Joel Deutsch Explained

Honorific Prefix:Dr.
Joel Deutsch
Birth Date:1813 3, df=y
Birth Place:Nikolsburg, Austrian Empire
Death Place:Vienna, Austria-Hungary
Burial Place:Old Jewish Cemetery, Vienna Central Cemetery (Gate I, 7-29-1)[1]
Occupation:Educator

Joel Deutsch (; 1813 3, df=y, Nikolsburg –, Vienna) was a Moravian Jewish writer, pedagogue, and distinguished deaf educator.

Biography

Joel Deutsch was born in Nikolsburg, Moravia. He was a close student of rabbinical literature and an energetic collector of Hebrew books. In 1844, he became a teacher at the Allgemeine österreichische israelitische Taubstummen-Institut in Nikolsburg, a school for deaf Jewish children established that year by philanthropist Hirsch Kolisch at the suggestion of Catholic priest Dr. Franz Herrmann Czech.[2]

The school developed into one of the leading schools of its kind in Europe, and was one of the first schools for deaf children which started an intensive auditory education program, thanks to its close co-operation with otologist Viktor Urbantschitsch. In a letter to Edward Walter, director of the Institute for the Deaf in Berlin, Deutsch asserted that the students who had undergone their training programme were of decided intelligence, contrary to contemporary thought about deaf-mutes. In support of this contention, he sent an essay by one of his students, Bernhard Brill, and said that he doubted whether any non-disabled person "could match his lucid and incisive style."[3]

Deutsch became director when the school was transferred to Vienna in 1852.[4] In 1859 he was decorated with the Goldene Verdienstkranz and in 1869 received the title Kaiserlicher Rath. On 17 February 1870, Deutsch survived an attempted murder by a teacher named Isaac Bardach, who had been severely reprimanded by Deutsch for whipping several of the children unmercilessly.[5]

Deutsch retired from his position in 1888. His pupils became teachers in the schools for the deaf of New York City, London, Budapest, and Lemberg, and the leading Jewish schools for deaf children were influenced by his work.[6] [7]

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Czeike, Felix. Felix Czeike. Historisches Lexikon Wien. de. Kremayr & Scheriau. Vienna. 1993. 2. 978-3-218-00743-6 . 57408547. 19 .
  2. Book: Beresnevičiūtė-Nosálová, Halina . Artists and Nobility in East-Central Europe: Elite Socialization in Vilnius and Brno Newspaper Discourse in 1795–1863 . De Gruyter . Oldenbourg. 2018 . 978-3-11-049477-8 . 190.
  3. Book: Marx, Tzvi C. . Disability in Jewish Law . Routledge. London . 2003 . 978-1-134-46841-6 . 122.
  4. Encyclopedia: Mikulov. Michael L.. Miller. YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe. Gershon. Hundert. Gershon Hundert. New Haven. Yale University Press. 2008.
  5. Attempted Murder of Mr. Deutsch. American Annals of the Deaf . Illinois Institution for the Deaf and Dumb . 16. 1. January 1871 . Edward A.. Fay. 63. Washington, D.C..
  6. https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED391278.pdf. The Contribution of Jewish Professional People to the Education of Hearing Impaired Children in Europe. Loewe. Armin. 16–20 July 1995. Proceedings of the 18th International Congress on Education of the Deaf. Tel Aviv. Amatzia. Weisel. https://web.archive.org/web/20170517082818/http://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED391278.pdf. 17 May 2017. 10 April 2019. bot: unknown.
  7. Book: Scouten, Edward L. . Turning Points in the Education of Deaf People . Interstate Printers & Publishers . Danville, Illinois . 1984 . 978-0-8134-2293-0 . 10768893 . 135.