He pursued his Jewish studies at the Veitel Heine-Ephraimsche Lehranstalt, Berlin (under Moritz Steinschneider) from 1890 to 1898, and at the Berlin Hochschule from 1894 to 1898, receiving his rabbinical diploma from the latter institution.
St. Moritz | Ernst Moritz Arndt | Moritz von Rohr | Moritz Richard Schomburgk | Johann Moritz Rugendas | Moritz von Jacobi | Moritz Steinschneider | Moritz Schiff | Moritz Pasch | Moritz Moszkowski | Moritz Michael Daffinger | Moritz Lewitt | Moritz, Landgrave of Hesse | Moritz Kaposi | Moritz Gottlieb Saphir | Moritz Eggert | Moritz College of Law | Michael Moritz | Max and Moritz | Hans Moritz von Brühl | Albert Moritz Wolff | Paulus Moritz | Moritz Wilhelm Wolf Freiherr von Beschwitz | Moritz Wagner | Moritz von Schwind | Moritz Schlick | Moritz Ludwig Frankenheim | Moritz Litten | Moritz Leuenberger | Moritz Lazarus |
In a short treatise written in Arabic (the title being probably Al-'Alam al-Saghir) and, according to Moritz Steinschneider, translated by Nahum ha-Ma'arabi into Hebrew under the title Olam Katan, he expounds his views on the most important problems of theology.