Lelyveld, Arthur

Lelyveld, Arthur
▪ 1997

      U.S. rabbi and Reform Judaism leader whose social activism embraced support for recognition of Israel two years before that country's birth, the fostering of closer relations between Jews and African-Americans, and civil rights work that included the registration of black voters in the South in the early 1960s (b. Feb. 6, 1913—d. April 15, 1996).

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • Lelyveld, Arthur — (1913 96)    American Reform rabbi and community leader. He was born in New York. He served as national director of the B nai B rith Hillel Foundations from 1947 to 1956, and later as rabbi of Fairmount Temple in Cleveland. From 1966 he was… …   Dictionary of Jewish Biography

  • LELYVELD, JOSEPH — (1937– ), U.S. journalist and author. Born in Cincinnati, Ohio, Lelyveld was the son of Rabbi arthur lelyveld , who became prominent in the Reform and civil rights movements. During his childhood, his father was largely absent, and the marriage… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Arthur Lelyveld — Rabbi Arthur J. Lelyveld (February 6 1913 April 15 1996) was a rabbi within the movement of Reform Judaism. As well as being a prominent rabbi he also embraced social activism in many forms.After marrying Toby Lelyvald a scholar of Shakespeare [… …   Wikipedia

  • Joseph Lelyveld — (born April 5, 1937) was executive editor of the New York Times from 1994 to 2001, is a Pulitzer Prize wining journalist and author, and a frequent contributor to the New York Review of Books .In all, Lelyveld worked at the Times for nearly 40… …   Wikipedia

  • Joseph Lelyveld — (n. 5 de abril de 1937) es un periodista y escritor estadounidense ganador del Premio Pulitzer y un habitual colaborador del New York Review of Books. Fue editor ejecutivo del New York Times desde 1994 hasta 2001, y editor ejecutivo interino en… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Joseph Lelyveld — (* 5. April 1937 in Cincinnati) ist ein US amerikanischer Schriftsteller, Journalist und war von 1994 bis 2001 Chefredakteur der New York Times. Sein Vater war der jüdische Führer des amerikanischen Reformjudentums Arthur Lelyveld. Lelyveld… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • LELOW — (Pol. Lelów), village (formerly a town) in Kielce province, S.E. central Poland. Several dozen Jewish families were living in Lelow in 1547, but in 1564 only six families remained; each paid the king one red guilder residence tax and a certain… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi — Gandhi redirects here. For other uses, see Gandhi (disambiguation). Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi …   Wikipedia

  • Jeremy Langford — (born London, England, 1956), British/Israeli glass designer and sculptorHis family s original name was Lelyveld, natives of the Netherlands, and Langford is related to Joseph Lelyveld, an editor of The New York Times , and to civil rights… …   Wikipedia

  • CLEVELAND — CLEVELAND, city situated in Northeast Ohio on Lake Erie. Its metropolitan area has the largest Jewish population in the state (81,500 in 1996). Jewish settlement began in the 1830s, when Daniel Maduro Peixotto (1800–43) joined the faculty of… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

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