Kaim Pollák (Yiddish: חיים בן יעקב פאָללאק, romanized: Ḥayyim ben Yaʿaḳov Polaḳ; October 6, 1835 – March 28, 1905)[1] was a Hungarian writer and educator.
Pollák was born to a Jewish family in Liptó-Szent-Miklós, Hungary, where his father was a spice merchant.
In 1858 he went to Prague, where he attended Rapoport's lectures, and then taught successively at the Jewish schools in Szegzárd, Hód Mezö Vásárhely, and Alt-Ofen.
Pollák was a prolific writer, contributing to Ben Chananja [Wikidata], Magyar-Zsidó Szemle [hu], and other Hungarian Jewish journals and yearbooks.
In 1882 and 1883 Pollák edited the religious journal Jeschurun, directed mainly against the anti-Semitic writings of Rohling.