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Sinai (journal)

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Sinai: Journal of Torah and Jewish Studies
DisciplineTorah and Jewish studies
LanguageHebrew
Edited byYehuda Leib Maimon
Publication details
History1937–2020
Publisher
Frequencybi-annually (once every 6 months)
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Sinai
Indexing
ISSN0334-4304
OCLC no.1765573

Sinai (Hebrew: סיני; Siynay) was a bi-annual journal for research in the fields of Torah and Jewish studies (much of its content based on Cairo Genizah research) and more. The magazine was published continuously, once every six months (despite the Hebrew name "Monthly") from 1937 to 2020, published by the Rav Kook Institute.

Editors of the journal hoped to broaden the study of the Hebrew language, as well as promote thereby the investigation of Israelite history, as well as to dispense of Talmudic, Midrashic and halachic literature.[1]

History

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The journal is devoted to Torah, literature and Jewish learning.[2] The first chief-editor of the journal was Rabbi Yehuda Leib Maimon, who edited from 1937 until his death in 1962. Its initial goal was "to create a permanent literary platform, Torah and scientific, for national religious Judaism."[3] Initially the journal was supported and funded by the Bialik Institute and the Jewish Agency[4] and also included a publicist section, for articles on current affairs and a section on fine literature, which were abolished over the years and contributed to its establishment as a unique journal for Torah research and Jewish studies.

In 1958, a Jubilee edition was published to mark the appearance of the fortieth volume of the Sinai bi-annual for the study of Torah, science and literature,[5] and which included at its end an index of authors and topics covered over the past twenty years.[6] In 1987, marking the fiftieth year of its publication, a two-part Jubilee volume was published.

In 1962, Dr. Yitzhak Rafael replaced Rabbi Maimon as editor of the journal. Rafael published sections extracted from the journal, dealing with such topics as "Chiddushei Torah" (Novellæ from the Torah), and the bibliographic section for which he installed supplementary editions for "Sinai", such as Beit Talmud, the Oral law and the Areshet Year Book.

In 1999, Rabbi Yosef Eliyahu Halevi Movshovitz replaced Dr. Rafael. The journal ceased its publication in 2020.[7]

Abstracting and indexing

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The Hebrew-language journal Sinai (Hebrew: Sinay) is abstracted and indexed in Specialized databases; in MLA - Modern Language Association Database (Modern Language Association of America).[8] Sinai is held in the library holdings of the National Library of Israel.[9] Renowned Palestinian/Israeli scholars who have written articles for Sinai include Samuel Klein,[10] Saul Lieberman,[11] Ze'ev Safrai,[12] Yosef Qafih,[13] and Zohar Amar,[14] among others.

References

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  1. ^ First issue, Sivan 1937
  2. ^ The Canadian Jewish Chronicle, 27 Mar 1953, “A Grand Israel Cultural Project” by Solomon Kerstein, p. 61
  3. ^ Concerning the publication, published in the first issue (Zion, lunar-month Sivan, 1937)
  4. ^ In the report of the Zionist leadership to the Twentieth Congress (lunar-months of Av-Elul 1937), it was stated that the Bialik Institute supports the publication of a Sinai monthly. In addition, in a memorial edition published in memory of Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook it is written: "Published by the Rav Kook Institute in affiliation with the Mizrachi movement, with the participation of the Bialik Institute alongside the Jewish Agency."
  5. ^ The National Library of Israel, Sinai Jubilee edition, 1958
  6. ^ Kressel, G. (1978). "The Eightieth-volume of Sinai (כרך-הגבורות של סיני)". Moznaim (in Hebrew). 47 (1): 58. JSTOR 23877444. Twenty years ago (i.e. 1958), with the issuance of the fortieth volume, and with the twentieth-year anniversary of the publication of Sinai, the Jubilee edition was published, under the editorship of Rabbi Maimon --- and towards the end an index was appended, listing both the contributing authors and the topics discussed.
  7. ^ Thus it was written in the last issue (2020, p. 153)
  8. ^ "Sinay". MIAR: Information Matrix for the Analysis of Journals. University of Barcelona. Retrieved 2024-09-04.
  9. ^ Sinai periodical, Catalogue listings, National Library of Israel
  10. ^ Samuel Klein (1939). "Comments on the Words of Israel's Sages" (הערות לדברי חז"ל), in: Sinai 3 (ed. Y.L. Hacohen Fishman), Jerusalem [Hebrew], pp. 405–417
  11. ^ Lieberman, Saul (1939). "Cantorship of Yannai (חזנות יניי)". Sinai (in Hebrew). 4. Mossad Harav Kook: 221–250.
  12. ^ Safrai, Z. (1976). "Beth-Anath". Sinai (in Hebrew). 78. Jerusalem: Mossad Harav Kook: 18–34.
  13. ^ Qafih, Y. (1958). "Ha-Rambam we-golath teiman". Sinai (in Hebrew). Jerusalem: Mossad Harav Kook.
  14. ^ Amar, Zohar (1994). "אוג הבורסקאים בתקופה העתיקה". Sinai: A Journal for Torah and Jewish Studies (in Hebrew). 114: 131–143. ISSN 0334-4304.