FILTERED BY:

Israel celebrated 75 years of statehood in spring 2023. At its wellspring is 3,000-plus years of Jewish peoplehood. On May 14, 1948 (5 Iyar on the Hebrew calendar, which in 2023 coincided with April 25-26), David Ben-Gurion read the Declaration of Independence in the Tel Aviv Museum. To mark the benchmark, the Center for Israel Education presents a range of enrichment opportunities to enhance understanding about the State of Israel and its evolution through Jewish history to its present headings.

Israel@75 content includes special webinars, a deep dive into the Declaration of Independence, and our Lists of 75: 75 Zionist and Israeli works of art since the 1890s, 75 Zionist Founders, 75 Israelis From History, 75 Current Israelis and 75 Non-Israelis, all of whom have contributed to the state’s past, present and future.

Augmenting these lists is the extensive Biographical Index (1885-1952) found originally in each of the 26 volumes of Chaim Weizmann’s letters, presented with permission in composite format, of those individuals who interacted with Israel’s first president over his lifetime.

When the United States turned 75 in 1851, its borders were uncertain, women couldn’t vote, and millions of people were enslaved. In its 75th year, Israel remained unfinished, clarifying its domestic identities, securing its borders, and still ingathering Jews in need and in crisis.

Israel@75 Webinars

Workshop 2023: Israel’s Economy at 75 (video, 21:15)

July 25, 2023
July 25, 2023 Economist Paul Rivlin of the Moshe Dayan Center and entrepreneur Moran Mizrahi, co-founder and COO of fintech startup Rebillia Platform, speak with CIE Vice President Tal Grinfas-David about the history of Israel’s...

Workshop 2023: Israel Between East and West (34:56)

July 25, 2023
How has Israel through its 75 years managed its relationships with superpowers, neighbors and other countries while trying to survive and thrive in an often hostile neighborhood? Why is the U.S. relationship essential? What is...

Israeli Civil Society Reactions to Judicial Overhaul Suggestions (46:27)

May 7, 2023
May 7, 2023 Firsthand Accounts of Israel’s Civil Society in Action In a 46-minute conversation recorded during the first hour of our special two-hour Israel@75 webinar and Teen Israel Leadership Institute session May 7, 2023, CIE Founding President Ken...

Stories of Israel’s Founders and the Declaration of Independence (31:47)

May 7, 2023
May 7, 2023 In a 32-minute presentation recorded during the second hour of our special two-hour Israel@75 webinar and Teen Israel Leadership Institute session May 7, 2023, Adina Karpuj, a podcast producer for Israel Story who lives in Jerusalem, talks...

Context and Consequences of Israel’s Proposed Judicial Overhaul (1:16:00)

March 30, 2023
As Israel turns 75 this spring, it is in the throes of a dynamic controversy over governance. Where might this ‘crisis’ or potential ‘political earthquake’ fit into Zionism’s history, and Israel’s tomorrows still to come?

Zionism and Us: Israeli Innovation (18:48)

February 5, 2023
Feb. 5, 2023 Dr. Rachel Schonberger, a leader in Hadassah’s medical work in Israel; Alan Wolk, the head of JNF-USA’s committee investing in innovation in Israel’s periphery; and Moran Mizrahi, a co-founder of fintech startup Rebillia Platform, join HR/staffing...

Zionism and Us: Has Zionism Succeeded? (20:40)

February 4, 2023
February 4, 2023 Center for Israel Education President Ken Stein explores the state of Zionism and the Jewish people in an in-person conversation with Rabbi Peter Berg of The Temple in Atlanta, Rabbi David Silverman of the Atlanta...

Intro to Zionism Today, Gil Troy (9:57)

Jan. 10, 2023
Professor Gil Troy, a CIE board member, lays out the continuing importance of Zionism to the Jewish people in a 10-minute video recorded Jan. 10, 2023, to help CIE mark the 75th birthday of the State of Israel.

Changes and Continuities in the Israel-Jordan Relationship (47:38)

January 31, 2023
Jan. 31, 2023 In this 48-minute webinar recorded Jan. 31, 2023, two experts on Jordan, the Washington Institute’s Ghaith al-Omari and Tel Aviv University’s Asher Susser, help CIE President Ken Stein explore more than a...

Zionist and Israeli Culture in Words, Art and Music (video, 45:00)

January 11, 2023
In this 45-minute video recorded Jan. 11, 2023, scholars of Jewish, Zionist and Israeli art, music and culture discuss how culture not only was a fundamental part of the effort to build a safe Jewish homeland, but was for many the reason behind the modern State of Israel. Featured are Dr. Arieh Saposnik, an associate professor at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev; Dr. Susan Nashman Fraiman, an instructor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem; and Dr. Eli Sperling, an Israel Institute teaching fellow at the University of Georgia. Moderating the conversation is Center for Israel Education President Dr. Kenneth Stein, professor emeritus of Middle Eastern history and political science and Israel studies at Emory University. This webinar is part of CIE’s Israel@75: A Yearlong Exploration project.

Arab-Israeli Conflict: 1945-1949 (45:57)

December 25, 2022
In this 46-minute video recorded Dec. 25, 2022, two emeritus professors from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem joined President Ken Stein to discuss the key period when the Zionists succeeded in creating and securing a...

U.S.-Israel Relations: 75 Years and On (52:03)

November 29, 2022
Join CIE’s founding president, Ken Stein, in a conversation at 5 p.m. ET on Nov. 29 with two experts in the field of U.S.-Israel relations, Aaron David Miller and Raphael Danziger, as part of CIE’s Israel@75: A Yearlong Exploration program.

The Israeli Declaration of Independence

Israel On Board: Declaration of Independence (4:48)

Israel’s Declaration of Independence which was issued by David Ben-Gurion in Tel-Aviv on May 14, 1948 was drafted by a small committee. This video highlights the similarities and differences between the Israeli and American declarations of independence and outlines the Israeli Declaration’s contents including the state’s intentions towards its citizens, the historical connection of the Jewish people to the Land of Israel, and the right of the Jewish people to determination.

Explainer Videos|May 9, 2019

A “Constitutional” Democracy

Israel, like Britain, is a parliamentary democracy, but, like Britain, Israel lacks a formal constitution. The following items show how the system works and include Israel’s proposed 1948 constitution and the Basic Laws that fill…

Issues and Analyses|March 24, 2023

Declaration Activity: A Look Back

This video, prepared as Israel approached its 73rd birthday in 2021, incorporates multiple perspectives on the previous year. Have members of your class, in small groups or collectively, create a similar video addressing the highs…

Curriculum/Syllabi|March 24, 2023

Declaration — One School’s Approach

Pressman Academy in Los Angeles, part of CIE’s Day School Initiative, has graciously shared its Megillat HaAtzmaut and accompanying, grade-specific lesson plans for exploring Israel’s Declaration of Independence at Yom Ha’Atzmaut. Reading of Megillat HaAtzmaut:…

Curriculum/Syllabi|March 24, 2023
Israel Independence Day

Israel Declares Independence

On Friday afternoon in the Tel Aviv Museum, David Ben-Gurion, chairman of the Provisional State Council, declares Israel’s independence. The United States is the first country to recognize the new and already besieged state of Israel.

The Lists of 75

These 75 people helped establish the foundations for a Jewish state in the Land of Israel between the start of the 19th century and independence in 1948. Those involved in the work of Zionism in the first half of the 20th century who went on to be important leaders of the State of Israel appear on our separate list of historical Israelis.
View 75 Zionist Founders as a PDF

75 Zionist Founders

Aaron Aaronsohn, 1876-1919

Aaronsohn, who made aliyah to Ottoman Palestine as a 6-year-old in 1882, discovered a strain of emmer wheat that could sustain itself in harsh climates. The agronomist became known worldwide, even working with the U.S….

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Sarah Aaronsohn, 1890-1917

Aaronsohn was born in Zikhron Ya’akov in Ottoman Palestine. After witnessing the Armenian genocide, she decided to help the British against the Ottomans in World War I with the Nili ring of Jewish spies, founded…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Gershon Agronsky, 1894-1959

Born in Ukraine, Agronsky immigrated to the United States. He wrote for Jewish newspapers and later for the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. In 1918 he joined Britain’s Jewish Legion in Palestine. He dived into Zionist politics…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Judah Alkalai, 1798-1878

Alkalai is credited with the idea of a national fund for Jewish land purchases. Adamant about the Jewish people returning to Eretz Yisrael, he advocated statehood in a booklet called “Shema Yisrael.” After the Damascus…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Chaim Arlosoroff, 1899-1933

Arlosoroff, an ardent socialist and Zionist, was born in Ukraine and immigrated to Palestine in 1921. He was a founder of the Histadrut labor federation. Working with the Jewish Agency, he helped negotiate the Haavara…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Yocheved Bat-Miriam, 1901-1980

Bat-Miriam, born in Belarus, is considered one of the four “mother poets” of modern Hebrew. Her 1937 book, “Eretz Yisrael,” examines the Land of Israel as a woman. She wrote many poems about biblical women…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Eliezer Ben-Yehuda, 1858-1922

Ben-Yehuda was born in Belarus and moved to Palestine in 1881. He championed the use of modernized Hebrew as an essential element of Zionism. He edited Hebrew newspapers, created the first modern Hebrew dictionary and…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Chaim Nahman Bialik, 1873-1934

Bialik, recognized as Israel’s national poet, was born in Ukraine and moved to Palestine in 1924. After interviewing survivors of the 1903 Kishinev Pogrom, he wrote “Be-Ir ha-Haregah” (“In the City of Slaughter”), in which…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Elisheva Bikhovsky, 1888-1949

Bikhovsky, one of the “four mothers” of modern Hebrew poetry, often known simply as Elisheva, wrote about Zionism and antisemitism without biblical and rabbinical references. She was drawn to Hebrew as a Russian girl and…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Nathan Birnbaum, 1864-1937

An Austrian-born journalist, activist and writer, Birnbaum coined the word “Zionism” in the late 19th century. Using the pseudonym Mathias Acher, he wrote about the sociopolitical culture of European Jewry and expanded on the ideas…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Rachel Bluwstein, 1890-1931

One of the four “founding mothers” of modern Hebrew poetry, known as Rachel the Poetess or simply Rachel, Bluwstein was born in Russia and moved to Ottoman Palestine in 1909. She wrote most of her…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Max Bodenheimer, 1865-1940

An early leader of German Zionism, Bodenheimer helped establish a Jewish bank in Ottoman Palestine and the Jewish National Fund, for which he was the first chairman. Bodenheimer corresponded with Theodor Herzl, attended the first…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Dov Ber Borochov, 1881-1917

A socialist and Labor Zionist founder from Ukraine, Borochov emphasized the poor working conditions of Jews in the Diaspora. Pulling from Marxism, he combined economic theory with nationalism. At the Seventh Zionist Congress, in response…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Yosef Haim Brenner, 1881-1921

Born in Ukraine, Brenner emerged as the leading Hebrew literary figure in Palestine in the early 20th century. He joined the Bund, a Jewish socialist movement, as a young man and became a Zionist who…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Selig Brodetsky, 1888-1954

Ukrainian-born Brodetsky engaged the Zionist movement as an undergraduate at Cambridge. He attended the Twelfth to Twenty-Third Zionist Congresses and served with the World Zionist Executive from 1928 to 1951. He was the president of…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Meir Dizengoff, 1861-1936

A native of what is now Moldova, Dizengoff became a leader with Hovevei Zion (Lovers of Zion) in Russia. He moved to Palestine in 1893 and managed a glass factory. He opposed the Uganda Plan…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Itzhak Elazari-Volcani, 1880-1955

An agronomist from Lithuania who moved to Palestine in 1908, Elazari-Volcani was a Hapoel Hatzair leader who advocated settlement by Jewish labor. He taught farming and advised the Zionist Organization and Palestine Office on agriculture….

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Akiva Ettinger, 1872-1945

Belarus-born agricultural settlement leader Ettinger encouraged Jewish families to live on the land outside capitalist society. He served as director general of the Jewish Colonization Association in South America and in a leadership role for…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Berthold Feiwel, 1875-1937

Feiwel was born in Moravia, now in the Czech Republic. He co-founded the Jewish People’s Voice in 1897 and the Jiidischer Verlag publishing house in Berlin in 1902 and served as the editor of Theodor…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Israel Friedlander, 1876-1920

A Ukrainian-born scholar, Friedlander was a commissioner for the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee. He became a U.S. Zionist leader and wrote books including “Past and Present: A Collection of Jewish Essays.” He was a…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Eliyahu Golomb, 1893-1945

Born in Belarus, Golomb settled in Palestine in 1909 and was part of the Herzliya Gymnasium’s first graduating class. A member of the Jewish Legion in World War I, he helped organize the Haganah and…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

A.D. Gordon, 1856-1922

Born in Ukraine, Gordon emerged as a leader in the nascent Zionist movement. Part of the Second Aliyah, he was the rare middle-aged, devout Jew to settle in Palestine in the early 20th century. He…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Emma Gottheil, 1862-1947

Gottheil attended the Second Zionist Congress, where Theodor Herzl invited her to translate his speech into French, Italian and English. In the United States she organized women’s study groups that were the precursors of Hadassah….

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Dov Gruner, 1912-1947

Hungarian-born Gruner joined the Betar movement and illegally immigrated to Palestine in 1940. He served in the British army’s Jewish Brigade to fight Nazis. After World War II he joined the Irgun. He was seriously…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Ahad Ha’am (Asher Ginsberg), 1856-1927

Born in Ukraine, Ahad Ha’am joined Hovevei Zion (Lovers of Zion) in Odesa and attended the First Zionist Congress but opposed political Zionism. He preferred cultural Zionism, creating a Jewish cultural center in Palestine as…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Rose Luria Halprin, 1896-1978

A two-time president of Hadassah, Halprin lived in Jerusalem in the late 1930s to serve as the Hadassah Medical Organization’s liaison during the construction of Hadassah Hospital at Mount Scopus. She spoke against violence during…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Yehoshua Hankin, 1864-1945

Hankin was born in Ukraine and moved to Palestine with his father in 1882. The Hankins were among the founders of Rishon LeZion, now one of the largest cities in Israel. Acting on behalf of…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Theodor Herzl, 1860-1904

Born in Hungary, Herzl is viewed as the father of modern political Zionism. A journalist, novelist and playwright, he embraced Zionism after reporting on Alfred Dreyfus’ trial in France. His pamphlet “Der Judenstaat” (“The Jewish…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Moses Hess, 1812-1875

Born into an Orthodox family in Germany in 1812, Hess became interested in socialism, befriended Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, and contributed to the Communist Manifesto. He recognized that German nationalism would inspire increased antisemitism….

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Bronislaw Huberman, 1882-1947

Born in the Russian-controlled Poland, Huberman toured Europe as an acclaimed violinist at age 11. He first visited the Land of Israel in 1929 and decided to bring classical music there. In 1936 he established…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Naftali Herz Imber, 1856-1909

Born in Ukraine, Imber moved to Palestine in 1882. Trained as a watchmaker, he instead became a Hebrew poet. His first poetry collection, which he published in Jerusalem in 1886, included “Tikvateinu” (“Our Hope”), which…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Ze’ev Jabotinsky, 1880-1940

A journalist born in Odesa, Jabotinsky organized self-defense units and fought for Jewish rights in Russia. He attended most Zionist Congresses from 1903 to 1933. He co-founded the Zion Mule Corps in World War I….

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Zvi Hirsch Kalischer, 1795-1874

Born in Prussia, Kalischer was an early proponent of the resettlement of the Land of Israel to strengthen the Jewish people. He contributed to Hebrew journals and wrote on the need for Diaspora Jews to…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Berl Katznelson, 1887-1944

Belarus-born Katznelson co-founded the Histadrut labor federation and advocated for labor unity to uplift Jewish workers and small landholders. Immigrating to the Land of Israel in 1909, Katznelson became involved in labor councils. He helped…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Frederick “Frank” Kisch, 1888-1943

A British brigadier general, Kisch chaired the predecessor to the Jewish Agency, the Palestine Zionist Executive, from 1918 to 1921. Kisch was prolific in Jewish life in Mandate Palestine. He helped found the Palestine Philharmonic…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Joseph Klausner, 1874-1958

A historian born in Lithuania who attended the First Zionist Congress and others, Klausner supported Ahad Ha’am’s cultural Zionism and succeeded Ha’am as the editor of Hashiloah. He immigrated in 1919 and became a Hebrew…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Abraham Isaac Kook, 1865-1935

Kook was born in Latvia and was one of the fathers of Religious Zionism. As a rabbi in London, he rallied popular support for the Balfour Declaration. After he immigrated to Palestine in 1919, Kook…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Yehudah Leib Levin, 1844-1925

A Belarus native, Levin was a Jewish Enlightenment poet who wrote in Hebrew on socialist themes. Concerned with Jewish lives in Russia, Levin wrote one of his most famous poems, “Daniyel be-gov ha-arayot” (“Daniel in…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Ephraim Moses Lilien, 1874-1925

Born in Galicia, Lilien was an art nouveau illustrator and lithographer who co-founded the Berlin Jiidischer Verlag, the premier Jewish and Zionist publishing house in Western Europe, in 1902. He highlighted Jewish themes and often…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Moshe Leib Lilienblum, 1843-1910

A scholar and author born in Lithuania, Lilienblum embraced the Hibbat Zion (Lovers of Zion) movement in Russia after the pogroms of 1881 and served as secretary of an Odesa committee on Palestine settlement. His…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Judah Magnes, 1877-1948

Born in the San Francisco Bay area, Magnes was ordained as a rabbi in 1900 and helped found such U.S. organizations as the American Jewish Committee and American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee. An advocate of…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Hannah Maisel-Shohat, 1890-1972

Maisel-Shohat was born in Belarus, where she was jailed for Zionist activities. She studied and trained for agriculture before moving in 1909 to Palestine, where she advocated women’s roles in farming and started agricultural institutions…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Haim Margalit-Kalvarisky, 1868-1947

Margalit-Kalvarisky was an agronomist who purchased tracts in the Galilee and served as an administrator for the Jewish Colonization Association. He advised the British authorities and served in the Yishuv leadership in the 1920s. He…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Samuel Mohilever, 1824-1898

Born in Lithuania and ordained at the Volozhin yeshiva, Mohilever was a founder of the Hovevei Zion (Lovers of Zion) movement in Russia and served as its president in the 1880s. He helped launch Religious…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Moses Montefiore, 1784-1885

Montefiore was an English entrepreneur and philanthropist who visited Ottoman Palestine seven times. Deeply affected religiously by his first visit, he financed Jewish land purchases, settlements, industry, education and health there and directed money bequeathed…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Leo Motzkin, 1867-1933

Born in Ukraine, Motzkin joined the Russian-Jewish Academic Society at the University of Berlin, a forerunner of political Zionism. At the First Zionist Congress he helped formulate the Basel Program for achieving a Jewish home…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Max Nordau, 1849-1923

Born in Budapest, Nordau was a physician and writer. In 1883 he had his greatest publishing success with “The Conventional Lies of Our Civilization,” which attacked organized religion and other institutions. In the 1890s he…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Leon Pinsker, 1821-1891

Pinsker was born in Russian-ruled Poland. He advocated full Jewish emancipation and joined the assimilationist Society for the Promotion of Culture Among the Jews of Russia, but pogroms in 1871 and 1881 pushed him to…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Roza Pomerantz-Meltzer, 1880-1934

The first female member of the Polish Parliament, Pomerantz-Meltzer represented a Zionist party. She supported Zionist youth groups and founded the Zionist Jewish Women’s Circle. She attended the Tenth Zionist Congress in 1911 and was…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Esther Raab, 1894-1981

Considered one of the four mothers of modern Hebrew poetry, Raab was the only one born in the Land of Israel. She was the child of one of Petah Tikvah’s founding couples. Her poems celebrated…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Isaac Jacob Reines, 1839-1915

A Lithuanian Orthodox rabbi born in Belarus, Reines was one of the earliest leaders of Religious Zionism, supported an unsuccessful effort to establish a settlement mixing Torah and labor in the early 1890s, and founded…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Baron Edmond James de Rothschild, 1845-1934

A member of the French banking family, Rothschild was a leading proponent of the Zionist movement and, beginning in 1882, provided decisive financial assistance to Jewish settlements such as Rishon LeZion, Zichron Ya’akov and Rosh…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Alexander Rubowitz, 1929-1947

Rubowitz was a member of the underground militant group Lehi (the Stern Gang) who disappeared from Rehavia in Jerusalem while carrying propaganda and became a Zionist martyr. Part of Brit Hashmonaim, a religious youth group…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Arthur Ruppin, 1876-1943

Ruppin was a German Jew sent to Palestine in 1907 to assess the Jewish community and potential of Zionist settlement. He opened the Zionist Organization’s Palestine office and became the chief land agent. He was…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Pinhas Rutenberg, 1879-1942

Rutenberg was born in Russia and devoted himself to the Russian revolutions of the early 20th century. After realizing that antisemitism remained potent in European politics, he immigrated to Palestine. During the British Mandate, he…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Myriam Schach, 1867-1956

Schach, a Frenchwoman, joined the Hibbat Zion (Lovers of Zion) movement. She attended all the Zionist Congresses through the 1920s and was a forceful speaker. She supported Theodor Herzl and criticized his rivals for not…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Zvi Hermann Schapira, 1840-1898

Lithuanian-born Schapira was a math professor at the University of Heidelberg. He first proposed creating what became the Jewish National Fund to purchase and develop land in Palestine. At the First Zionist Congress in 1897…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Boris Schatz, 1866-1932

Born into a religious family in Lithuania, Schatz pursued a career as an artist. In 1903 he met Theodor Herzl and became a staunch Zionist. He received support from the Seventh Zionist Congress in 1905…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Hannah Senesh, 1921-1944

Senesh, a native of Hungary, became a martyr and inspiration to generations of soldiers. She was a poet best known for “Eli Eli” (“Oh, God, My God”) who immigrated to Palestine in 1939. A Haganah…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Enzo Sereni, 1905-1944

An Italian Zionist, Sereni was a member of the British army’s Jewish Brigade in World War II. He assisted in getting Jews out of Germany, distributed anti-fascist materials in Egypt and worked with the Youth…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Moshe Smilansky, 1874-1953

Smilansky was born into a farming family in Ukraine and urged agricultural labor to renew the Jewish people. He joined the First Aliyah in the 1890s. He helped launch and led the moshav movement and…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Peretz Smolenskin, 1842-1885

Born into poverty in Russia, Smolenskin emerged as a prominent Hebrew writer and early proponent of the Zionist movement during the 19th century. His novels depicting Jewish life conveyed his political ideas and social grievances….

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Nahum Sokolow, 1859-1936

Born in Poland, Sokolow was a prolific writer and journalist, including a Hebrew newspaper in Warsaw and books on geography and antisemitism. He translated Theodor Herzl’s “Altneuland” into Hebrew as “Tel Aviv,” providing the city’s…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Avraham Stern, 1907-1942

Born in Russian-ruled Poland, Stern immigrated to Mandate Palestine in 1925. After serving in the Haganah, he joined the militant underground Irgun in 1932. He broke from the Irgun in 1940 to form Lehi, a…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Nahum (Nachman) Syrkin, 1868-1924

Born in Belarus, Syrkin joined Hovevei Zion (Lovers of Zion) in high school. He was one of the earliest proponents of Labor Zionism, which called for the establishment of a socialist-Jewish state in the Land…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Henrietta Szold, 1860-1945

Baltimore native Szold co-founded Hadassah, was its first president from 1912 to 1926, and led its establishment of health care infrastructure in Palestine. In 1896, before Theodor Herzl published “The Jewish State,” she described her…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Shaul Tchernichovsky, 1875-1943

Ukraine-born Tchernichovsky was a physician and one of the great poets working in modern Hebrew. Drawn to Zionism and modern Hebrew in the 1890s, he didn’t settle in Mandate Palestine until 1931, when a contract…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Jacob Thon, 1880-1950

A founder of the Jewish National Council in pre-state Palestine, Thon with Arthur Ruppin founded the kibbutz in the Beit Shean Valley. Born in Poland, he immigrated to Palestine in 1907 and worked as the…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Joseph Trumpeldor, 1880-1920

Trumpeldor lost an arm in the Russo-Japanese War and was the most decorated Jewish soldier in the Russian army. He led immigrants to Palestine to be farmers in 1911. During World War I, he helped…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Yechiel Tschlenow, 1863-1918

Ukraine-born Tschlenow was a physician and speaker for the Zionist cause who vocalized support for major land purchases in Palestine. He led the walkout from the Sixth Zionist Congress after it voted to support the…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Menachem Ussishkin, 1863-1941

Born in Belarus, Ussishkin was a Labor Zionist leader who rejected the Uganda Plan and any other suggestions for a Jewish home outside the Land of Israel. He was a founder of BILU and the…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Orde Wingate, 1903-1944

A British army officer, Wingate was sent to Palestine in 1936 to counter Arab violence against the British and Jews. A fundamentalist Christian who embraced the prophetic vision of a Jewish return to Israel, he…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

David Wolffsohn, 1856-1914

Wolffsohn was born in Lithuania and became active in Zionist affairs as a businessman in Cologne, Germany. In 1893 he established the Cologne Association for the Development of Agriculture in the Land of Israel. He…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

David Yellin, 1864-1941

Yellin co-founded and led the Hebrew Language Committee and the Teachers Union. He also founded a Hebrew teachers college now named after him. He helped modernize Hebrew and published a dictionary in 1920. He held…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Israel Zangwill, 1864-1926

Born in London, Zangwill was a journalist, humorist, novelist and dramatist. He introduced Theodor Herzl to Joseph Chamberlain, who proposed the Uganda Plan. When the Seventh Zionist Congress in 1905 rejected that idea to settle…

Biographies|August 11, 2022

Though they may have played important roles in helping Israel achieve statehood, these 75 people deserve recognition for what they did after Israel’s Declaration of Independence on May 14, 1948. Everyone on this list either is dead or has largely retired from the area of greatest influence. Those still playing an active role in shaping Israel appear on our separate list of current essential Israelis. Those whose greatest influence came before statehood appear on our list of Zionist founders.
View 75 Israelis From History as a PDF

75 Israelis From History

S.Y. Agnon, 1887-1970

Known by the acronym Shai, Agnon became Israel’s first Nobel laureate when he received the literature prize in 1966. No other Hebrew writer has won the Nobel in literature. Born in Galicia, now part of…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Reuven Alcalay, 1907-1976

A Jerusalem native, Alcalay was a lexicographer best known for his “The Complete Hebrew-English Dictionary,” which was popular for its colloquial style. He also wrote “The Hebrew Lexicon of Foreign Words and Phrases.” He was…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Yigal Allon, 1918-1980

Allon led the Palmach and was an IDF major general who oversaw the Southern Command. He served in the Knesset from 1955 until his death. After the 1967 war, he proposed returning the West Bank…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Shulamit Aloni, 1928-2014

Founder of the Meretz party, Aloni was known for advocating for peace and for human and civil rights, especially as a voice for women and against Orthodox control of society. She fought in the Palmach…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Natan Alterman, 1910-1970

A Warsaw native who moved to Tel Aviv as a teen, Alterman was a playwright, poet, journalist and translator who influenced Labor Zionism and socialist Jewish policies despite never holding political office. He opposed martial…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Yehuda Amichai, 1924-2000

Born in Germany, Amichai immigrated to Mandatory Palestine in 1935 and became one of Israel’s best-known poets and the poet laureate of Jerusalem. He fought for the British in World War II, then with the…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Aharon Appelfeld, 1932-2018

Born in a part of Romania that is now in Ukraine, Appelfeld was a writer and professor who survived the Holocaust as a child after escaping a concentration camp. He reached the Land of Israel…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Gabriel Baer, 1919-1982

Baer, who escaped Germany in 1933, was a scholar of the social history of the modern Middle East, particularly Egypt, as well as the late Ottoman Empire. As a Hebrew University professor in African and…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Aharon Barak, 1936-

Lithuania-born Barak was a 28-year Supreme Court justice who served as the president of the court from 1995 to 2006. He lifted restrictions on individual petitions to the court and strengthened the judiciary’s authority to…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Salo Wittmayer Baron, 1895-1989

Born in Poland, Baron emerged as one of the greatest Jewish historians of the 20th century. He opposed the “lachrymose conception of Jewish history,” which focused on Jewish suffering. Baron’s “Social and Religious History of…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Shulamit Bat-Dori, 1904-1985

Born in Warsaw and known as Mita, Bat-Dori immigrated to the Land of Israel in 1923 and brought theater to kibbutzim as an actress, playwright and theater director. Her plays targeted political issues, such as…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Menachem Begin, 1913-1992

Born in Belarus, Begin joined the Revisionist Betar movement and escaped Nazis and Soviets to reach Palestine. He led the Irgun, then spent three decades in the political opposition, including arguing against German reparations. In…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Dorit Beinisch, 1942-

Beinisch became the first female president of the Supreme Court in 2006 after serving over 10 years as a justice. She also was the first woman to serve as state attorney, the highest nonpolitical role…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

David Ben-Gurion, 1886-1973

Ben-Gurion was Israel’s first prime minister and its leading political force for two decades. Born in Poland, he arrived in Palestine in 1907. He formed socialist-leaning Mapai, the dominant political party, in 1930 and became…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Miriam Ben-Porat, 1918-2012

A native of Belarus who grew up in Lithuania and made aliyah in 1936, Ben-Porat in 1977 became the first woman appointed to the Israeli Supreme Court and the first to serve on the highest…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Yitzhak Ben-Zvi, 1884-1963

Before becoming Israel’s second and longest-serving president in 1952, Ukraine-born Ben-Zvi co-founded Yishuv self-defense groups Bar Giora and Hashomer. He became a Poalei Zion leader after immigrating to Palestine in 1907. He was prominent in…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Mordechai Bentov, 1900-1985

Born in Poland, Bentov was a writer and Knesset member who immigrated to Palestine in 1920. He founded the Mapam newspaper Al Hamishmar. He attended Zionist Congresses and was part of the Jewish Agency‘s U.N….

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Martin Buber, 1878-1965

Born in Austria, philosopher Buber spoke at the Third Zionist Congress on behalf of education over propaganda to win Zionist support. He edited the Zionist weekly Die Welt for a year but left because he…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Eli Cohen, 1924-1965

Israel’s most famous spy, Cohen infiltrated the Syrian government in the 1960s. Born in Egypt to Syrian Jewish parents, he applied his language skills to pretend to be businessman Kamel Amin Thaabet. He befriended top…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Moshe Dayan, 1915-1981

Known for the patch he wore after losing his left eye in World War II, Dayan was a military leader and politician. As a field commander, IDF chief of staff and defense minister, he helped…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Edis De Philippe, 1912-1979

A New York-born opera singer, De Philippe founded the Israel National Opera Company in 1947. She settled in Palestine after World War II and performed with the Palestine Folk Opera in 1945 and for the…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Abba Eban, 1915-2002

A native of Cape Town, South Africa, who was raised in England and made aliyah in 1944, Eban was a diplomat, politician and writer. With the Jewish Agency’s U.N. delegation, he was heavily involved in…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Arik Einstein, 1939-2013

Einstein has been called the most important man in Israeli music. Combining folk and rock, Einstein’s music has been celebrated since his first album in 1960 and still influences pop. He introduced rock to Israel,…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Shmuel Eisenstadt, 1923-2010

Warsaw-born Eisenstadt was an internationally acclaimed sociologist noted for enhancing understanding of cultures and civilizations. Aside from guest professorships, he spent his career at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, including time as department chairman and…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Eliahu Elath, 1903-1990

A Ukraine-born journalist, politician and diplomat, Elath arrived in the Land of Israel in 1924, joined the Jewish Agency in 1934, and became Israel’s first ambassador to the United States and, when the diplomatic post…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Levi Eshkol, 1895-1969

Eshkol, Israel’s third prime minister, was a farm worker after arriving from Ukraine in 1914. He organized labor and became a Mapai and Jewish Agency leader. He raised money for arms and for immigrant absorption….

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Amir Gilboa, 1917-1984

Ukraine-born Gilboa was one of Israel’s leading poets, winning the Bialik and Israel prizes. His poems incorporated a biblical theme of moral ambiguity and reflected his experience as a soldier in World War II with…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Leah Goldberg, 1911-1970

Raised in Lithuania, Goldberg settled in Tel Aviv in 1935 and became a Hebrew poet, literary translator, and author of children’s books and plays. She referenced the effects of World War II on Jews in…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Gila Goldstein, 1947-2017

A singer, actress, and advocate for trans and gay rights, Goldstein in 1960 was the first trans Israeli woman to have sanctioned sex reassignment surgery. She co-founded the nonprofit organization Aguda in 1975 to help…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Leah Gottlieb, 1918-2012

Gottlieb, who escaped the Holocaust in Hungary, was world-renowned and known as the “queen of Israeli fashion” for her swimsuit designs for Gottex, the textile company she created with her husband, Armin. The couple tried…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Abraham Granot, 1890-1962

Moldova-born Granot (originally Granovsky) led the Jewish National Fund in expanding land purchases during the British Mandate. As JNF director-general starting in 1940, he led settlement and forestry initiatives. A signatory of the Declaration of…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Gideon Hausner, 1915-1990

As Israel’s attorney general from 1960 to 1963, Poland-born Hausner successfully prosecuted Adolf Eichmann in 1961 for his crimes against humanity and the Jewish people during the Holocaust. Hausner persuaded the court to sentence Eichmann…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Ofra Haza, 1957-2000

Born into a Yemeni family in Tel Aviv, singer Haza helped popularize Mizrahi culture. Her song “Ga’agu’im” (“Yearning”) launched her career in 1973. She was Israel’s Singer of the Year from 1980 to 1983 and…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Chaim Herzog, 1918-1997

A politician, lawyer, diplomat and writer who immigrated from Ireland to Israel in 1935, Herzog was Israel’s sixth president. He led IDF military intelligence after the War of Independence. When the U.N. General Assembly passed…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Eliezer Hoofien, 1881-1957

Born in Holland, Hoofien was the president of Bank Leumi L’Yisrael when it issued Israel’s first non-British currency. He arrived in Ottoman Palestine in 1912 to help run the Anglo-Palestine Bank, which financed land purchases…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

David Horowitz, 1899-1979

Horowitz, who was born in Galicia and immigrated to Palestine in 1920, helped organize the state economy as the first director-general of Israel’s Finance Ministry. He founded the Bank of Israel in 1954 and was…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Eli Hurvitz, 1932-2011

Hurvitz, who was born in Jerusalem, in 1976 merged three companies, including one where he started working while attending the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, into Teva Pharmaceuticals. It became the world’s largest manufacturer of generic…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Salim Joubran, 1947-2024

Joubran, a Maronite Christian born in Haifa, was the first Arab with a permanent seat on the Israeli Supreme Court, serving from 2004 to 2017 after a temporary appointment in 2003. He was often on…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Eliezer Kaplan, 1891-1952

A native of Minsk in present-day Belarus, Kaplan was an active Socialist Zionist before immigrating to Palestine in 1919. He served as the treasurer of the Jewish Agency and a member of the Zionist Executive…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Jacob Katz, 1904-1998

Awarded the Israel Prize in 1980, modern Israeli historian Katz was a leading figure in Jewish social studies as a Hebrew University professor. He used rabbinical sources for books such as 1970’s “Freemasons and Jews”…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Ephraim Kishon, 1924-2005

A Holocaust survivor from Hungary, Kishon was a columnist, playwright and film director. His satirical work portrayed social and political issues, often focusing on the day-to-day struggles of regular people or on the state bureaucracy….

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Israel Kolatt, 1927-2007

Kolatt was a professor of the New Yishuv at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Israel Goldstein professor emeritus of the history of Zionism. His books and articles address such topics as the organization…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Teddy Kollek, 1911-2007

Kollek was Jerusalem’s mayor from 1965 to 1993 and, after the city’s 1967 reunification, helped develop it into a modern metropolis with a vision for coexistence and religious protection. Born in Hungary, he was named…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Moshe Levinger, 1935-2015

Jerusalem native Levinger was a leader in the settler movement. He brought 30 families to a Hebron hotel in June 1968 to demand and win the right to establish the first permanent Jewish presence in…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Sarah Levy-Tanai, 1910-2005

One of Israel’s foremost choreographers and a 1973 Israel Prize winner, Levy-Tanai also produced plays and drew inspiration from her Mizrahi roots in her art. A Jerusalem native who was largely raised in orphanages, she…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Ehud Manor, 1941-2005

Manor was a singer, songwriter, and TV and radio host. He wrote more than 1,200 songs, including the 1978 Eurovision winner, “A-Ba-Ni-Bi.” Many songs reacted to events such as the June 1967 war and the…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Golda Meir, 1898-1978

Born in Ukraine and raised in Wisconsin, Meir rose in Labor Zionism with the Histadrut and engaged in diplomacy for the Jewish Agency and Israel, including trying to keep Transjordan out of the 1948 war…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Yoni Netanyahu, 1946-1976

The older brother of Benjamin, Netanyahu was a military legend and the assault commander of the elite Sayeret Matkal commandos. A New York native who fought in the June 1967 war, he joined Sayeret Matkal…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Ehud Olmert, 1945-

Olmert, a 10-year Jerusalem mayor, served as Israel’s 12th prime minister from 2006 to 2009, taking office for Kadima after Ariel Sharon’s stroke and resigning amid charges of bribery and obstruction of justice, for which…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Shaike Ophir, 1928-1987

A Palmach veteran of the War of Independence, Ophir was a comedian, actor and singer for whom the Israeli Film Academy Award was named. He starred in almost 30 films, including the Hebrew version of…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Amos Oz, 1939-2018

Oz was a journalist, a novelist and one of the first Israeli intellectuals to endorse a two-state solution through his 1967 article “Land of Our Forefathers.” He was a frequent critic of Israel’s military policies…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Shimon Peres, 1923-2016

Peres is the only Israeli to serve as prime minister and president. Born in Belarus, he arrived in Palestine in 1934. He helped establish and arm the initial IDF in the 1940s and launched a…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Yehoshua Porath, 1938-2019

Porath specialized in the history of Palestinian nationalism as a professor of Islamic and Middle Eastern studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His books include “Palestine Jewry and the Arab Question, 1917-1925” and “In…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Yitzhak Rabin, 1922-1995

Rabin was a two-time prime minister whose assassination shattered hopes for peace under the Oslo Accords, for which he shared the 1994 Nobel Peace Prize with Shimon Peres and Yasser Arafat. He also signed a…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Gideon Rafael, 1913-1999

Berlin-born Rafael made a career in diplomacy after time as a soldier with the Haganah and the British. He was part of the Jewish Agency‘s U.N. delegation in 1947, was a founder of the Foreign…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Ilan Ramon, 1954-2003

Israel’s first astronaut, Ramon was an air force colonel and pilot who flew in Operation Opera, which destroyed Iraq’s nuclear reactor in 1981. He was one of the seven crew members aboard the space shuttle…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Hanna Rovina, 1888-1980

Called “the high priestess of the Hebrew theater” by a fellow actor, Belarus-born Rovina got her start onstage in Moscow with what became Israel’s national theater, Habimah. She was best known for playing Leah in…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Pinhas Sapir, 1906-1975

Labor Party politician Sapir played a vital role in the development of the Israeli economy. Born in Poland as Pinhas Kozlowski, he immigrated to the Land of Israel in 1929. He served in the Cabinet…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Gershom Scholem, 1897-1982

A brilliant scholar of Jewish mysticism and messianism, Berlin-born Scholem arrived in the Land of Israel in 1923 after completing his doctorate and taught at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where he was the first…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Yitzhak Shamir, 1915-2012

Belarus-born Shamir was the seventh prime minister, serving two terms between 1983 and 1992. He was a Lehi leader during the British Mandate. As a Likud prime minister, he approved Operation Solomon to airlift in…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Moshe Sharett, 1894-1965

The first foreign minister and second prime minister of Israel, Ukraine-born Sharett (originally Shertok) was a signer of the Declaration of Independence and one of the key negotiators of cease-fire agreements that ended the War…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Ariel Sharon, 1928-2014

Sharon led IDF commandos in the 1950s, was a field commander in 1967 and drove the Sinai counteroffensive in 1973. As defense minister, he launched the First Lebanon War, which resulted in an 18-year occupation,…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Naomi Shemer, 1930-2004

Singer-songwriter Shemer was considered the “first lady of Israeli song.” She wrote “Jerusalem of Gold” (“Yerushalayim Shel Zahav”) for the 1967 Israel Song Festival, and it became the anthem for a united Jerusalem after the…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Reuven Shiloah, 1909-1959

Born in Jerusalem, Shiloah was the founding director of the Mossad, Israel’s intelligence agency. His support of the British military during World War II included planning Hannah Senesh‘s mission. Before independence he obtained the Arab…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Moshe Sneh, 1909-1972

Sneh was a left-wing Knesset member from 1949 to 1972, mostly with the Communist Maki party. Born in Poland, Sneh was a founder of the General Zionists in 1935 and a doctor with the Polish…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Yosef Sprinzak, 1885-1959

Originally from Moscow, Sprinzak was the first speaker of the Knesset, a position he held until his death. He was interim president after Chaim Weizmann died. After immigrating to Palestine during the Second Aliyah, Sprinzak…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Chaim Topol, 1935-2023

Born in Tel Aviv, Topol was an actor, singer and comedian best known for playing Tevye on the stage and screen in “Fiddler on the Roof.” He received Oscar and Tony nominations and won two…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Ephraim Urbach, 1912-1991

Urbach was a religion scholar and rabbi whose seminal work, The Sages, focused on the evolution of Jewish religious and social thought. A native of Poland, Urbach studied in Rome and Breslau before immigrating to…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Zerach Warhaftig, 1906-2002

Belarus-born Warhaftig persuaded Japanese diplomat Chiune Sugihara to issue 3,500 visas for Jews fleeing Lithuania at the start of World War II, then escaped to Canada via Japan. He reached the Land of Israel in…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Yosef Weitz, 1890-1972

Born in Ukraine, Weitz moved to Palestine in 1908 and became a leader in efforts to acculturate immigrants through agricultural labor. He helped found the Galilee’s Yavniel moshav and Jerusalem’s Beit Hakerem neighborhood. Starting in…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Ezer Weizman, 1924-2005

Weizman, the nephew of Chaim Weizmann, was Israel’s seventh president from 1993 to 2000. He was a founder of the Israeli Air Force and became its commander in 1958. As defense minister in the first…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Chaim Weizmann, 1874-1952

Weizmann, a native of Russian-controlled Poland, was the first president of Israel. In England during World War I, he used his chemistry skills to develop a synthetic process for making acetone and thus made relationships…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Yigael Yadin, 1917-1984

Yadin was a military commander and an archaeologist. He led the Negev campaign against the Egyptians in the War of Independence and served as the second IDF chief of staff from 1949 to 1952. He…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

A.B. Yehoshua, 1936-2022

A part of the new wave of Israeli authors, Yehoshua wrote short stories, novels and plays, including “The Lover,” “The Tunnel” and “A Tale of Two Zionists.” He received international literary awards ranging from the…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

Ovadia Yosef, 1920-2013

Born in Baghdad, Yosef in 1984 founded Shas, an Orthodox Sephardi political party. He exerted authority within the party and backed government funding for the poor and Orthodox. An important Talmudic scholar, he served as…

Biographies|August 31, 2022

It’s impossible to pick 75 people to represent all aspects of a state of more than 9 million people, let alone to pick the 75 most important or most influential people, but these diverse 75 are Israelis worth knowing across a range of fields to gain a better understanding of the current State of Israel.
View 75 Israelis Today as a PDF

75 Israelis Today

Mansour Abbas, 1974-

Abbas is a dentist who lives in the Galilee town of Maghar. Since 2019, he has served in the Knesset as the head of the Islamist party Ra’am. After Ra’am broke from the Joint List…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Chava Alberstein, 1946-

Singer-songwriter-musician Alberstein is a native of Poland who moved to Israel with her family in 1950. She has released more than 60 albums, recording in Hebrew, English and Yiddish, and is one of Israel’s most…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Ghassan Alian, 1972-

A major general since 2021, Alian is the highest-ranking Druze officer in the IDF. He commanded COGAT, the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories, during the 2023-2025 war with Hamas and thus oversaw aid…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Doron Almog, 1951-

Almog, a retired IDF major general, was unanimously nominated in June 2022 to serve a four-year term as the chairman of the Jewish Agency for Israel, succeeding Isaac Herzog. A paratrooper, Almog was the first…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Ruth Almog, 1936-

Born in Petah Tikvah to German Jewish immigrants, Almog is considered one of the most important writers in Hebrew literature. Trained as a teacher, she published her first story in 1967 and first novel, The…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Yael Arad, 1967-

A Tel Aviv native and entrepreneur, Arad is the first Israeli to win an Olympic medal, taking a silver in judo at the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona. She dedicated her medal to the 11 Israelis…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Linoy Ashram, 1999-

A native of Rishon LeZion, Ashram won gold in the rhythmic gymnastics all-around at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021. She also won the European all-around in 2020 and captured 11 world championship medals in her…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Robert Aumann, 1930-

Aumann is an Israeli-American mathematician who shared the Nobel Memorial Prize in economics in 2005 for his game theory analysis of conflict and cooperation. His family escaped Germany two weeks before Kristallnacht. A Religious Zionist,…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Deni Avdija, 2001-

Avdija, the son of an Israeli Jewish mother who was an athlete and a Kosovo-born Israeli Muslim who was a professional basketball player, is a small forward for the NBA’s Washington Wizards, who drafted him…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Shlomo Avineri, 1933-2023

Avineri, a native of Poland, was one of Israel’s premier political scientists as a Hebrew University professor and wrote extensively on the history of political philosophy, including Marx, Engels, Hegel, Zionism, colonialism and the Soviet…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Mira Awad, 1975-

An Arab Christian from the Galilee, Awad is a star singer and actress. She was educated in Tel Aviv before moving to Tel Aviv. In 2009 she became the first Arab and Christian to represent…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Ehud Barak, 1942-

As Israel’s 10th prime minister and last from the Labor Party from 1999 to 2001, Barak ended the occupation of southern Lebanon, participated in the 2000 Camp David talks, was rebuffed by Yasser Arafat in…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Netta Barzilai, 1993-

Barzilai, who performs mononymously as Netta, won the Eurovision Song Contest in 2018 with “Toy,” making her the fourth Israeli victor. She first gained fame by winning Season 5 of reality competition “HaKokhav HaBa.” Barzilai’s…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Naftali Bennett, 1972-

Israel’s 13th prime minister, Bennett was born in Haifa to U.S. immigrants. He was an IDF Sayeret Matkal commando and a software entrepreneur. He became the leader of the settler-supported Jewish Home party in 2012…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Orna Berry, 1949-

A computer scientist and tech entrepreneur, Berry has been a driver of innovation and received Ben-Gurion University’s 2012 Yakirat Ha’Negev award for excellence in technology. In 1996 she became the first female chief scientist at…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Tal Brody, 1943-

New Jersey native Brody was a first-round NBA draft pick out of the University of Illinois in 1965, but after visiting Israel for the first time that summer for the Maccabiah Games, he decided to…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

David Broza, 1952-

Haifa native Broza is one of Israel’s most successful and influential musicians, including Spanish-style guitar playing learned during his time in Madrid. His first hit was “Yihyeh Tov” (“It Will Be Good”) in 1977. He…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Omri Casspi, 1988-

Casspi was the first Israeli-born first-round NBA draft pick and player. He made his professional basketball debut for Maccabi Tel Aviv in 2005 at age 17. The Sacramento Kings drafted him 23rd overall in 2009,…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Aaron Ciechanover, 1947-

Ciechanover shared the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 2004 with Israeli Avram Hershko and Jewish American Irwin Rose for showing the role of the protein ubiquitin in breaking down other proteins in cells. He was…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Dani Dayan, 1955-

An Argentina native who moved to Israel at 15, Dayan founded the information technology company Elad Systems. He gained prominence as a leader of the Yesha Council, the organization of West Bank settlers. His role…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Artem Dolgopyat, 1997-

A Ukraine native who moved to Israel at 12, Dolgopyat won the artistic gymnastics gold medal for floor exercise at the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo. He also won gold in the event at the…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Karine Elharrar, 1977-

Elharrar became Israel’s minister of infrastructure, energy and water at the formation of the coalition government led by Naftali Bennett in 2021. She had been a member of the Knesset from the Yesh Atid party…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Michelle Cohen Farber, 1971-

Farber studied the Talmud at Bar-Ilan University and graduated from the Midreshet Lindenbaum’s scholars program for women. Without the option to be an Orthodox rabbi, she uses the title rabbanit and advocates for more women…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Maxine Fassberg, 1953-

Named one of CNN’s “10 Most Powerful Women in Tech” in 2010, Fassberg immigrated from South Africa in 1975, rose to become CEO of Intel Israel and retired in 2016 after 33 years with the…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Gal Fridman, 1975-

Fridman was the first Israeli to win an Olympic gold medal, which he earned in windsurfing in Athens in 2004 after taking the bronze in Atlanta in 1996. He also was the first Israeli to…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Gal Gadot, 1985-

Born in Rosh Haayin and crowned Miss Israel at 18, Gadot served in the military and became a model, singer and martial artist. She has emerged as one of the world’s most recognized actresses, first…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Benny Gantz, 1959-

Gantz was a paratrooper who rose to serve as the chief of the IDF general staff from 2011 to 2015. He entered politics by launching Israel Resilience in late 2018, then merged it into Blue…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Eilam Gross, 1960-

Gross is a physicist at the Weizmann Institute of Science. Searching for the Higgs boson, known as the “God particle,” Gross applied machine learning in particle physics to help develop the ATLAS detector. As a…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

David Grossman, 1954-

A Jerusalem native, Grossman is one of Israel’s most prolific and most acclaimed writers. His books have been translated into more than 30 languages. His 2017 novel, “A Horse Walks Into a Bar,” received the…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Sarit Hadad, 1978-

Hadad is one of Israel’s most popular singers. She was a 2002 Eurovision contestant and was Israeli Music TV’s Best Female Singer of the 2000s. She was a judge on “The Voice Israel” and was…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Shalom Hanoch, 1946-

Singer and composer Hanoch is considered the father of Israeli rock and is known for poetic lyrics. Born on Kibbutz Mishmarot, he began writing songs at 14 and joined the army band during his military…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Esther Hayut, 1953-

Hayut is the Israeli Supreme Court’s president, a post she is due to hold until October 2023. The Jerusalem Post says she could be Israel’s most influential chief justice since Aharon Barak by reasserting the…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Avram Hershko, 1937-

A native of Hungary who immigrated to Israel in 1950, Hershko led the biochemistry department at the Technion. He and colleague Aaron Ciechanover became the first Israelis to win a Nobel Prize in the natural…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Isaac Herzog, 1960-

Herzog has served as the 11th president of Israel since July 2021. His father, Chaim Herzog, also served as president, and grandfather Yitzhak HaLevi Herzog was the chief rabbi of Ireland. A Tel Aviv native,…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Dana International, 1969-

International, whose real name is Sharon Cohen, is a pop singer and former drag performer. She became Israel’s third Eurovision Song Contest winner with “Diva” in 1998. She released her first album in 1993, the…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Dalia Itzik, 1952-

The first female speaker of the Knesset from 2006 to 2009, Itzik was a teacher who began her political career as the chair of the Jerusalem Teachers Union for five years. She was elected to…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Morris Kahn, 1930-

Kahn is a tech and media entrepreneur, investor, philanthropist, and one of Israel’s richest men. A native of South Africa, he immigrated to Israel in 1956. He founded Amdocs, the Aurec Group, Golden Pages and…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Daniel Kahneman, 1934-

Kahneman is an author and emeritus professor of behavioral psychology at Princeton who shared the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics in 2002 for his work on prospect theory, which explores how people make decisions under…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Gadeer Kamal-Mreeh, 1984-

A lifelong resident of the Druze village of Daliyat al-Karmel, Kamal-Mreeh in 2017 became the first non-Jewish woman to anchor a Hebrew-language news program on Israeli television. In 2019, as part of Blue and White,…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Sayed Kashua, 1975-

Kashua is a Palestinian-Israeli author and columnist born in Tira in Israel’s Arab Triangle. He attended the prestigious Israel Arts and Science Academy boarding school in Jerusalem. Writing mostly in Hebrew about being an outsider…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Etgar Keret, 1967-

Born in Ramat Gan to Holocaust survivors from Poland, Keret is internationally renowned for quirky, darkly humorous short stories, novels and screenplays exploring such themes as love, death, morality and the meaning of life. His…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Noa Kirel, 2001-

Kirel is a pop star and actress of Mizrahi and Ashkenazi ancestry who is Israel’s 2023 Eurovision contestant. She released her first songs at 14. She won the MTV Europe Music Award for best Israeli…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Sigalit Landau, 1969-

Landau is a Jerusalem-born artist who studied at the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design, then worked in the United States and United Kingdom. Her pieces are multimedia, including drawing, sculpture, video and performance. She…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Yair Lapid, 1963-

Born in Tel Aviv, Lapid followed the path of his father, Tommy, in gaining fame as a journalist, then moving into politics with a vision for a secular government. Lapid worked for Channel 1 and…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Yisrael Meir Lau, 1937-

The youngest survivor of the Buchenwald concentration camp, Lau arrived in the Land of Israel with a brother in 1945. He was the chief rabbi of Netanya from 1978 to 1988 and of Tel Aviv…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Avigdor Liberman, 1958-

A two-time foreign minister, Liberman was the finance minister in the coalition formed in June 2021. Born in Moldova, Liberman arrived in Israel in 1978. He worked closely with Benjamin Netanyahu before splitting with him…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Merav Michaeli, 1966-

A Petah Tikvah native and Tel Aviv resident, Michaeli became the transportation minister in the governing coalition formed in June 2021. She is credited with reinvigorating the Labor Party since becoming its leader at the…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Adi Nes, 1966-

Kiryat Gat native Nes is one of Israel’s most prominent photographers. He stages art photos to convey themes of masculinity and identity, often reflecting the influence of iconic artworks and his experiences growing up gay…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Benjamin Netanyahu, 1949-

Netanyahu has served as the Likud leader for all but six years since 1993. He is Israel’s longest-serving prime minister, holding the office from 1996 to 1999, 2009 to June 2021, and December 2022 to…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Ayman Odeh, 1975-

An Arab politician and lawyer from Haifa, Odeh has led the far-left Hadash party since 2015 and headed the Joint List, a coalition of Arab-majority parties, in elections in 2019, 2020 and 2021. He served…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Shahar Pe’er, 1987-

Israel’s most successful tennis player, Pe’er won five singles and three doubles titles on the Women’s Tennis Association tour. Her highest world ranking was No. 11 in 2011. She reached the singles quarterfinals of two…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Itzhak Perlman, 1945-

Perlman is an acclaimed violinist and conductor who was born in Tel Aviv, survived polio at age 4, and lives and teaches in New York. He has performed for U.S. presidents and British Queen Elizabeth…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Yohanan Plesner, 1972-

London-born Plesner has served since 2014 as the president of the nonpartisan Israel Democracy Institute, which conducts polling and advocates for government reforms to strengthen democracy. He was in the Knesset from 2007 to 2013…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Natalie Portman, 1981-

Jerusalem-born actress Portman made her film debut as the star of 1994’s “Leon: The Professional.” She won an Oscar for 2010’s “Black Swan” and was nominated for two others. Her directorial debut was the 2015…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Itamar Rabinovich, 1942-

Diplomat and historian Rabinovich is a former ambassador to the United States and former president of Tel Aviv University. A former IDF lieutenant colonel, he was Israel’s chief negotiator with Syria in the 1990s. His…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Miri Regev, 1965-

Regev has served in the Knesset since 2013 as a member of Likud. During a 25-year military career in IDF public relations, she rose to the rank of brigadier general in the reserves. Her roles…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Reuven Rivlin, 1939-

The 10th president of Israel from 2014 to 2021, Rivlin was a Likud politician who served as the speaker of the Knesset from 2003 to 2006 and 2009 to 2013. As president, he pushed for…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Haim Saban, 1944-

Saban is a multibillionaire music, film and TV producer who founded Saban Entertainment, creator of “Mighty Morphin Power Rangers.” A native of Egypt, he immigrated to Israel in 1956. He started a tour promotion business…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Noa Sattath, 1977-

Sattath became the executive director of the Association for Civil Rights in Israel in November 2021 after 11 years leading the Reform movement’s Israel Religious Action Center. The rabbi also served as the executive director…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Stav Shaffir, 1985-

Shaffir was the youngest-ever female member of the Knesset when she was elected with the Labor Party in 2013. She remained in the Knesset until 2020. She leads the Green Party. She rose to prominence…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Nachman Shai, 1946-

Shai, a Labor Party member who served in the Knesset from 2009 to 2019, became the Diaspora affairs minister under Naftali Bennett in 2021. He was the IDF’s chief spokesman during the 1991 Persian Gulf…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Ayelet Shaked, 1976-

An electrical engineer, Shaked in June 2021 became the interior minister under Naftali Bennett, her close ally as they have moved from the Jewish Home to the New Right and Yamina. She served in the…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Shimon Shamir, 1933-

Shimon Shamir was Israel’s first ambassador to Jordan and its second to Egypt. A scholar of the Middle East, he is a professor emeritus in the faculty of humanities at Tel Aviv University. He was…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Anita Shapira, 1940-

Shapira is a historian of Zionism and modern Israel and a professor emerita at Tel Aviv University. Her books include 2012 National Jewish Book Award winner Israel: A History and biographies of Berl Katznelson, David…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Natan Sharansky, 1948-

Sharansky, a physicist and writer, was a Soviet refusenik imprisoned in a Siberian labor camp from 1977 to 1986. Upon his release, he joined his wife, Avital, in Israel. He became an activist for immigrant…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Dan Shechtman, 1941-

Tel Aviv native Shechtman won the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 2011 for his discovery of quasicrystals, which are crystals whose atoms are not organized in repeating patterns. A materials science professor at the Technion,…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Michael Solomonov, 1978-

A multiple James Beard Award winner who leads several Israeli-themed restaurants in Philadelphia and writes cookbooks, Solomonov was born in Israel and raised in Pittsburgh. He worked in a bakery when he returned to Israel…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Alon Tal, 1960-

One of Israel’s leading environmentalists, Tal is a member of the Knesset for Blue and White. A North Carolina native who made aliyah after college, he founded the Arava Institute for Environmental Studies in 1996…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Pnina Tamano-Shata, 1981-

A lawyer and TV journalist, Tamano-Shata in 2013 became the first Ethiopian-born woman in the Knesset. She also is the first Ethiopian-born Cabinet member, serving as immigrant absorption minister since May 2020 under three prime…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

David Vital, 1927-

Vital is an English-born historian of Zionism and diplomacy. His books include “The Origins of Zionism” and “A People Apart: A Political History of the Jews in Europe.” He worked in the Foreign Ministry and…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Arieh Warshel, 1940-

With Martin Karplus and Michael Levitt, Warshel was awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 2013. His work in computational chemistry applied classical mechanics and quantum mechanics to predict and model chemical reactions. He studied…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Noa Wertheim, 1965-

A dancer and choreographer, Wertheim is the artistic director of Vertigo Dance Company, founded with partner Adi Shaal in Jerusalem in 1992. They added a dance school in 1997 and in 2007 established the Vertigo…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Avraham Yitzhak, 1972-

Yitzhak, who moved to Israel at age 19, was the first Ethiopian immigrant to earn an Israeli medical degree, having started his studies in Ethiopia, and to serve as an IDF combat surgeon. He was…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Ada Yonath, 1939-

Yonath is the first Israeli woman to receive a Nobel Prize, sharing the chemistry prize in 2009 for work on ribosomes, which are crucial proteins in cells. She used X-ray crystallography to map ribosomes’ structure,…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Ghaida Rinawie Zoabi, 1972-

Zoabi serves as an Arab member of the Knesset for Meretz and deputy speaker and is an activist for Arab rights. Forbes named her one of Israel’s 50 most influential women in 2018. She was…

Biographies|September 23, 2022

Many people, Jewish and non-Jewish, have played a part in the State of Israel’s creation, survival and development despite never themselves becoming Israeli. For good or bad, Israel would not be what it is today without the contributions of these 75 people. They are, of course, not the only non-Israelis who have been important in Israel’s history, but all have been essential.
View 75 Key Non-Israelis as a PDF

75 Non-Israelis Who Helped Shape Israel

Bella Abzug, 1920-1998

Abzug was the first Jewish woman elected to Congress, representing New York as a Democrat in the House from 1971 to 1977. The daughter of immigrants from Russia, she joined Zionist youth group Hashomer Hatzir…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Sheldon Adelson, 1933-2021

Casino magnate Adelson was one of the biggest donors to Israeli and Jewish causes. He launched and owned Israel Hayom, Israel’s most widely distributed newspaper, and was a stalwart backer of Benjamin Netanyahu. He funded…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Konrad Adenauer, 1876-1967

Adenauer, West Germany’s chancellor from 1949 to 1963, initiated talks in March 1952 that resulted in West Germany agreeing to pay Israel 3 billion marks over 12 years as Holocaust reparations. The funds were crucial…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Arthur Balfour, 1848-1930

Balfour, an English politician and diplomat who served as the British prime minister from 1902 to 1905, was the foreign secretary in November 1917 when he sent a letter to Lord Rothschild that became known…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Noah Barou, 1889-1955

Born in Ukraine, Barou was a trade unionist and political activist who was active in Poalei Zion. After that group broke with the new Soviet authorities, he moved to London, where he helped found the…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Fritz Bauer, 1903-1968

Bauer was a German Jewish judge and prosecutor before and after World War II. He was arrested by the Nazis in 1933, lived in Denmark from 1936 to 1943, then escaped to neutral Sweden. He…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Leonard Bernstein, 1918-1990

Born in Massachusetts to Ukrainian Jewish immigrants, Bernstein was a prominent pianist, conductor and humanitarian. His longtime association with the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra began with a concert he conducted in Tel Aviv in 1947. Among…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Jacob Blaustein, 1892-1970

Serving as the American Jewish Committee president, Blaustein in 1950 coordinated with Israeli Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion to reach the Blaustein-Ben-Gurion Agreement on Israel-Diaspora relations. The agreement aimed to secure financial and political support for…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Louis Brandeis, 1856-1941

The first Jew on the U.S. Supreme Court, Brandeis influenced many American Jews in the early 20th century to become Zionists. He persuaded President Woodrow Wilson, a close friend, to support the 1917 Balfour Declaration…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Charles Bronfman, 1931-

Bronfman, part of the Canadian Jewish family who built the Seagram beverage company, co-founded Birthright Israel, which brings young Jewish adults from around the world to Israel for a 10-day educational visit. His foundation, Charles…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Ralph Bunche, 1904-1971

Bunche, an American diplomat, received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1950 for brokering the armistice agreements between Israel and four Arab neighbors in 1949. He served in 1947 with the U.N. Special Committee on Palestine,…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

George W. Bush, 1946-

The 43rd U.S. president, Bush offered a vision for a two-state Israeli-Palestinian solution in June 2002 that inspired the “Roadmap for Peace” presented by the Quartet (the United States, European Union, United Nations and Russia)…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Jimmy Carter, 1924-2024

The 39th U.S. president, Carter mediated the 1978 Camp David Accords and 1979 peace treaty between Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. The treaty was the first between Israel and an…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Emanuel Celler, 1888-1981

Celler was New York’s longest-serving congressman, holding a House seat from 1923 to 1973. He read Herzl during World War I and became a Zionist. He attempted to assist fellow Jews by opposing the Immigration…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Winston Churchill, 1874-1965

Churchill visited Palestine in March 1921 as the British secretary of state for the colonies and declared that a Jewish national home would be a “blessing to the whole world.” In July 1922, after the…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Clark Clifford, 1906-1998

As a special presidential counsel, Clifford opposed the pro-Arab State Department and urged President Harry Truman to maintain support for the U.N. partition of Palestine and to lift the arms embargo on Jewish forces heading…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Bill Clinton, 1946-

As president, Clinton hosted the signing of the 1993 Oslo Accords, helped Jordan and Israel achieve a peace treaty in 1994, and mediated the 1995 Oslo II agreement that recognized the Palestinian Authority. He brokered…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Irwin Cotler, 1940-

Cotler is Canada’s special envoy on preserving Holocaust remembrance and combating antisemitism after serving as a member of Parliament and justice minister. He defended Israel and Jews at the 2001 World Conference Against Racism in…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Richard Crossman, 1907-1974

A leader of the Labor Party Zionists in the British Parliament, Crossman served on the 1944-1946 Anglo-American Palestine Commission, which aimed to set the number of Jews permitted into Palestine after World War II. He…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Lester Crown, 1925-

American billionaire Crown is a philanthropist who supports many Israeli causes, including Tel Aviv University and the Weizmann Institute of Science. He is dedicated to sharing Israel’s accomplishments with the world. He is a director…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Ted Deutch, 1966-

Deutch, a Democratic congressman from Florida since 2010, succeeded David Harris as the American Jewish Committee CEO on Oct. 1, 2022. In the U.S. House he introduced and supported legislation and resolutions to further U.S.-Israel…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Blanche “Baffy” Dugdale, 1880-1948

A close adviser to Chaim Weizmann on his relations with British officials, Dugdale was a strong, non-Jewish advocate for Zionism. A niece of Arthur Balfour’s, she wrote a biography of him and a book on…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Albert Einstein, 1879-1955

Einstein was a Zionist who wrote about the importance of Jewish nationalism in 1921. The physicist credited Zionism with strengthening the Jewish community, though he preferred a binational Palestine to partition. He raised money for…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Max Fisher, 1908-2005

Pittsburgh native Fisher, who made his fortune in Midwestern gas stations and real estate, advised Republican presidents from Richard Nixon to George W. Bush on the Middle East and Jewish issues. He helped persuade Nixon…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Abraham Foxman, 1940-

Foxman was the national director of the Anti-Defamation League from 1987 to 2015. He and ADL spoke out against rising anti-Israel sentiment as an expression of increasing antisemitism beginning in the late 1990s. A Holocaust…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Jorge García-Granados, 1900-1961

García-Granados, Guatemala’s ambassador to the United Nations and a member of the U.N. Special Committee on Palestine, was moved by Chaim Weizmann’s partition pleas to UNSCOP in July 1947 and cast the first vote for…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Arthur Goldberg, 1908-1990

Goldberg resigned as a U.S. Supreme Court justice in 1965 to serve as the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. He drafted the text of U.N. Security Council Resolution 242, the basis of all “land…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

David Harris, 1949-

Harris served as the chief executive of the American Jewish Committee from 1990 until the end of September 2022. He made advocacy for a Jewish, democratic, internationally accepted Israel a fundamental part of AJC’s efforts….

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Arthur Hertzberg, 1921-2006

Hertzberg, who arrived in the United States from Poland in 1926, was a Conservative rabbi and scholar. He was the president of the American Jewish Congress in the 1970s and vice president of the World…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Malcolm Hoenlein, 1944-

Hoenlein is transitioning out of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, which coordinates support for Israel, after serving as the executive vice chairman since 1986. He handed the CEO position to William…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

King Hussein, 1935-1999

As Jordan’s king, Hussein tried to annex the West Bank and eastern Jerusalem while ruling them from 1948 to 1967. He lost everything west of the Jordan River after he attacked Israel to support Egypt…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Henry “Scoop” Jackson, 1912-1983

As a congressman from 1941 to 1953 and a senator from 1953 until 1983 for Washington state, Jackson was one of the leading pro-Zionist and pro-Israel voices in Congress. He wrote legislative amendments in 1970…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Eddie Jacobson, 1891-1955

Jacobson and Harry Truman became close friends during World War I and partnered after the war in a failed haberdashery. In March 1948, Jacobson visited Truman, now the president, at the White House and persuaded…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Kenneth Jacobson, 1943-

The deputy national director of the Anti-Defamation League, Jacobson is the civil rights organization’s No. 2 official and its longest-serving professional. Since 1971, in roles that include international affairs, education, and marketing and communications, he…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Lyndon Johnson, 1908-1973

The 36th U.S. president, Johnson increased U.S. economic and military support for Israel. Unlike Dwight Eisenhower in 1956, Johnson did not demand Israel’s immediate withdrawal from captured territory after the 1967 war. He outlined five…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Isaiah “Si” Kenen, 1905-1988

Isaiah “Si” Kenen in 1951 founded the American Zionist Committee for Public Affairs, the predecessor of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). Kenen’s organization provided a united pro-Israel voice in Washington and helped win…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Jeane Kirkpatrick, 1926-2006

Kirkpatrick was the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations under President Ronald Reagan. She built a close relationship with Israeli Ambassador Yehuda Blum and was as staunch in her support of Israel as she was…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Henry Kissinger, 1923-2023

Kissinger was the national security adviser and secretary of state to Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford. He heavily influenced U.S. policy in the Middle East and made “shuttle diplomacy” famous after the October 1973…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Howard Kohr, 1955-

Howard Kohr has served as the top executive of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee since 1996. Under Kohr, AIPAC has built support beyond the Jewish community. Its lobbying for a strong U.S.-Israel relationship has…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Tom Lantos, 1928-2008

A native of Hungary, Lantos was the only Holocaust survivor to serve in Congress, representing California in the House from 1981 to 2008. Steven Spielberg’s documentary “The Last Days” featured Lantos’ life story. He was…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Naomi Lauter, 1930-2017

Recruited by Si Kenen, Lauter worked with the American Israel Public Affairs Committee in San Francisco for more than 50 years, from chief volunteer recruiter to regional director to a consultant training staff across the…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Emma Lazarus, 1849-1887

Jewish poet Lazarus’ words, taken from “The New Colossus,” are on the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty: “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free.” She wrote some of…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Bernard Lewis, 1916-2018

Orientalist scholar Lewis, a London native who finished his academic career at Princeton, influenced American foreign policy and the West’s attitudes toward the Middle East. He backed U.S. intervention in Iraq and Afghanistan. His “Lewis…

Biographies|October 17, 2022
Sam Lewis

Samuel Lewis, 1930-2014

Lewis served as the U.S. ambassador to Israel from 1977 to 1985, second in tenure to Walworth Barbour. He played an important part in brokering Israeli-Egyptian peace and provided the on-site U.S. response to the…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

David Lloyd George, 1863-1945

Lloyd George was the British prime minister from 1916 to 1922. His government issued the Balfour Declaration and took control of Palestine during World War I, negotiated for the inclusion of the declaration’s language at…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Bernie Marcus, 1929-2024

Home Depot co-founder Marcus has devoted much of his philanthropy to Israel and to organizations supporting Israel. Examples within Israel include the Israel Democracy Institute and Magen David Adom’s underground blood storage facility in Ramle….

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Louis Marshall, 1856-1929

Marshall co-founded the American Jewish Committee and served as its president from 1912 to 1926. He supported efforts that aided the development of a Jewish homeland in Palestine and united Zionists and anti-Zionists in helping…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Mayer “Bubba” Mitchell, 1933-2007

A longtime resident of Alabama, Mitchell was the president of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee from 1990 to 1992 and AIPAC’s chairman from 1993 to 1996. As an activist and philanthropist for Jewish and…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Henry Morgenthau Jr., 1891-1967

Morgenthau was the U.S. secretary of the Treasury under Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman from 1934 to 1945. He drove the creation of the War Refugee Board in 1944 to help Jews escape the Nazis…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Daniel Patrick Moynihan, 1927-2003

Moynihan was the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations in 1975 when the U.N. General Assembly passed Resolution 3379, equating Zionism with racism. He delivered a passionate speech lambasting the resolution and its supporters and…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Richard Nixon, 1913-1994

Though he expressed antisemitic views in private, Nixon as the 37th U.S. president authorized the airlift that replenished Israel’s arms during the October 1973 war, providing the means for Israel to end the war with…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Barack Obama, 1961-

The 44th U.S. president, Obama was less active in seeking Middle East peace than his three immediate predecessors and tried to strengthen relations with Israel’s neighbors. He split with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Pope Paul VI, 1897-1978

Pope Paul VI’s visit to the Holy Land in 1964 served as de facto recognition of the State of Israel. It was the first time any pope left Italy in over a century. In 1965,…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Ronald Reagan, 1911-2004

Although considered pro-Israel, Reagan, the 40th U.S. president, acted to balance U.S. policy toward Israel and Arab states. Under Reagan, the United States halted F-16 sales to Israel after its raid on Iraq’s nuclear reactor…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Russell Robinson, 1956-

The CEO of the Jewish National Fund (JNF-USA) since 1997, Robinson has led programs to raise billions of dollars for Israeli infrastructure beyond trees, including reservoirs, the revival of Be’er Sheva, and the sustainable development…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Dennis Ross, 1948-

Working in the Defense Department, with the National Security Council or in the State Department under every president from Jimmy Carter to Barack Obama, Ross helped shape U.S. Middle East policy. He helped get Israel…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

John Ruskay, 1946-

Ruskay was the executive vice president and CEO of UJA-Federation of New York from 1999 to 2014, giving him influence over millions of dollars a year allocated within Israel. He remains a consultant to nonprofits…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Anwar Sadat, 1918-1981

Sadat was elevated from Egypt’s vice president to president after Gamal Abdel Nasser died in 1970. With Syria, he launched the October 1973 war against Israel. He flew to Israel four years later in pursuit…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Alexander Schindler, 1925-2000

Serving from 1973 to 1996 as the president of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, Schindler aligned the Reform movement with Zionism. Going back to the mid-19th century, Reform had emphasized Jewish religion over peoplehood….

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Charles and Lynn Schusterman, 1935-2000 and 1939-

Charles Schusterman, born in the Soviet Union, and wife Lynn, a Missouri native, used their Oklahoma oil wealth to launch the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Philanthropies. The foundation is deeply involved in Israeli and…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Abba Hillel Silver, 1893-1963

Silver, a child immigrant to New York from Lithuania, was a leading American advocate and fundraiser for Zionism and headed the U.S. Zionist establishment in the late 1940s. He rallied support for a Jewish state…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

James Snyder, 1952-

Since 2020, Snyder has been the executive chairman of the U.S.-based Jerusalem Foundation, which raises money and seeks partnerships to support the efforts of the Jerusalem Foundation in Israel to develop Jerusalem into an ideal…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Leonard Stein, 1887-1973

A British lawyer, Stein was stationed with the army in Jerusalem and Cairo and was part of the pre-mandate British administration of Palestine. He published a 1922 pamphlet titled “The Truth About Palestine” to counter…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Michael Steinhardt, 1940-

Billionaire New York philanthropist Steinhardt’s extensive donations to Jewish causes include co-founding Birthright Israel with Charles Bronfman and launching a network of Hebrew-language charter schools. He chaired the board of Tel Aviv University and endowed…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Mark Sykes, 1879-1919

Sykes was a British diplomat who, with French diplomat François Georges-Picot, negotiated the secret Sykes-Picot Agreement in 1916. The pact called for dividing the Middle East territories of the Ottoman Empire after its defeat in…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Harry Truman, 1884-1972

The 33rd U.S. president, Truman had the United States vote for the U.N. partition plan for Palestine in November 1947 and made the United States the first country to recognize the State of Israel in…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Donald Trump, 1946-

The 45th and 47th U.S. president, Trump took steps in both terms to strengthen ties with Israel. He withdrew from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal. He fulfilled a deferred 1995 law and moved the U.S….

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Robert Wagner, 1877-1953

As a U.S. senator from New York from 1927 to 1949, Wagner was a prominent Christian Zionist. He introduced unsuccessful legislation in 1939 to admit 20,000 Jewish refugee children from Germany. He co-wrote a congressional…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Raoul Wallenberg, 1912-1947

Wallenberg was a Swedish diplomat who in 1944 saved thousands of Hungarian Jews, including future Congressman Tom Lantos, by providing protective passports and safe houses. He went missing in January 1945 and is believed to…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Barbi Weinberg, 1929-

Weinberg is the founder and chairman emerita of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, fulfilling a vision she shared with her late husband, Larry, a former AIPAC president. In 1973 she became the first…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Avi Weiss, 1944-

Weiss is an author and activist who led the movement to free Soviet Jewry; ultimately, more than 1 million immigrants moved as the Soviet Union crumbled. He served as spy Jonathan Pollard’s personal rabbi and…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Harold Wilson, 1916-1995

Labor Party leader Wilson was the British prime minister from 1964 to 1970 and 1974 to 1976 and was one of Parliament’s strongest supporters of Israel, where he made social democratic friends. He spoke up…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Charles Winters, 1913-1984

A U.S. businessman who wasn’t Jewish, Winters bought three surplus U.S. B-17 bombers on the pretense that they were for his Caribbean transport service. Instead, he delivered them to the nascent Israeli Air Force in…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Stephen Wise, 1874-1949

A native of Hungary who immigrated to the United States as a toddler, Wise co-founded the New York Federation of Zionist Societies in 1897 and the Federation of Zionist Societies in 1898 and launched the…

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Sheik Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, 1961-

Bin Zayed, known as MBZ, is the president of the United Arab Emirates and the ruler of Abu Dhabi. In August 2020 he signed the Abraham Accords to normalize relations between the UAE and Israel….

Biographies|October 17, 2022

Choosing 75 works of art to commemorate Israel’s 75th anniversary is daunting; Israel has a robust artistic scene that started well before the state’s founding. Early Zionists such as Martin Buber considered art a key element in the Jewish people’s rehabilitation. “A nation without art is not a nation,” he declared. As is evident in this compilation, Israel has compensated for the historic dearth of a Jewish artistic tradition resulting from both Second Commandment prohibitions and historical circumstance. Indeed, since the founding of the Bezalel Art Academy in Jerusalem in 1906, Israel’s art scene has flourished. This collection, while not a comprehensive survey, comprises a wide range of media and artists, including painting, sculpture and architecture, and reflects the vibrancy and complexity of life in Israel, as well as the rich sources from Jewish and Israeli history that inspired these works. My hope is that the compilation will be at once stimulating and uplifting.

— Dr. Susan Nashman Fraiman

View Dr. Fraiman’s Curated 75 Works of Art as a PDF

75 Works of Art

1896 — Mattiyahu, Boris Schatz

Boris Schatz (1866-1932) is the father of Israeli art. Lithuanian born, he studied in Paris and was influenced by the Russian Jewish sculptor Mark Antokolsky. The drama and strength with which Schatz depicts the father…

Images|1896

1923 – Triptych: First Fruits, Reuven Rubin

Reuven Rubin (1893-1974) was a well-established artist in his native Romania when he made aliyah in the 1920s. The light and atmosphere of the Land of Israel led to a striking change in his work…

Images|April 11, 2023

1928-1934 – The Roaring Lion, Abraham Melnikoff

Abraham Melnikoff (1892-1960) was a well-known figure in the art scene of Mandatory Palestine, sculpting funerary stones, portrait busts and other works. This Galilee marble sculpture at Tel Hai commemorates the eight who died defending…

Images|April 11, 2023

1929 – Les Fiancées, Reuven Rubin

Reuven Rubin (1893-1974) met Esther, an American Jew who had won a prize to visit the Land of Israel and later to be his betrothed, while on a ship bound for Jaffa. In this oil…

Images|April 11, 2023

1930 (circa) – Self-Portrait, Boris Schatz

Bezalel founder Boris Schatz (1866-1932) was a visionary but lacked managerial skills. World War I forced Bezalel to close, and after it reopened in 1919 under the British administration, the school employed the same methods…

Images|April 11, 2023

1938-1941 – Alexander Zaid, David Polus

David Polus (1893-1975) emigrated from Poland to Palestine, where he spent his life as an itinerant artist. His figure of Alexander Zaid (1866-1938), the founder of HaShomer, a group dedicated to the self-defense of Jewish…

Images|April 11, 2023

1939 – Nimrod, Yitzhak Danziger

Yitzhak Danziger (1917-1977) probed the Semitic roots of the Jewish people. Born in Germany but raised in Tel Aviv, Danziger was part of the Canaanite movement, which aspired to meld into a greater pre-Abrahamic people….

Images|April 11, 2023

1947 – Children of the Diaspora, Zeev Ben-Zvi

Israel’s first Holocaust memorial stands at Kibbutz Mishmar HaEmek, associated with one of the youth movements that led the resistance in the Warsaw ghetto. The kibbutz members built the monument themselves under the guidance of…

Images|1947

1947 – Sabbath on the Kibbutz, Yohanan Simon

Idyllic kibbutz life was part of the romanticized founding ethos of Israel. The kibbutznikim were the elite, working the land. Sabbath, portrayed in this painting in the Tel Aviv Museum of Art by Yohanan Simon…

Images|April 11, 2023

1948 – In the Cyprus Deportation, various artists

In August 1946 the British established displaced-persons internment camps in Cyprus, a bitter affront to those who had just survived the concentration camps in Europe. Industrialist Pinhas Rutenberg set up a seminar to prepare the…

Images|April 11, 2023

1948 – Nocturne (Death of a Warrior), Marcel Janco

Marcel Janco (1894-1985) was a renowned Dadaist before making aliyah in response to the fascist, Nazi-sympathizing rule in Romania at the beginning of World War II. Once in Palestine, Janco worked as an architect and…

Images|April 11, 2023

1948-1949 – Torah Case, Ludwig Yehuda Wolpert

Eliahu Elath, Israel’s first ambassador to the United States, presented this Torah case to President Harry Truman in 1949. It is in the collection of the Truman Presidential Library & Museum in Independence, Missouri. The…

Images|April 11, 2023

1949-1950 – First Seder in Jerusalem, Reuven Rubin

In this oil painting on canvas in the Rubin Museum collection, Reuven Rubin (1893-1974) depicts a representative gathering of the new state. A Hasidic rabbi, Bukharan immigrants, kibbutznikim, Yemenites, a Palmach fighter, the artist and…

Images|April 11, 2023

1958 — Might, Yosef Zaritsky

This massive painting by Yosef Zaritsky (1891-1985) was given primacy of place at the First Decade Exhibit held at Binyanei HaUma, now known as Jerusualem’s International Convention Center. Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion was heard to…

Images|April 11, 2023

1960 – Fountain, Kosso Elul

The need for a new campus for the Hebrew University of Jerusalem after the loss of Mount Scopus in 1948 led to a search for an indigenous architectural design. The Canaanite school, which glorified the…

Images|April 11, 2023

1964 – Agripas Street, Arie Aroch

Using oil, oil pencil and scratching and considered a seminal work, Agripas Street by Arie Aroch (1908-1974) represents an important trend in Israeli art of the 1960s: the move away from the colorist abstractions of…

Images|April 11, 2023

1966 – Flying Spice Box, Yossl Bergner

In his fanciful works, Yossl Bergner (1920-2017) often used objects to symbolize the human condition. In the foreground of this piece at the Mishkan Museum of Art in Ein Harod, the top of an ancient…

Images|April 11, 2023

1966 – Peace Monument, Yigal Tumarkin

Many are the war memorials in Israel; in 1966, the peace activist Abie Nathan decided there needed to be a monument to peace. A site was chosen (later home to the B’nai B’rith Bridge) opposite…

Images|April 11, 2023

1966 – The Story of Tel Aviv, Nahum Gutman

The charming works of Nahum Gutman (1898-1980) are best known from his book and newspaper illustrations. Gutman grew up in Little Old Tel Aviv, known as Ahuzat Bayit, which he also wrote about. The Shalom…

Images|April 11, 2023

1966 – Wall to the Glory of Jerusalem, Moshe Castel

Moshe Castel (1909-1991), born in Jerusalem, developed an unusual style and technique in his later years, using ground-up basalt in his works. This basalt relief in the reception hall of the President’s Residence often serves…

Images|April 11, 2023

1968 – Monument to the Negev Brigade, Dani Karavan

This concrete work in Be’er Sheva is probably Dani Karavan’s (1930-2021) first environmental sculpture, creating a space of memory that must be walked through to be appreciated. Elements of the work symbolize different stages of…

Images|April 11, 2023

1969 – Untitled collage, Raffi Lavie

Raffi Lavie’s (1937-2007) works were influential on the Israeli art scene. A combination of collage, paint, scribbles and erasures on plywood, this work at the Israel Museum questions the role of art even as it…

Images|April 11, 2023

1970 – From Holocaust to Revival, Naftali Bezem

Naftali Bezem’s (1924-2018) cast-aluminum wall sculpture at Yad Vashem is composed of four sections, moving sequentially from the crematoria of Auschwitz to the fallen ghetto fighters to the immigrants making their way to Israel and…

Images|April 11, 2023

1971 – Ingathering of the Exiles, Abraham Ofek

Shimon Peres, then the minister of communication, commissioned Abraham Ofek (1935-1990) to decorate the inside of the Mandate-era Central Post Office in Jerusalem in the spirit of using art for public edification. The mural he…

Images|April 11, 2023

1974 – Holocaust and Revival, Igael Tumarkin

Igael Tumarkin (1933-2021) made this monument in Rabin Square in Tel Aviv of corten steel. It consists of two pyramids: a large one inverted and intersecting a smaller one below. The upper pyramid is the…

Images|April 11, 2023

1975 – Druksland, Michael Druks

Michael Druks (1940-2022), born in Jerusalem, spent most of his artistic career in London. This iconic image, created through offset lithography and housed at the Israel Museum, depicts the artist’s head as a topographical map,…

Images|April 11, 2023

1983 – Holidays Set, Zelig Segal

Zelig Segal (1933-2015), born into an ultra-Orthodox family, became one of the first artists from that community accepted at Bezalel. A talented silversmith and producer of various kinds of metalwork, he is best known for…

Images|April 11, 2023

1985 – The Sacrifice of Isaac, Menashe Kadishman

The theme of the near-sacrifice of Isaac runs through Jewish literature and art from earliest times until today. Menashe Kadishman (1932-2015) made several works on this subject, some connected with his own son’s entering the…

Images|April 11, 2023

1988 – Cactus, Assem Abu Shakra

Assem Abu Shakra (1961-1990) came from a family of artists in Umm El Fahm, near Hadera. His potted cactus, an oil painting in the Israel Museum, alludes to the metaphor for Israeli identity of the…

Images|April 11, 2023

1989 – Herzl, Uri Lifschitz

Driving on one of Israel’s main highways, it is impossible to miss Uri Lifschitz’s (1936-2011) imposing cut-out metal silhouette of Theodor Herzl atop a water tank at the Sira Intersection entering Herzliya. Based on an…

Images|April 11, 2023

1995-1996 – El Maleh Rachamim, Moshe Gershuni

This work of acrylic paint on paper releases a burst of energy and pain while invoking the beginning of the traditional prayer for the dead, written in Moshe Gershuni’s (1936-2017) own handwriting. The image, imbued…

Images|April 11, 2023

1997 – Bereshit, Belu Simion Fainaru

An impressive Jerusalem marble installation in the shape of a large rectangular box with an arched top, Bereshit has the first six letters of the Hebrew alphabet incised backward on its sides. A light within…

Images|April 11, 2023

1999 – The Book of Women, Nechama Golan

Nechama Golan (b.1947), a religious artist who studied at Bezalel, creates a wide range of works in a variety of media, all exploring the place of Judaism and of Jewish women in today’s world. This…

Images|April 11, 2023

1999 – Untitled, Adi Nes

This carefully staged photograph by Adi Nes (b.1966) references Leonardo da Vinci’s iconic Last Supper. These soldiers, caught in the vortex of a conflict over which they have no control, put their lives on the…

Images|1999

2002 – Jericho First, Sharif Waked

In this series of 32 images in acrylic on canvas, Sharif Waked (b.1964), born in Nazareth, responds to the political situation and the original motto of the Oslo Accords, “Jericho First.” The artist’s first canvas…

Images|April 11, 2023

2003 – Bayit, Samuel Bak

The story of Samuel Bak (b.1933) encapsulates much of 20th century Jewish history: His first art exhibit was held under the shadow of deportations in the Vilna ghetto when he was 9, and his second…

Images|April 11, 2023

2003 – Tilted Tree, Ran Morin

Environmental artist Ran Morin (b.1958) employs the evocative symbolism of the tree in Jewish life to commemorate the seven students and staff members of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem killed in the terrorist bombing of…

Images|April 11, 2023

2003 – Tree of the Field, Zadok Ben-David

This plasma-cut, corten steel statue in Yad Vashem’s Partisans Plaza was commissioned by a family of descendants of Jewish partisans who, by hiding in the forest, both attacked the Nazis and survived the Holocaust. This…

Images|April 11, 2023

2005 – Remembrance 2, Ruth Kestenbaum Ben-Dov

This oil painting by Ruth Kestenbaum Ben-Dov (b.1961) is based on the Jewish law that each home should leave a small square unfinished in memory of the destruction of Jerusalem, and the size of this…

Images|April 11, 2023

2005-2007 – Tel Kakun, Israel Hershberg

Israel Hershberg (b.1948) was born in the Linz displaced-persons camp to Holocaust survivors and moved from the struggling Israel of the 1950s to the United States. Upon his return to Israel in 1984, he founded…

Images|April 11, 2023

2009-2010 – Nahalal, Gal Weinstein

This work of carpet on plywood by Gal Weinstein (b.1970) is inspired by the first moshav, Nahalal, which was designed by the German-born architect Richard Kaufman and built in 1921. The original design was a…

Images|April 11, 2023

2013 – Hilula, Shai Azoulay

In this oil painting on canvas, Shai Azoulay (b.1971) explores the tradition of pilgrimage to the graves of Jewish saintly personae, in this case Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai, a second century tanna buried on Mount…

Images|April 11, 2023

2013 — A Delicate Balance, Andi Arnovitz

American-born multimedia artist Andi Arnovitz (b.1960) designed this installation to force the viewer to walk through more than 1,000 ceramic scrolls suspended in pairs from metal rods. One ceramic scroll in each pair is embossed…

Images|April 11, 2023

2014 – Return in Peace, Ken Goldman

Our concern for our children serving in the army is the focus of this mixed-media work by Ken Goldman (b.1960). Goldman embossed into the soles of his son’s army boots two Hebrew words from the…

Images|April 11, 2023

2015 – Kav 70, Dov Abramson

Artist and graphic designer Dov Abramson (b.1975) created a conceptual map of Jerusalem named for an imaginary No. 70 bus line and based on 70 images from different parts of the city, in reference to…

Images|April 11, 2023

2016 – New Victims, Zoya Cherkassky

Artist Zoya Cherkassky (b.1976), an immigrant from Ukraine, depicts in oil on linen the difficulties that the ex-Soviet olim (immigrants) faced during the massive wave of aliyah in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Here…

Images|April 11, 2023

2017 – Samira, Amira Ziyan

Amira Ziyan (b.1977) is a Druze photographer who lives in Yarka in the north of Israel. Her photographs in this series relate to the role of women in Druze society. Are they simply those who…

Images|April 11, 2023

2018 – Strangeness, Raida Adon

Raida Adon (b.1972), the daughter of an Arab mother and a Jewish father, is an actress, performance artist and filmmaker. This video installation from the Israel Museum addresses the alienation many feel, whether as refugees,…

Images|April 11, 2023

2019 – Atlit, Tigist Yoseph Ron

Tigist Yoseph Ron (b.1979), whose parents made aliyah from Ethiopia with their nine children, first settled in Atlit. The difficulty and displacement of those years are expressed in this powerful charcoal drawing in the collection…

Images|April 11, 2023

2019 – We Came to Our Land, Jack Jano

Jack Jano (b.1950), who was born in Morocco and immigrated with his family as a young child, studied at Bezalel and works in a variety of media. He deals with issues of rootedness, tradition and…

Images|April 11, 2023

2022 – Strand, Sigalit Landau

This striking installation, part of The Burning Sea exhibit at the Israel Museum until June 2023, comes from an ongoing project by Sigalit Landau (b.1969) in which she immerses a variety of objects in the…

Images|April 11, 2023

2023 — Letters of Light, Micha Ullman 

Letters of Light by Micha Ullman (b.1939), a Bezalel-trained sculptor, is an environmental work based on the Hebrew alphabet and inspired by Sefer Yetzira (The Book of Creation), the oldest known Jewish mystical text. Set…

Images|April 11, 2023

CIE held an international contest for students from third to 12th grade to engage with the 75th anniversary of the State of Israel in 2023. Third- to fifth-graders were asked to create an Israel@75 stamp. Sixth- to eighth-graders were asked to create Zionist posters. Ninth- to 12th-graders were asked to create a museum exhibit. View the galleries of winners and other entries below, and see the details of the competition for inspiration for projects with your learners.

CIE's Israel@75 International Competition

CIE’s Israel@75 Student Competition Winners

April 21, 2023
The results are in for CIE’s Israel@75 International Student Competition, and we’re excited to share the winners out of more than 100 entries across the three age groups. Grades 3-5 We asked students to “exercise...

CIE’s Israel@75 International Student Competition

July 16, 2022
The Center for Israel Education presents an opportunity for students to win prizes and recognition by thinking deeply about Israel as it approaches its 75th birthday and submitting their creative representations of Israel’s challenges, successes and visions for the future.

Additional Resources

Outside Resources

August 17, 2022
CIE connects you to other Jewish and educational institutions going the extra step or 75 to explore the State of Israel as it marks its 75th year.

CIE Israel@75 videos and analyses (2022-2023)

September 1, 2023
During Israel’s 75th year, (2022-2023), CIE produced three dozen webinars, content analyses, and programs about Zionism and Israel’s past and future. Materials are listed by topic, with contributors and length.