Moshe Ronen | |
---|---|
President of the Canadian Jewish Congress | |
In office 1998–2001 | |
Preceded by | Goldie Hershon |
Succeeded by | Keith M. Landy |
Personal details | |
Born | 1958or1959(age 64–65) [1] Ramat Gan,Israel [2] |
Nationality | Canadian |
Spouse | Dara Ronen |
Moshe Ronen is a Canadian lawyer,and a Jewish community leader. Ronen served as vice-president of the World Jewish Congress,national chair of the Canada-Israel Committee,and president of the Canadian Jewish Congress from 1998 to 2001. [3]
Moshe Ronen was born in Ramat Gan,Israel,to Holocaust survivors Mordechai and Ilana Ronen. [2] [4] He immigrated to Canada at the age of 6. [2] He was educated at the Associated Hebrew School and Community Hebrew Academy of Toronto (CHAT) before obtaining a degree in political science and economics from York University and a law degree from the University of Windsor. [3] During his studies he served as vice-chairman of the World Union of Jewish Students and president of the North American Jewish Students' Network. [1]
In the 1970s and 1980s Ronen was an activist in the Movement to Free Soviet Jewry in support of refusenik political prisoners in the Soviet Union,and to allow emigration of Soviet Jews to Israel. [3] In 1985,he led an international student protest against US President Ronald Reagan's visit to a cemetery in Bitburg,Germany that contained Nazi SS graves. [3] Later that year,he was arrested for staging a sit-in at the offices of Soviet airline company Aeroflot during the Geneva Summit. [2]
In 1996,he was awarded the Jewish National Fund's Jerusalem of Gold Award and,in 1998,was received a Volunteer Service Award from the Province of Ontario. [3]
Ronen succeeded Goldie Hershon as national president of the Canadian Jewish Congress (CJC) in 1998. [5] As CJC president,he successfully advocated the recognition of Yom Hashoah by each provincial government in Canada as a means of remembering and educating people about the Holocaust. [3] In January 1999,he accompanied Prime Minister Jean Chrétien on a visit to the Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination camp. [6]
Moshe Safdie is an Israeli-Canadian-American architect,urban planner,educator,theorist,and author. He is known for incorporating principles of socially responsible design throughout the course of his six-decade career. His projects include cultural,educational,and civic institutions;neighborhoods and public parks;housing;mixed-use urban centers;airports;and master plans for existing communities and entirely new cities in the Americas,the Middle East,and Asia. Safdie is most identified with designing Marina Bay Sands and Jewel Changi Airport,as well as his debut project Habitat 67,which was originally conceived as his thesis at McGill University. He holds legal citizenship in Israel,Canada,and the United States.
Yad Vashem is Israel's official memorial to the victims of the Holocaust. It is dedicated to preserving the memory of the Jews who were murdered;echoing the stories of the survivors;honoring Jews who fought against their Nazi oppressors and gentiles who selflessly aided Jews in need;and researching the phenomenon of the Holocaust in particular and genocide in general,with the aim of avoiding such events in the future. Yad Vashem's vision,as stated on its website,is:"To lead the documentation,research,education and commemoration of the Holocaust,and to convey the chronicles of this singular Jewish and human event to every person in Israel,to the Jewish people,and to every significant and relevant audience worldwide."
Edgar Miles Bronfman was a Canadian-American businessman. He worked for his family's distilled beverage firm,Seagram,eventually becoming president,treasurer and CEO. As president of the World Jewish Congress,Bronfman is especially remembered for initiating diplomacy with the Soviet Union,which resulted in legitimizing the Hebrew language in the USSR,and contributed to Soviet Jews being legally able to practice their religion,as well as immigrate to Israel.
The Betar Movement,also spelled Beitar (בית"ר),is a Revisionist Zionist youth movement founded in 1923 in Riga,Latvia,by Vladimir (Ze'ev) Jabotinsky. It was one of several right-wing youth movements that arose at that time and adopted special salutes and uniforms.
Yom HaZikaron laShoah ve-laG'vurah,known colloquially in Israel and abroad as Yom HaShoah and in English as Holocaust Remembrance Day,or Holocaust Day,is observed as Israel's day of commemoration for the approximately six million Jews murdered in the Holocaust by Nazi Germany and its collaborators,and for the Jewish resistance in that period. In Israel,it is a national memorial day. The first official commemorations took place in 1951,and the observance of the day was anchored in a law passed by the Knesset in 1959. It is held on the 27th of Nisan,unless the 27th would be adjacent to the Jewish Sabbath,in which case the date is shifted by a day.
The Jewish Infantry Brigade Group,more commonly known as the Jewish Brigade Group or Jewish Brigade,was a military formation of the British Army in the Second World War. It was formed in late 1944 and was recruited among Yishuv Jews from Mandatory Palestine and commanded by Anglo-Jewish officers. It served in the latter stages of the Italian Campaign,and was disbanded in 1946.
The Canadian Jewish Congress was,for more than ninety years,the main advocacy group for the Jewish community in Canada. Regarded by many as the "Parliament of Canadian Jewry," the Congress was at the forefront of the struggle for human rights,equality,immigration reform and civil rights in Canada.
World Agudath Israel,usually known as the Aguda, was established in the early twentieth century as the political arm of Ashkenazi Torah Judaism. It succeeded Agudas Shlumei Emunei Yisroel in 1912. Its base of support was located in Eastern Europe before the Second World War but,due to the revival of the Hasidic movement,it included Orthodox Jews throughout Europe. Prior to World War II and the Holocaust,Agudath Israel operated a number of Jewish educational institutions throughout Europe. After the war,it has continued to operate such institutions in the United States as Agudath Israel of America,and in Israel. Agudath Israel is guided by its Moetzes Gedolei HaTorah in Israel and the USA.
The Anne &Max Tanenbaum Community Hebrew Academy of Toronto,also known as CHAT and TanenbaumCHAT,is a private Jewish high school in Toronto,Ontario,established in 1960. As of 2012,it was the largest private high school in Canada. A second campus of TanenbaumCHAT existed from 2000 to 2017 in the York Region,known as the Kimel Family Education Centre.
Bernie M. Farber is a Canadian writer,commentator,and the former chief executive officer of the Canadian Jewish Congress and a social activist. He has testified before the Canadian courts as an expert witness on hate crime.
Ephraim Oshry,was an Orthodox rabbi,posek,and author of The Annihilation of Lithuanian Jewry. He was one of the few European rabbis to survive the Holocaust.
The World Holocaust Forum is a series of events aimed at preserving the memory of the Holocaust. It is also known as the "Let My People Live!" Forum.
Viatcheslav Moshe Kantor is a Russian businessman.
Keith M. Landy was a Canadian lawyer and former president of the Canadian Jewish Congress.
Dorothy Reitman,is a Canadian philanthropist and activist who served as first female president of the Canadian Jewish Congress (CJC) from 1986 to 1989.
Goldie Brenda Hershon was a Canadian activist from Montreal and former president of the Canadian Jewish Congress (1995–1998). Her presidency was marked by the focus on national unity,support for Jewish communities living in smaller Canadian centres,aid to Jewish communities in places like the former Soviet Union,and the prosecution of Nazi war criminals living in Canada.
Marvin Alan Sweeney is Professor of Hebrew Bible at Claremont School of Theology (1994–present). Dr. Sweeney was trained under the tutelage of Rolf P. Knierim at Claremont Graduate University. He was a Yad ha-Nadiv/Barecha Foundation Post-Doctoral Fellow in Jewish Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem,where he worked with Moshe Greenberg (1989-1990);a Lilly Theological Research Grant Recipient (1997-1998);and a Fellow of the Summer Institute for Modern Israel Studies,sponsored by the American Jewish Committee and Brandeis University (2004). Sweeney previously taught in the Religious Studies Department and Judaic Studies Program at the University of Miami in Coral Gables,FL (1983-1994),and he has served as Dorot Research Professor at the W. F. Albright Institute in Jerusalem,Israel (1993-1994);Visiting Professor of Bible at the Hebrew Union College—Jewish Institute of Religion,Los Angeles,CA;Underwood Professor of Divinity at Yonsei University in Seoul,Korea (2011);visiting scholar at Chang Jung Christian University in Tainan,Taiwan (2015);and Professor of Tanak at the Academy for Jewish Religion California,Los Angeles,CA (2000-2019). He also serves on the faculty of Religion at Claremont Graduate University (1994–present). In 2019,Sweeney relocated to Salem,Oregon,due to the attempted transfer of Claremont School of Theology to Willamette University.
Itsik Moshe was born on December 31,in 1959 and is currently the founder and Chairman of Israeli House,the organization concentrated on Israeli Hasbara in Eastern Europe. Formerly he was the representative of the Jewish Agency in 5 USSR countries and now he is actively cooperating in Europe within the framework of cooperation with the European Alliance for Israel.
Itzhak Nener was an Israeli jurist who cofounded the International Association of Jewish Lawyers and Jurists and served as vice-president of Liberal International.
Yitzchak Zelig Morgenstern of Kotzk-Sokolov was an Admor and Rosh yeshiva,a member of the Moetzes Gedolei HaTorah and a leader of Polish Jewry before the Holocaust,who died shortly after the war began.