Rabbi Max Warschawski was born on July 4, 1925 in Strasbourg France. He was
orphaned from his mother when he was 8 years old. Upon his mothers death he
was cared for by a Jewish refugee family from Germany in Quatzenheim.
When Rabbi Warschawski zt”l was 10 years old, his father remarried and
he returned to his family in Strasbourg. He studied under the tutelage of Rabbi
Abraham Deutsch (1902 - 1992) at the Fustel de Coulanges College until the
outbreak of World War II.
Rabbi Max Warschawski and his family left Strasbourg the day before the deportations,
and settled in Vichy. He continued his studies in Vichy until 1941, when he
became an intern at the local ORT school. In 1942, Rabbi Max Warschawski became
the first student at Le Petit Séminaire Israélite de Limoges in
Limoges, France, which was founded by Rabbi Abraham Deutsch and trained its
students for both rabbinical ordination and academic degrees.
Rabbi Warschawki joined the sixth network of the French Resistance against the
Nazis, the Eclaireurs Israélites de France (Jewish Scouts of France)
(EIF also known as the Marc-Haguenau company) under the command of the famous
resistance organizer Marc Haguenau, (known by his code name Colombe). The EIF
was known for its activities in helping the Jews of France avoid arrest and
subsequent deportation to concentration camps by obtaining the necessary resources
to produce and distribute forged identity papers.
In 1948, Rabbi Warschawki returned to France where he became the Rabbi of Bischheim in 1948, and married Mireille Metzger. In 1950 he received a rabbinical diploma from the Seminar of Paris. Rabbi Warschawki continued his service to the Bischheim community until 1954, where he traveled to Strasbourg, to become the assistant of Chief Rabbi Abraham Deutsch.
In 1960, Rabbi Warschawki was offered the position of Chief Rabbi of Algeria.
He declined and later succeeded his life long mentor, Rabbi Abraham Deutsch and
was officially named Chief Rabbi in Strasbourg. Rabbi Warschawki concentrated
on educational activities for the youth of the city.
After his retirement, Max and Mireille Warschawski settled in Jerusalem, to be near their children and grandchildren. He became a member of Rabbis for Human Rights, and was active in promoting social justice and equality for all of the residents of the Middle East.
Rabbi Warschawski authored numerous biographies of famous Jewish Personalities, and many books, articles, audio recordings and movies on Jewish culture and tradition, and the History of the Jews in the Alsace area of France.