Seth Farber

Seth Farber is a Modern Orthodox rabbi and historian in Israel, best known for his work helping Jews navigate the Israeli religious bureaucracy.

Farber grew up in Riverdale, Bronx, New York, and is a graduate of New York University. He was ordained by the  Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary of Yeshiva University in 1991, received his Masters in  Judaic Studies from Yeshiva University in 1995, and a PhD from the Hebrew University in Jerusalem in 2000.

He was a teacher at the Maimonides School in Brookline, Massachusetts before moving to Israel.

Farber is widely-known as the founder and director of ITIM: The Jewish Life Information Center, an organization that aims to assist Israelis with the legal intricacies of  personal status—marriage, divorce, conversion, and burial—which are administered by the Ministry of Religious Affairs in a manner that often leaves  families  bewildered, overwhelmed, and resentful. Farber is widely cited in the press on the politically-fraught issues of personal status among Jews in Israel.

The New York Times called Farber a “pragmatic idealist” who believes that Orthodox Jews — including the rabbinate — and non-Orthodox Jews need to learn to “to trust each other” sufficiently to work together on difficult issues of personal status.

Farber’s great-great-great-grandfather was the pre-eminent Central European Rabbi Moshe Sofer, better known as the Hatam Sofer.