Community Corner

Prominent Local Rabbi, Law Professor Admits Fake Identity

Michael J. Broyde, also the founder of Young Israel of Toco Hills, admitted using a pseudonym to join an Orthodox Jewish organization.

Michael Broyde, a prominent local rabbi and Emory University law professor and founder of Young Israel of Toco Hills, admitted Friday to using a pseudonym to join a rival Modern Orthodox rabbinical group.

Broyde, who Newsweek named one of the nation's top rabbis last month, apologized for joining the International Rabbinic Fellowship under a fake name – Rabbi Hershel Goldwasser – about two decades ago so he and a friend could write about Jewish law (based on the Talmud) and public policy and debate in the fellowship's exclusive email group, according to AtlantaJewishNews.com.

The fellowship is considered a more liberal rival to the Rabbinical Council of America, of which Broyde is formally a member.

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From the AtlantaJewishNews.com post, which links out to a number of original sources:

Rabbi Broyde says he stopped using the pseudonym three or four years ago, but someone unknown to him has taken up the pen name.

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“It is clear to me that my conduct was inappropriate and I have regretted it for a while,” Rabbi Broyde wrote.

He also says he meant the IRF no harm, despite its rivalry with the RCA.


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