
Angie Irma Cohon
Angie Irma Cohon (née Reinhart, 1890-1991) was a Jewish author, poet, translator, and educator. Born to parents J.F. and Amelia (Marks) Reinhart in 1890, Cohon lived in Portland, Oregon until moving to Ohio at 19 to attend Hebrew Union College. She transferred to the University of Cincinnati, earning a bachelors degree in 1912. On June 12 of the same year she graduated, Cohon married Rabbi Samuel S. Cohon. In Chicago, they ran Temple Mizpah, with A. Irma Cohon organizing the sisterhood (Women of Mizpah) and the synagogue's religious school. A prayer pamphlet she prepared, A Brief Jewish Ritual, was published by Women of Mizpah in 1921. Cohon is best known for her contributions to the field of Jewish music in the English language. The National Council on Jewish Women published Introduction to Jewish Music in Eight Illustrated Lectures, with a second edition coming out in 1923. This work became a basis for the Council's study of music for nearly 30 years. She collaborated with Abraham Zevi Idelsohn on Harvest Festivals, A Children’s Succoth Celebration (1925).
Bnei (Bar/Bat) Mitsvah & Other Birthday Prayers | Hymn-Books & Religious poetry | Personal & Paraliturgical collections of prayers | Ḳabbalat Shabbat | Shavuot | Sukkot | Yom Kippur
American Reform Movement | confirmation | English Translation | English vernacular prayer | hymns | לכה דודי Lekhah Dodi | modern hebrew poetry | O Tag des Herrn | paraliturgical kol nidrei | Queens | Reform Jewry | rhyming translation | זמירות zemirot | 20th century C.E. | 57th century A.M.
Frederick Lucian Hosmer | Leopold Stein | Aharon N. Varady (transcription) | Felix Adler | Shlomo haLevi Al-Qabets | Women of Miẓpah | Aharon N. Varady (digital imaging and document preparation) | Israel Meir Lask (translation) | Ḥayyim Naḥman Bialik
The Pilgrim March, a hymn for Sukkot by Angie Irma Cohon (1921)
Contributed by Angie Irma Cohon | Aharon N. Varady (transcription) | ❧
“The Pilgrim March” by Angie Irma Cohon is a hymn for Sukkot published in her תפלת ישראל (Tefilat Yisrael) A Brief Jewish Ritual (Women of Miẓpah 1921), p. 22. . . .