Chaim Potok
(1929 - 2002)
Rabbi Dr. Chaim Potok (February 17, 1929 - July 23, 2002) was an American author and rabbi.
Herman Harold Potok was born in the Bronx to Jewish immigrants from Poland. Following tradition, his parents, Benjamin Max (d. 1958) and Mollie (Friedman) Potok (d.1985), gave him a Hebrew name, Chaim Tzvi. His Orthodox education taught him Talmud as well as secular studies. He decided to become a writer as a teenager, after reading Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited.
In 1950, he obtained an B.A., summa cum laude, in English Literature from Yeshiva University. After receiving an M.A. in Hebrew literature, and his later rabbinic ordination from the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, Potok joined the U.S. Army as a chaplain. He served in South Korea from 1955 to 1957.
On June 8, 1958, he married Adena Sara Mosevitzsky, a psychiatric social worker, whom he met in 1952 at Camp Ramah in the Poconos. They had three children: Rena, Naama, and Akiva.
From 1964-1975, Potok edited Conservative Judaism and also served as editor, from 1965-1974, of the Jewish Publication Society. In 1965, Potok was awarded a Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania.
Potok is most famous for his 1967 novel The Chosen, which was also made into a film released in 1981, which won top award at the World Film Festival, Montreal, and later became a musical on Broadway for a short time. It was a semi-autobiographical story about two boys. Reuven Malter, a Modern Orthodox Jew, becomes friends with Danny Saunders, an exceptionally brilliant young son of a Hasidic rabbi. The father, Reb Saunders, expects his son to succeed him as a rabbi, yet Danny wants to study psychology, a secular field of study.
In addition to his work in the fields of theology, history, and literature, Rabbi Potok was an accomplished painter. His novel My Name is Asher Lev chronicles the conflicts experienced by a young artist who had been raised in orthodox Judaism. Dr. Potok cited James Joyce, Thomas Mann, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Ernest Hemingway, and S.Y. Agnon as his chief literary influences.
Dr. Potok died of brain cancer in Merion, Pennsylvania, on July 23, 2002.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaim_Potok