The Schulweis Institute Library Online - provides Internet access to 750+ audiotapes, videos, documents, and sermons of Rabbi Harold Schulweis.
Harold Schulweis met Malkah, his wife of 64 years, at a dance at the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York City. Their family grew to two sons, one daughter, and eleven grand-children.
In 2005, Rabbi Schuweis participated in a memorial for Roman Catholic Pope John Paul II.
Educated at Yeshiva College, New York (1945); New York University, New York, M.A. Philosophy (1950); Pacific School of Religion, Berkerly, California, Th.D. Theology; Ordination: Jewish Theological Seminary, (1950).
Often, Rabbi Schulweis was placed on Newsweek Magazine's list of influential Jewish rabbis in the United States.
In 2005, along with Archbishop Hovnan Derderian (Armenian Church of North America), Rabbi Schulweis participated in a memorial service for Jewish and Armenian genocide victims.
In 1986, Schulweis established the 'Jewish Foundation for the Righteous' to assist over "600 gentiles in 20 countries who had save Jews" during World War II.
In Encino, California, Schulweis was rabbi at Valley Beth Shalom Synagogue, a large conservative congregation.
Around 2005, Schulweis founded the 'Jewish World Watch,' which collected $2 Million annually to help African genocide survivors.