«While that may be interpreted by some as permission to do whatever we please towards other creatures and to the land, Professor Nahum Rakover cites the nearly century - old words of
Rav Kook giving a different, more tempered view of human's proper relationship towards nature:
During the tumultuous years between his birth in 1865 and death in 1935,
Rav Kook developed....
Not exact matches
Yehudah Mirsky's biography of Rabbi (or «
Rav») Abraham Isaac
Kook, the first Chief Rabbi of Jewish Palestine, is much more than merely an account of a long - gone historic personality.