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  1. Joseph Haïm Sitruk (Hebrew: יוסף סיטרוק ‎; 16 October 1944 – 25 September 2016) was a former Chief Rabbi of France, a position he held from June 1987 to 22 June 2008. Born Joseph Sitruk in Tunis , after suffering a stroke in 2001 and recovering he added the name " Haim " to his name in line with Jewish tradition.

  2. PARIS (AP) — Joseph Sitruk, a former grand rabbi of France for more than two decades who oversaw a growth in synagogues and Jewish schools, has died after a long illness. He was 71. President Francois Hollande's office announced Sitruk's death. In a statement Sunday, Hollande praised Sitruk as a "defender of secularism" who left an indelible legacy for French Judaism.

  3. 25 de sept. de 2016 · France’s former chief rabbi, Rabbi Joseph Haim Sitruk, died Sunday at the age of 71. He had been hospitalized for several days following a stroke. Last Wednesday current chief rabbi Haim Korsia ...

  4. 27 de sept. de 2016 · Joseph Sitruk, who served as chief rabbi of France for more than two decades, has died. Sitruk died Sunday after being hospitalized for several days following a stroke, The Times of Israel ...

  5. 25 de sept. de 2016 · Rabbi Joseph Sitruk, France’s chief rabbi for 21 years at a time when harassment of Jews escalated around the country, died Sunday. He was 72. Sitruk led the French Jewish community, the world’s third largest after Israel's and America's, for three seven-year terms until 2008. During that period French Jews increasingly fell victim to ...

  6. 25 de sept. de 2016 · Né le 16 octobre 1944, à Tunis, formé à Strasbourg, d’abord grand rabbin de Marseille, Joseph Sitruk fut élu grand rabbin de France pour la première fois en 1987, réélu en 1994, puis le ...

  7. SITRUK, JOSEPH (1945– ), chief rabbi of France. Sitruk was born in Tunisia, but raised from early childhood on in Nice. His brilliant high school record seemed to indicate a career in science, but his extracurricular activities, such as those in the French Jewish scouting movement, led him to choose a career in the rabbinate instead.