List of North European Jews

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Before the Holocaust, Jews were a significant part of the population in Lithuania where they numbered around 240,000, including approximately 100,000 in Vilnius, or about 45% of that city's pre-World War II population (Vilnius was also once known as the "Jerusalem of Lithuania"). A large Jewish community also existed in Latvia. In comparison, Estonia and the Nordic countries have had much smaller communities, concentrated mostly in Denmark and Sweden. The following is a list of prominent North European Jews, arranged by country of origin:

Denmark[]

  • Victor Bendix, composer, conductor and pianist
  • Susanne Bier, film director
  • Kim Bodnia, actor
  • Harald Bohr, mathematician and footballer (Jewish mother)
  • Niels Bohr, physicist, Nobel Prize (1922) (Jewish mother)
  • Victor Borge, entertainer
  • Edvard Brandes, politician, critic and author, minister of finance from 1909 to 1910
  • da:Henry Grünbaum, minister of finance 1965 to 1968
  • Ernst Brandes, economist and editor
  • Georg Brandes, author and critic, father of Danish naturalism
  • Marcus Choleva, Chief executive officer of KFI
  • Dagmar Cohn, illustrator
  • Meïr Aron Goldschmidt, author and editor
  • Heinrich Hirschsprung, industrialist, art patron (Den Hirschsprungske Samling)
  • Arne Jacobsen, architect and designer (Jewish mother)
  • Abraham Kurland, Olympic wrestling medalist[1]
  • Arne Melchior, politician and former Transport Minister and Minister for Communication and Tourism
  • Marcus Melchior, chief rabbi of Denmark, father of Arne Melchior
  • Michael Melchior, rabbi and Israeli politician
  • Ivan Osiier, seven-time Olympic fencer
  • Lee Oskar, harmonica player, member of War
  • Herbert Pundik, journalist
  • Raquel Rastenni, jazz and popular singer
  • Edgar Rubin, Gestalt psychologist
  • Dan Zahavi, philosopher
  • Nikolaj Znaider, violinist, conductor

Estonia[]

  • Eino Baskin (1929–2015), actor and theatre director
  • Avi Benjamin (born 1959), composer
  • Ben Berlin (1896–1944), jazz musician
  • Maria Dangell (born 1974), singer and pianist
  • Aaron Feinstein, chess player
  • Moses Wolf Goldberg (1905–1964), chemist
  • Heinrich Gutkin (1879–1941), businessman and politician
  • Idel Jakobson (1904–1997), NKVD investigator
  • Louis Kahn (1901–1974), architect
  • Eri Klas (1939–2016), conductor
  • Mihhail Lotman (born 1952), philologist and politician
  • Juri Lotman (1922–1993), semiotician
  • Zara Mints (1927–1990), literary scientist
  • Vladimir Padwa (1900–1981), pianist and composer
  • Ita Saks (1921–2003), translator and publicist
  • Hagi Šein (born 1945), journalist, film director, screenwriter and professor
  • Benno Schotz (1891–1984), sculptor
  • Samuel H. Shapiro (1907–1987), politician
  • Emmanuel Steinschneider (1886–1970), physician
  • Leonid Stolovich (1929–2013), philosopher
  • David Vseviov (born 1949), historian

Finland[]

Iceland[]

Latvia[]

  • Elya Baskin, actor
  • Isaiah Berlin, historian of ideas
  • Lipman Bers, mathematician and activist[2]
  • David Bezmozgis, author
  • Boris Brutskus
  • Sergei Eisenstein, film director
  • Movsas Feigins, chess player
  • Morris Halle, linguist
  • Philippe Halsman, photographer
  • Joseph Hirshhorn, financier and philanthropist
  • Abraham Zevi Idelsohn, Jewish musicologist
  • Hermann Jadlowker, musician (born at Riga)
  • Mariss Jansons, conductor (Jewish mother)
  • Gil Kane, comic book illustrator
  • Alexander Koblencs, chess player
  • Abraham Isaac Kook, rabbi
  • Gidon Kremer, violinist; father was a Jewish Holocaust survivor[3]
  • Nechama Leibowitz
  • Yeshayahu Leibowitz
  • Hermanis Matisons, chess player
  • Mischa Maisky, cellist
  • Solomon Mikhoels, actor
  • Aron Nimzowitsch, chess player
  • Arkady Raikin, performing artist
  • Yosef Rosen, der Rogatchover Gaon
  • Mark Rothko, painter
  • Judith Shklar, political philosopher
  • Meir Simcha of Dvinsk, rabbi
  • Mikhail Tal, world chess champion
  • Max Weinreich, linguist

Lithuania[]

  • Semyon Alapin (1856–1923), chess player
  • Mark Antokolsky (1840–1902) , sculptor to Czar Alexander II of Russia
  • Moshe Arens (1925–2019), former Minister of Defence and former Minister of Foreign Affairs of Israel
  • Aaron Barak (born 1936), President of the Supreme Court of Israel
  • Saul Bellow (1915–2005), writer and laureate of the Nobel Prize for Literature (1976)
  • Eliezer Ben-Yehuda (1858–1922), reviver of Hebrew
  • Bernard Berenson (1865–1959), art critic
  • Izis Bidermanas (1911–1980), photographer
  • Reuben Asher Braudes (1851–1902), Hebrew-language novelist and journalist
  • Victor David Brenner (1871–1924), designer of the US penny
  • Eli Broad (1933–2021), American philanthropist and investor; founder of KB Home
  • Sir Montague Burton, British retailer[4]
  • Abraham Cahan (1860–1951), writer and activist
  • Leonard Cohen (1934–2016), musician, poet
  • David Cronenberg (born 1943), film director
  • Eliyahu Eliezer Dessler (1892–1953), rabbi, Talmudic scholar
  • Simeon Dimanstein (1886–1938), Soviet Commissar of Nationalities
  • Bob Dylan (born 1941), singer-songwriter, artist, writer
  • Ilya Ehrenburg (1891–1967), one of the most prolific and well-known writers during the Soviet Union
  • Nosson Tzvi Finkel, Orthodox Judaism leader
  • Vyacheslav Ganelin (born 1944), jazz musician
  • Sara Ginaite (born 1924), former resistance fighter, now Canadian academic
  • Romain Gary, novelist, the Prix Goncourt (twice)
  • Morris Ginsberg, sociologist[5]
  • Louis Ginzberg, scholar of the Talmud
  • Philip Glass, music composer
  • Grant Arthur Gochin, American diplomat and journalist (grandparents are Litvaks)
  • Leah Goldberg, poet
  • Emma Goldman, political activist
  • Nahum Goldmann, world Jewish leader
  • Chaim Grade, writer
  • Iosif Grigulevich, secret agent, historian
  • Zvi Griliches, economist
  • Shira Gorshman, Zionist pioneer, writer
  • Aryeh Leib ben Asher Gunzberg, rabbi
  • Bernard Lown, scientist, Nobel prize winner
  • Aron Gurwitsch, philosopher
  • Laurence Harvey, actor
  • Jascha Heifetz (1901–1987), widely regarded as the greatest violinist of the 20th century[6]
  • Sidney Hillman, political activist
  • Shemp Howard (1895–1955), comedian and actor
  • Moe Howard (1897–1975), comedian and actor
  • Curly Howard (1903–1952), comedian and actor
  • Jay M. Ipson, founder of the Virginia Holocaust Museum
  • Leo Jogiches, revolutionary
  • Al Jolson, singer, comedian, and actor
  • Berek Joselewicz, colonel of the Polish Army
  • Joseph Kagan, Baron Kagan, clothes manufacturer[7]
  • Yisrael Meir Kagan, rabbi
  • Daniel Kahneman, psychologist, Nobel Prize (2002) (Lithuanian parents)
  • Mordechai Kaplan, founder of Reconstructionist Judaism
  • Shlomo Kleit, political activist
  • Aaron Klug, chemist, Nobel Prize (1982)
  • Gurwin Kopel (1923–1990), artist
  • Lazare Kopelmanas, international law scholar
  • Abba Kovner, poet, writer
  • Abraham Dob Bär Lebensohn, writer
  • Micah Joseph Lebensohn, writer
  • Phoebus Levene, biochemist
  • Emmanuel Levinas, philosopher
  • Isaac Levitan, artist
  • Bernard Lewis, historian
  • Morris Lichtenstein, rabbi, founder of the Jewish Science
  • Jacques Lipchitz, cubist sculptor
  • Jay Lovestone, politician
  • Alexander Ziskind Maimon, author and scholar of the Talmud
  • Osip Mandelstam, poet librettist
  • Abraham Mapu, novelist
  • Isser Zalman Meltzer, rabbi
  • Harvey Milk, gay politician in the U.S.
  • Hermann Minkowski, mathematician
  • Oskar Minkowski, physiologist
  • Benjamin Netanyahu, Prime Minister of Israel
  • Mitchell Parish (1900–1993), Lithuanian-born American lyricist[8]
  • Abram Rabinovich, chess player
  • Bar Refaeli, Israeli supermodel, television host, actress, and businesswoman
  • Willy Ronis, artist
  • Eduardas Rozentalis, chess player
  • Yisroel Salanter, rabbi, famed Talmudist
  • Meyer Schapiro, art historian
  • Alexander Schneider, violinist and conductor
  • Lasar Segall, painter, engraver and sculptor
  • Benjamin Schlesinger, American labor leader, former President of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union
  • Ben Shahn, artist
  • Esther Shalev-Gerz, artist
  • Karl Shapiro, poet (Lithuanian parents)
  • Sam, Lee and Jacob Shubert, theatre managers, producers (cf. Shubert Brothers)
  • Joe Slovo, ANC activist
  • Elijah ben Solomon, rabbi, The Gaon of Vilna
  • Maximilian Steinberg, composer
  • David Suchet, English actor
  • Helen Suzman, anti-apartheid MP (Lithuanian parents)
  • Isakas Vistaneckis, chess player
  • Louis Washkansky, recipient of the world's first human heart transplant
  • Uriel Weinreich, linguist
  • David Wolfsohn, second President of World Zionist Organization
  • Bluma Zeigarnik, psychologist and psychiatrist
  • Emanuelis Zingeris, politician
  • William Zorach, painter, sculptor and writer
  • Louis Zukofsky, poet (Lithuanian parents)
  • Benjamin Zuskin, actor

Norway[]

  • Bjørn Benkow, journalist, known for faking interviews
  • Jo Benkow, President of the Parliament of Norway
  • Carl Paul Caspari, professor in theology (Lutheranism)
  • Leo Eitinger (born in Slovakia), professor of psychiatry at University of Oslo and Holocaust survivor, known mainly for his work on late-onset psychological trauma amongst Holocaust survivors
  • Victor Goldschmidt, professor in mineralogy
  • Salo Grenning, pen name Pedro, editorial cartoonists in Verdens Gang
  • Berthold Grünfeld, specialist in psychiatry, and professor in social medicine until 1993
  • Imre Hercz, physician and public debater
  • Bente Kahan, Yiddish singer and actress
  • Hermann Kahan, Holocaust survivor, activist
  • Morten Levin, professor of organization and work science
  • Robert Levin, pianist
  • Oskar Mendelsohn, historian, known for his two-volume history of Norwegian Jews
  • Charles Philipson, Supreme Court Justice Judge, Chairman of the Petroleum Law Committee, deputy chairman of the Petroleum Council and chairman of the Riksel Committee
  • Moritz Rabinowitz, merchant, active in public debate against antisemitism and Nazism before World War II
  • Øystein Wingaard Wolf, poet and author

Sweden[]

  • Olof Aschberg, businessman and banker
  • Robert Aschberg, journalist, media executive, TV personality
  • Amalia Assur, first female dentist in Sweden
  • Lovisa Augusti, opera singer
  • Jean-Pierre Barda, musician
  • Mathilda Berwald, née Cohn, musician
  • Sharon Bezaly, flute soloist
  • Jerzy Einhorn, pathologist and politician
  • Herbert Felix, entrepreneur
  • Josef Frank, architect and designer
  • Isaac Grünewald, artist
  • Lars Gustafsson, writer and scholar
  • Johan Harmenberg, épée fencer, Olympic fencing medalist[1]
  • Eli Heckscher, economist
  • Erland Josephson, actor and writer
  • Ernst Josephson, painter
  • Ragnar Josephson, writer and art historian
  • Anne Kalmering, singer
  • Joel Kinnaman, actor
  • George Klein, pathologist and writer
  • Oskar Klein, physicist
  • Oscar Levertin, poet and literary historian
  • Jacob Marcus, businessman, pioneer in the history of Sweden's Jewish population
  • Rudolf Meidner, economist
  • Hanna Pauli, painter
  • Dominika Peczynski, musician
  • Alexandra Rapaport, actress
  • Marcel Riesz, mathematician[9]
  • Göran Rosenberg, journalist
  • Bo Rothstein, political scientist
  • Nelly Sachs, poet, Nobel Prize (1966)[10]
  • Jerzy Sarnecki, criminologist
  • Harry Schein, writer and culture personality
  • Leif Silbersky, lawyer and author
  • Sara Sommerfeld, actress
  • Ute Steyer, Sweden's first female rabbi
  • Mauritz Stiller, director[11]
  • Marcus Storch, industrialist[12]
  • Peter Weiss, dramatist and writer

References[]

  1. ^ a b c "Jews in Sports: Jewish Olympic Medalists (1896 - Present)". Jewish Virtual Library.
  2. ^ http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Biographies/Bers.html
  3. ^ "Arts: Violinist Gidon Kremer talks to Charlotte Higgins". TheGuardian.com. 22 November 2000.
  4. ^ Concise Dictionary of National Biography: "born in Lithuania of Jewish parentage"
  5. ^ Jewish Year Book 1975, p.213
  6. ^ Heifetz - [1] "Jascha Heifetz, Fritz Kreisler, Mischa Elman... were all Jews, too"
  7. ^ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography: "His parents were Orthodox Jews"
  8. ^ Bloom, Nate (2006-12-19). "The Jews Who Wrote Christmas Songs". InterfaithFamily. Retrieved 2006-12-19.
  9. ^ Jewish Mathematicians
  10. ^ "Sachs, Nelly". Nationalencyklopedin Multimedia 2000. Höganäs: Bokförlaget Bra Böcker AB. 2000. ISBN 91-7133-747-4.
  11. ^ "Stiller, Mauritz". Nationalencyklopedin Multimedia 2000. Höganäs: Bokförlaget Bra Böcker AB. 2000. ISBN 91-7133-747-4.
  12. ^ Jewish Chronicle, February 4, 2000, p.6: "Jewish business leader Marcus Storch"
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