Jacob Frankel Explained

Jacob Frankel
Native Name:Jacob Fränkel
Birth Date:5 July 1808
Birth Place:Grünstadt, French Empire
Death Place:Philadelphia, United States

Jacob Frankel (July 5, 1808January 12, 1887) was a German-born rabbi who became the first official Jewish military chaplain of the United States, during the American Civil War.

Life and work

Frankel came from a Jewish family with a long tradition of musicians based in Grünstadt in the Palatinate which was then part of the French Empire, and was the son of Joseph and Dorothe Fränkel.[1]

With his two brothers he undertook concert tours, including to neighboring Alsace. Frankel, at the time of Rabbi Leopold Roos, became cantor at his Grünstadt home synagogue, and in 1844 he moved to Mainz.[2] [3] [4] In 1848 he emigrated to the United States.[5]

From 1848 to a year before his death, Frankel served as the cantor and leader of the Rodeph Shalom Congregation in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The congregation was a community of Ashkenazi Reform Judaism which had been founded in 1795.[6] He was known as the "sweet singer of Israel."[7]

Military career

See also: Board of Delegates of American Israelites and Arnold Fischel. Frankel was appointed the first official Jewish chaplain in the United States Armed Services on September 18, 1862, by President Abraham Lincoln.[8] He was also the first non-Christian to be appointed as a chaplain.[9] Until his appointment, the law required a chaplain to be ordained by a "Christian denomination." After Rabbi Arnold Fischel was elected to serve as chaplain-designate for the 5th Pennsylvania Cavalry Regiment, as a test case as opposed to their prior un-ordained minister, the Secretary of War Simon Cameron (for whom the regiment was named, "Cameron’s Dragoons") denied the request.[10] This denial led to the Board of Delegates of American Israelites and Fischel to lobby to change the law. Fischel also met with President Lincoln who was in favor of changing the law. Once the law was changed, Lincoln appointed Frankel as the first Jewish chaplain.[11] Frankel served in the military hospitals of Philadelphia which was a center of care for the war wounded. He held this post until mid-1865 and was discharged from the military at that time.[6]

Death

Frankel died in Philadelphia in 1887 as a widower, leaving two sons and two daughters. Isaak Fränkel, one of his brothers, died on December 20, 1877, in Grünstadt at the age of 74 after serving as a cantor for the synagogue there for over 50 years.[12] [13]

Commemoration

During the torpedoing and sinking of the in 1943, four American military chaplains, including a Jewish chaplain, sacrificed themselves and died in the performance of their duties. In commemoration of this, a medal was designed by the American sculptor Eugene Daub and issued by the Jewish-American Hall of Fame, the Four Chaplains' Medal. The obverse shows Jacob Frankel as the first Jewish chaplain of the United States Army, the reverse shows the fallen clergymen from 1943.[14]

Literature

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Gruenstadt. Kultur-Büro AHB.
  2. Arnold Vogt: Religion im Militär, 1984, S. 719, ; (Ausschnittscan zur Tätigkeit als Kantor an den Synagogen Grünstadt und Mainz)
  3. Königlich bayerisches Amts- und Intelligenzblatt für die Pfalz, S. 878 des Jahrgangs 1844; (Digitalscan)
  4. Web site: Informationsseite – DENIC eG. www.denic.de.
  5. Book: Irene Heskes. Passport to Jewish Music: Its History, Traditions, and Culture. 1994. Greenwood Publishing Group. 978-0-313-28035-1. 183–.
  6. News: The U.S. Army gets its first Jewish chaplain. Haaretz.
  7. Web site: Jacob Frankel. Bethanne Kelly. Patrick. Military.com. June 29, 2022 .
  8. Web site: First Army Jewish Chaplains. September 19, 2016.
  9. Web site: History of Non-Christian Chaplains. April 23, 2018.
  10. Web site: Letter to Arnold Fischel (December 14, 1861) | Lincoln's Writings.
  11. Hoenig . Sidney B. . 1976. The Orthodox Rabbi as a Military Chaplain: A Bicentennial Retrospect. Tradition: A Journal of Orthodox Jewish Though . 16 . 2 . 35–60 . 23258388 . February 4, 2021.
  12. http://www.alemannia-judaica.de/gruenstadt_synagoge.htm Synagoge Grünstadt
  13. Ed Davis: The history of Rodeph Shalom Congregation, Philadelphia, 1802–1926, 1926, S. 98 u. 99, (Ausschnittscans)
  14. http://www.amuseum.org/jahf/virtour/page45.html Jewish-American Hall of Fame