The community was divided between Orthodox and Neolog Judaism traditions and Aaron Pressburger was the chief Orthodox rabbi.
In the era of Communist Hungary after World War II, the government forced Orthodox and Neolog organizations there into a single organizational structure, albeit with a semi-autonomous Orthodox section.
Judaism | Orthodox Judaism | Hasidic Judaism | Reform Judaism | Conservative Judaism | Haredi Judaism | Karaite Judaism | Chumash (Judaism) | Christianity and Judaism | Union for Reform Judaism | Names of God in Judaism | Modern Orthodox Judaism | Conversion to Judaism | United Torah Judaism | Neolog Judaism | German Reform movement (Judaism) | Crypto-Judaism | Consistory (Judaism) | Bereavement in Judaism | Atheist Manifesto: The Case Against Christianity, Judaism, and Islam | Zen Judaism: For You a Little Enlightenment | Tabernacle (Judaism) | Shaving in Judaism | Reform movement in Judaism | Reform Judaism (North America) | Rabbinic Judaism | orthodox Judaism | modern Orthodox Judaism | Jacob's ladder#Judaism | History of responsa in Judaism |
Schick was a leading figure in the Orthodox camp during its struggle with Neolog Judaism, which promoted moderate Reform and embraced the Magyarization policy of the government.