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Jacob schick
Jacob schick









jacob schick

He repeated the accusations of his predecessor, Israel Moses ha-Levi *Zamoscz, against the fanatical rabbis and leaders who persecuted and condemned the maskilim. He regarded the neglect of the sciences as caused by the exile. Schick devoted his energies to arousing his fellow Jews to the need for studying the arts and sciences. Among the manuscripts he left were a book of medical cures and the translation of the second part of Euclid. Toward the end of his life he lived in Slutzk, where he served as dayyan and as court physician to Count Radziwill, and where he died. After some time he settled in Shklov, and there he belonged to the maskilim whose needs were supplied by the wealthy Joshua *Zeitlin of Ustye near Shklov. In 1784 he was in Prague, where he published his Keneh ha-Middah, on geometry and trigonometry, which he translated from English (republished by him in Shklov in 1791, together with additional expositions to Maimonides' Hilkhot Kiddush ha-Ḥodesh). In the Hague in 1779, he published his Derekh Yesharah, on medicine and hygiene, and in 1780 he published from Latin a Hebrew translation of the first part of Euclid's geometry. He stated that the Gaon of Vilna advised him to translate scientific works into Hebrew in order to make their contents available to Jews. This strengthened Schick's standing in Jewish circles and influenced not only his contemporaries but also subsequent generations. Solomon (the Gaon of Vilna), in whose name he published a statement on the need for scientific knowledge for an understanding of the Torah. In 1778, on his way back to Minsk, he visited Vilna and was in the group associated with Elijah b. Aryeh Lob *Levin, and that same year published his Ammudei Shamayim, a scientific commentary to Maimonides' Hilkhot Kiddush ha-Ḥodesh, adding to it his Tiferet Adam, a popular work on anatomy. In 1777 Schick published in Berlin Isaac *Israeli's astronomical work Yesod Olam from a defective manuscript in the possession of Hirschel b. After qualifying as a doctor he moved to Berlin, where he became acquainted with the maskilim of the town, including Moses *Mendelssohn and Naphtali Herz *Wessely. He traveled to London to study medicine and there joined the Freemasons. His first scholarly work and his other works were lost in a conflagration. In his youth he was already attracted to the Haskalah and general knowledge. Schick was ordained as a rabbi in 1764 and subsequently served as dayyan in Minsk.

jacob schick jacob schick

SCHICK, BARUCH BEN JACOB (also known as Baruch Shklover, from the name of his birthplace, Shklov 1740?–after 1812), rabbi, physician, and one of the pioneers of *Haskalah of Eastern Europe.











Jacob schick