- Eric Cline (Ancient Jewish History)
- Paul Duff (Hebrew Bible)
- Robert Eisen (Jewish Thought)
- Barry Freundel (Rabbinic Judaism)
- Steven Glazer (Jewish Ethics, American Judaism)
- Edwin Hostetter (Hebrew Bible)
- Shoshana Marcus (Hebrew Language)
- Yaron Peleg (Hebrew Language and Literature)
- Linda Raphael (Modern Jewish Literature)
- Bernard Reich (Modern Israel)
- Walter Reich (International Affairs)
- Daniel Schwartz (Modern Jewish History)
- Lauren Strauss (American Jewish History)
- Max Ticktin (Hebrew and Yiddish Language and Literature)
Adjunct Lecturer, Religion
(202) 994-6325 | 2106 G Street
B.S., Yeshiva College, B.S., Erna Michael College of Hebraic Studies, M.S., Bernard Revel Graduate School, Rabbinical Ordination, REITS, Yeshiva University, Ph.D, Baltimore Hebrew University
Barry Freundel has taught courses on Rabbinics and Liturgy in the Judaic Studies Program for several years. Rabbi Freundel is rabbi to the Kesher Israel Congregation at the Georgetown Synagogue in Washington. He has been an adjunct instructor at Yeshiva University, a visiting lecturer at Albert Einstein College of Medicine's Jewish Students Group, a visiting faculty member at the New York institute of Technology, an adjunct lecturer at the University of Maryland, and is currently an Assistant Professor of Rabbinics at the Baltimore Hebrew University. Freundel's recently published book, Contemporary Orthodox Judaism's Response to Modernity (2004) addresses in succinct but penetrating, analyses 31 different topics, including Israel, prayer, Shabbat, Kashrut, teshuvah (repentance). Each chapter summarizes the legal sources and the spectrum of Orthodox opinions, including those that he or the law ultimately rejects.