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William Chomsky
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Born
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Died
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July 21, 1977 (aged 81)
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Nationality
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American
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Occupation
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Scholar of Hebrew
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Spouse(s)
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Elsie
Simonofsky
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Children
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Relatives
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William Chomsky (January 15, 1896 – July 21, 1977) was an
American scholar of Hebrew. He was born in Ukraine (then a part of the Russian Empire) and fled to the United States in 1913 to avoid
conscription into the army. He worked in sweatshops in Baltimore before gaining employment teaching at the city’s
Hebrew elementary schools, using his money to fund his studies at Johns
Hopkins University.
Marrying Elsie Simonofsky – a native of what is present-day Belarus who grew up in the United States – they moved to Philadelphia, where they
both began teaching at the Mikveh Israel religious school, with William eventually rising
to the position of school principal.
In 1924, he was appointed to
the faculty at the country’s oldest Jewish teacher training institution, Gratz College, where he became faculty president in 1932. In
1955 he also began teaching courses at Dropsie College. Independently, he was involved in researching
Medieval Hebrew, eventually authoring a series of books
on the language: How to Teach Hebrew in the Elementary Grades (1946), Hebrew,
the Story of a Living Language (1947), Hebrew, the Eternal Language
(1957), Teaching and Learning (1959), and an edited version of David
Kimhi’s Hebrew Grammar (1952).[1] Described as a “very warm, gentle, and engaging”
individual, William Chomsky placed a great emphasis on educating people so that
they would be “well integrated, free and independent in their thinking, and
eager to participate in making life more meaningful and worthwhile for all”, a
view that would subsequently be adopted by his son.[2]
Biography
William Chomsky was born in Kupil, Volhynian Governorate, Russian
Empire (in present-day Ukraine) in 1896. He taught as a professor at Gratz
College. He became the faculty president of Gratz in 1932, a position that
he held for 37 years. He also taught at Dropsie
College, a graduate school for Jewish and Semitic
studies from 1955–77. He was a renowned specialist of the history of the
Hebrew grammatical tradition, before and after David Kimhi
(1160–1235). His obituary (New York Times, 22 July 1977) describes him
as “one of the world’s foremost Hebrew grammarians”.
Chomsky was married to Elsie Simonofsky. The couple had two sons: Noam,
a well-known linguist and activist; and David, a physician.
Selected
bibliography
1.
Chomsky, William: How
the Study of Hebrew Grammar Began and Developed; The Jewish Quarterly
Review, New Ser., Vol. 35, No. 3. (Jan., 1945), pp. 281–301 JStor
2.
Chomsky, William: How
to teach Hebrew in the elementary grades; New York, The United Synagogue
Commission on Jewish Education, XIV 295 p. 22 cm. 1946.
3.
Chomsky, William: David
Kimhi’s Hebrew Grammar: (Mikhlol) Systematically Presented and Critically
Annotated by William Chomsky; Bloch Pub Co, New York, for Dropsie College,
XXXIV 427 p. 23 cm, 1952 (available in paperback as 2001 edition, ISBN 978-0-8197-0719-2)
4.
Chomsky, William: Hebrew:
The Eternal Language; Jewish Publication Society of America, Philadelphia
1964, c1957, other edition: June 1975, ISBN 978-0-8276-0077-5
References
Footnotes
1. Barsky 1997. pp.
9–10.
2. Barsky 1997. p.
11.
Bibliography
1. Barsky,
Robert F. (1997). Noam Chomsky: A Life of Dissent. Cambridge, MAS and
London: The MIT Press. ISBN 978-0262024181.
External
links
3.
First
chapter from the electronic version of Noam Chomsky: A Life of Dissent (by Robert F. Barsky)
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