leeds, England in 1924, to a religious Zionist family. His father, Simon (Noach) Newman, was a prominent building contractor in Leeds. He received a secular education along with extensive Jewish and Talmudic studies.

In January 1941, Newman won a scholarship to study English Literature at Emmanuel College at Cambridge University, where he graduated with honours and obtained his master's degree. His tutor was the literary scholar Joan Bennett.[1]

During his academic studies, Newman became an ordained rabbi at the age of 19 under the aegis of Rabbi K. Kahana Kagan of Fitzwilliam[2] after graduating from Jews' College London as well as Gateshead Talmudical College where he studied under Rabbis Eliyahu Eliezer Dessler and Leib Lopian.

Newman was also heavily involved in the Jewish Student Union while at Cambridge University and became president of the Jewish Society having succeeded the late Chaim Herzog who later became the President of Israel.

In 1949, following the declaration of the State of Israel, Newman emigrated to Israel with his wife, the late Manchester-born novelist Renée Crane Newman, and their two children; they subsequently had two further children who were born in Israel.

Career

In the 1950s, Newman worked as a night editor at The Jerusalem Post and as the Editor of The Zionist Newsletter. Newman was also the producer and broadcaster of English radio programs in Kol Zion Lagolah that were focused on the Anglo-Jewish Diaspora.

Later he became the director of English educational programs in the Department for Religious Education and Culture at the Jewish Agency.

In 1962, Newman was appointed as the Jewish cultural officer in Australia and New Zealand's Jewish communities, where he founded the Yavneh College Primary School in Melbourne.

Newman later returned to Cambridge University as a research fellow in the Department of Linguistics, and received a Post-graduate diploma in the field of General and Applied Linguistics. He thereafter completed his doctoral thesis in linguistics, which was later published in a book by Acco Leuven (Belgium): Academic Publishing Company.[3]

In 1981, Newman became a Senior Lecturer and head of Department of English as a Foreign Language at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.During his career at the Jewish Agency and at the Hebrew University, Newman had various books and articles published on Judaism, Zionism, Jewish Education, State and Religion issues and Linguistics. In addition, he translated, edited and adapted the works of Nehama Leibowitz's Studies in the Pentateuch.[4]

Newman contributed to Encyclopaedia Judaica, The Jewish Encyclopedia, Encyclopedia of Judaism, Encyclopedia of Zionism, The Oxford Dictionary of the Jewish Religion and Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics. Newman has also had articles published in Congress Weekly – A Review of Jewish Interests, The Reconstructionist, The American Zionist, Jewish Heritage and The Jewish Horizon.

Newman served as a visiting professor at the Linguistics Department of St. Andrews University, Scotland, at Berkeley Comparative Literature and Linguistics Departments, at SUNY Binghamton Translation Research and Instruction Programme, and at the Australian Universities of Monash and Macquarie, and the Australian National University.

Linguistic approaches

Newman's approach to translation was a holistic and contextual approach that included the historical and cultural background of the source and target text, as well as the structural differences between the source and target languages. Newman saw the importance of using various models to provide insight regarding translation equivalence involving sound, syntax, semantics and pragmatics.[5] He believed translation is more of an art than a science.[6]

Personal life

Newman died in Israel on 20 October 2021, at the age of 97.[7] [8]

Published works

Editing and Translating

Original articles and publications

Articles published in the Brooklyn Jewish Center Review

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Aryeh Newman, "From Exile to Exit: the Frankau Jewish Connection", The Jewish Quarterly, Vol. 34 No. 4 (128), 1987
  2. K. Kahan Kagan, Three great Systems of Jurisprudence (London; Stevens, 1955)
  3. Aryeh Newman, Mapping Translation Equivalence, no. 8 Contrastive Analysis Series, Acco Leuven 1980 pp. 142. .
  4. Studies in the Pentateuch of Nehama Leibowitz. English Adaptation by Aryeh Newman in 5 volumes. 1973–1980 pp. 2520
  5. Eugene A. Nida, Applied Linguistics, Vol. 4, Issue 1, Spring 1983, pp. 79–81
  6. Aryeh Newman (1994) "Translation Equivalence: Nature", R. E. Asher, ed. The Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics, Oxford: Pergamon Press Ltd., pp. 4694–4700
  7. Web site: Aryeh (Leonar) Newman z"l . Jerusalem Post . 10 March 2022 . 22 October 2021.
  8. Web site: Aryeh (Leonard) Newman zl . Modaotevel . 10 March 2022 . 21 October 2021.