Background
Urbach was born in Morávka, Czechoslovakian Republic to Jewish parents on September 29, 1872. His mother died when he was 7 years old. After his father remarried, Urbach was sent away from home to learn craft as a shoemaker"s apprentice.
Urbach was born in Morávka, Czechoslovakian Republic to Jewish parents on September 29, 1872. His mother died when he was 7 years old. After his father remarried, Urbach was sent away from home to learn craft as a shoemaker"s apprentice.
After Cheder, he was educated at Moses Sofers yeshiva in Bratislava.
Later he was sent to cheder in Český Těšín. After completing his studies at yeshiva, he stayed there for a time and worked as a teacher. In 1898, he enrolled at higher Master of rabbinical school in Budapest, Hungary.
Simultaneously he attended the Faculty of Philosophy in Budapest, study of comparative philology of Semitic languages, from which he graduated in 1904.
In 1906, he went to Tuzla, Bosnia and Herzegovina and worked there as a Rabbi for 5 years. Since half of the congregation were native Sephardi Jews, and another half settler Ashkenazi Jews from Austria, Urbach himself Ashkenazi held separated ceremonies at the synagogue.
In 1911, he moved to Zemun, Serbia. During World War I, Urbach was mobilized as military priest in the Austro-Hungarian Army.
After the war, he returned to Zemun.
In 1928, when Sarajevo ashkenazi congregation rabbi Samuel Vesel died, Urbach was an appointed as his successor. During World World War II, Urbach and his family found refuge in Italy, from where they moved to Lausanne in Switzerland. His valuable library was seized by Nazis and taken to Berlin for future "Museum of an Extinct Race".
After the war, Urbach returned to Sarajevo and in 1946 he was moved to Zagreb.
There he was appointed as Zagreb chief rabbi.