Julius Galliner

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Julius Galliner (born February 3, 1872 in Zinten ; died September 7, 1949 in New York City ) was a German rabbi.

His parents were the teacher and cantor Jonas Galliner and Lina Galliner, b. Pianikowski. In addition to his older siblings Max and Dorothea, he had five brothers, including Siegfried , Arthur and Emil (1881–1960), who set up a large women's fashion store in Finsterwalde in 1909.

At the age of eleven, Julius attended high school in Königsberg , then Michael Holzmann's Jewish teachers' seminar in Berlin . In 1893 he passed the first teacher examination there. From 1893 to 1897 he was a religion teacher at the elementary school and cantor in Schwerin , where he was supported by Rabbi Gabriel Fabian Feilchenfeld .

Back in Berlin, he attended the College for the Science of Judaism and the University of Berlin. In 1897 he received his doctorate. In Charlottenburg he worked as a religion teacher, head of the religious school and rabbi in the synagogue Fasanenstrasse and synagogue Prinzregentenstrasse .

In 1903 he had married Elisabeth Zerline Kristeller, the daughter of Benjamin (Benno) and Clara Kristeller; he had two children with her. In March 1939 he emigrated to New York City via England to his son Helmut.

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  1. Wilke, Jansen: Biographisches Handbuch der Rabbis. See volume 2, p. 211 .;
  2. ^ Finsterwalde: Jacobsen and Galliner family. Action alliance Brandenburg, archived from the original on February 1, 2016 (pictures of stumbling blocks ).;
  3. ^ List of names of the Jews in Niederlausitz. In: luckauer-juden.de.

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