From: Morris, Susan <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, November 12, 2019 10:58 AM
To: LS/ABA Staff <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Paul Maher's Obituary

ABA-Washington staff:  Beacher learned over the weekend that our treasured 
former colleague Paul Maher passed away this past May. I’m forwarding an 
obituary kindly supplied by Virginia Schoepf, former assistant chief of the 
Decimal Classification Division.

I’m forwarding this news to all members of ABA.  Supervisors don’t need to 
forward. -- Susan

From: Virginia Schoepf 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Sent: Tuesday, November 12, 2019 9:52 AM
To: Wiggins, Beacher <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: Paul's Obituary

Beacher, A friend of Paul's sent me this that he wrote about him:


Our dear friend Paul passed away on Thursday night May 15 2019. He became ill 
while staying at his hotel in Iowa City, Iowa after spending the day doing 
research at the University of Iowa’s library. Paul was doing that day what was 
his most enjoyed passtime: visiting a major research library to mine 
information and resources for a major project on Jewish biography and journal 
articles. He had worked on this for years since his retirement, and nothing 
tickled him more than finding and accessing rare documentation that could be 
included in this ongoing project.


Paul was born in 1952 in the northern town of Viola Illinois. He lived in a 
smaller town near there during childhood with six brothers and his parents. He 
finished high school in Indiana, and then went to college at Marion College 
(now Indiana Wesleyan University), graduating in 1972.


Paul grew up in a religious environment, and from an early age was fascinated 
by Biblical history, especially that of the Jewish people. He made it his 
life’s work to study Hebrew, Biblical Greek, and theology. He studied at the 
University of Dubuque Theological Seminary and the University of Michigan in 
Ann Arbor, receiving two masters degrees. He spent a year abroad during this 
time, living and studying in Israel.


He worked for some years as a specialist at University Microfilms in Ann Arbor, 
but relocated to Washington DC to take a job at the Library of Congress in the 
1980s. It soon became clear that Paul was a brilliant cataloguer, particularly 
in regards to Hebrew and Yiddish materials. He wrote “Hebraica Cataloging”,  
THE standard manual in English as a guide to cataloging Hebrew resources in 
English-language libraries. This was published by the Library and is available 
full-text for free on the web.


When Paul retired in 2002, he moved back to the area where he grew up in 
Northern Illinois, settling down in Aledo. His research continued now as his 
chief avocation. He wrote an exhaustive bibliography to the works of Donald G. 
Bloesch, a noted Catholic theolgian, who mentored Paul during his days in 
Dubuque. It was published by Scarecrow Press in 2007.


Paul relocated to Champaign-Urbana in 2011, to tap into the vast collections of 
the University of Illinois’s libraries. Its location made day trips and short 
visits to surrounding university collections easy, and Paul loved to go on 
these jaunts. Over the years he amassed an enormous database of bibliographic 
information, that he was organizing for public use by Jewish scholars. Parts of 
it were used by Professor David J. A. Clines in his epic work: “The Dictionary 
of Classical Hebrew”.


In 2016, Paul moved to Quincy IL. His research continued, now focusing on the 
university libraries within a short distance from him in Iowa and Missouri. And 
it was while on his visit to Iowa City this week, that he suffered a heart 
attack.


Paul was well-loved by his friends, who live all around the world now. He had a 
modest demeanor that might not indicate just how smart and accomplished he was. 
The same was true of his sharp wit! He laughed easily and often, and was a 
superb storyteller. He loved to talk history, politics and religion, and could 
accommodate the views of those who might disagree, without rancor. He was an 
accomplished organist and adored classical music and opera, as well as all the 
talent reality shows for unknown musicians competing on tv. He loved to cook 
for his friends, and try ethnic dishes, especially from the Middle East. He 
shared his home with beloved cats that he took in during his years in 
Baltimore/DC and then later, in Illinois. It was a lucky kitty who got to live 
with Paul!

And this was true for those who got to know him as his closest friends, as well 
as his many casual acquaintances. He was generous, fun, and kind. He will be 
missed greatly by all of us, and he left our world all too soon.

Written by Tony Skaggs

Ginnie

_______________________________________________
Heb-naco mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/heb-naco

Reply via email to