Draft:Solomon Andhil Fineberg

S. Andhil Fineberg and Solomon Fineberg should redirect here

Solomon Andhil Fineberg (November 29, 1896 - February 1990) was a rabbi, author, and Jewish community leader in the United States. He worked to combat anti-semitism and wrote five books including Overcoming Anti-Semitism in 1943, for which he won the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award in 1945. He wrote Punishment Without Crime in 1949 about fighting prejudice and promoting human relations. He also wrote Checkmate for Rabble-rousers. He recommended isolating people like Gerald L. K. Smith and George Lincoln Rockwell. He also wrote The Rosenberg Case.

Fineberg was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

He married Hilda Cohen of Baltimore, Maryland in 1925.

Books

 * Overcoming Anti-Semitism (1943)
 * Punishment without crime : what you can do about prejudice
 * Checkmate for Rabble-rousers
 * The Rosenberg Case: fact and fiction
 * Deflating the professional bigot (1960)

Other writings

 * "Biblical myth and legend in Jewish education : the presentation of Biblical myths and legends in books for Jewish religious schools", Phd. thesis Columbia University
 * By the light of chanukah, a play inthree acts
 * A Project in American Jewish history : a manual for teachers with Lee J. Levinger, Cincinnati Dept. of Synagogue and School Extension of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations (1931)