Josué Jéhouda
Josué Jéhouda (born Koldriansky; March 19, 1892 – March 19, 1966) was a Swiss Zionist writer and journalist.
Born in Russia, he fought in the Jewish Legion during World War I, and worked in the Zionist committee in Zürich up until the Balfour Declaration of 1917, founding the Revue juive magazine in Geneva.
He was author of the Histoire de la colonie juive de Genève 1843–1943 (1944), of the novel cycle La tragédie d'Israël (Miriam and De père en fils; 1927–1928), and of La Terre Promise (1926).
In the early 1910s, he boosted Panait Istrati's career by teaching him French, and helped him during his illness.
In 1947, he was a delegate to the Seelisberg Conference.[1]
He died on 19 March 1966 in Geneva.
References[]
- ^ Israël vu par les catholiques français: 1945-1994, Martine Sevegrand, page 39
Categories:
- Swiss male novelists
- Swiss Jews
- Swiss Zionists
- Swiss people of World War I
- 1892 births
- 1966 deaths
- 20th-century Swiss novelists
- 20th-century male writers
- Russian emigrants to Switzerland
- 20th-century Swiss journalists
- Jewish biography stubs