Hyman G. Enelow

Hyman Gerson Enelow (October 26, 1877 – February 6, 1934) was a Russian-born American rabbi of the New York Congregation Emanu-El.

He intended to study at the University of Heidelberg, but en route he changed his mind and went to America.

Under the influence of Emil G. Hirsch and Joseph Stolz, he went to the University of Chicago prior to going to Hebrew Union College in 1895.

[3] During World War I, Enelow went to France as overseas commander and general field secretary of the National Jewish Welfare Board.

[6] In the year prior to Enelow's death, he published a rabbinic work written in about the later end of the 4th-century CE, entitled Mishnat Rabbi Eli'ezer (aka The Thirty-two Hermeneutical Principles), a work heretofore preserved in manuscript form, and cited by the author of the Midrash HaGadol.