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Czech and Slovak Jews

Czech and Slovak Jews

There was a large and thriving community of Jews, both religious and secular, in Czechoslovakia before World War II. Many perished during the Holocaust. Today, nearly all of the survivors have inter-married and assimilated into Czech and Slovak society.

From wikipedia:

Czech and Slovak Jews. En,

See also: History of the Jews in the Czech Republic, History of the Jews in Slovakia, Austrian Jews, List of Czech people, List of East European Jews

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Academics and scientists

  • Guido Adler (1855–1941), musicologist, composer, writer, born in Ivančice (Eibenschütz), Moravia
  • Yehuda Bauer, Czech-born Israeli historian of the Holocaust[1]
  • Itzhak Bentov, inventor[2]
  • Samuel Bergman, philosopher[3]
  • Pavel Bergmann, historian, philosopher and political activist; signatory of charter 77; nephew of Hugo Bergmann
  • Berthold Bretholz, Moravian historian[4]
  • Gerty Cori (1896–1957), biochemist[5]
  • Martin Fleischmann, chemist[6]
  • Vilém Flusser (1920–1991), self-taught philosopher[7]
  • Sigmund Freud (1856–1939), neurologist, founder of psychoanalysis; born in Příbor (Freiberg), Moravia
  • Ernest Gellner (1925–1995), philosopher and social anthropologist[8]
  • Carl Koller (1857–1944), ophthalmologist[9]
  • Stephan Korner, philosopher[10]
  • Daniel Mandl (1891–1944), civil engineer, inventor, victim of the Holocaust
  • Ernest Nagel, philosopher[11]
  • Samuel Steinherz (1857–1942), Czechoslovak mediaevalist[12]
  • Rudolf Vrba (1924–2006), pharmacologist[13] (born in Slovakia)

Mathematicians

  • Nikolai Brashman (1796–1866), mathematician[14]
  • David Gans (1541–1613), mathematician[15]
  • Joseph Kohn (born 1932), mathematician[16]
  • Ernst Kolman (1892–1972), philosopher of mathematics[17]
  • Charles Loewner (1893–1968), mathematician[18]
  • Assaf Naor (born 1975), mathematician[19]
  • Alfred Tauber (1866–1942), mathematician[20]
  • Olga Taussky-Todd (1906–1995), mathematician[21]

Arts / entertainment

  • Bedřich Feuerstein (1892–1936), architect, painter and essayist[22]
  • Miloš Forman (born 1932), film director, actor and script writer[23]
  • Juraj Herz (born 1934), film director, actor, and scenic designer[24] (born in Slovakia)
  • Arnošt Goldflam (born 1946), playwright, writer, director, screenwriter and actor[25]
  • Hugo Haas (1901–1968), actor and film director[26]
  • Miloš Kopecký (1922–1996), actor
  • Hugo Lederer (1871–1940), sculptor[27]
  • Francis Lederer (1899–2000), actor[28]
  • Herbert Lom (1917–2012), actor[29]
  • Robert Maxwell (1923–1991), media mogul[30]
  • Emil Orlik (1870–1932), painter[31]
  • Alfréd Radok (1917–1976), writer and director in theater and film[32]
  • Karel Reisz (1926–2002), director, became one of the most important film-makers in post war Britain[33]
  • Ivan Reitman (born 1946), film director (born in Slovakia)
  • Emery Roth (1871–1948), architect (born in Sečovce at the present-day territory of Slovakia)
  • Jan Saudek (born 1935), art photographer[34]
  • Anna Ticho (1894–1980), artist[35]
  • Jiří Weiss (1913–2004), film director and screenwriter[36]
  • Adrianna Demiany (née Roskovanyi) (born 1942), Slovak-Hungarian-Canadian Journalist (Born in Košice at the present-day territory of Slovakia)[37]

Athletes

  • Kurt Epstein, Czechoslovak national water polo team, Olympic competitor, incarcerated by the Nazis in Theresienstadt and Auschwitz[38][39]
  • Arie Gill-Glick (1930–2016), Israeli Olympic runner
  • Gertrude "Traute" Kleinová, table tennis, three-time world champion, incarcerated by the Nazis in Theresienstadt and Auschwitz
  • Olga Winterberg (1922–2010), Israeli Olympian in the discus throw

Music

  • Karel Ančerl (1908–1973), conductor, respected for his performances of contemporary music and particularly cherished for his interpretations of music by Czech composers[40]
  • Karel Berman (1919–1995), opera singer and composer[41]
  • Ignaz Brüll, composer and pianist[42]
  • Arthur Chitz (1882–1944) musicologist, composer, pianist, and conductor[43][44]
  • Alexander Goldscheider (born 1950), composer and producer
  • Alfred Grünfeld (1852–1924), pianist and composer[45]
  • Pavel Haas (1899–1944), composer[46]
  • Eduard Hanslick (1825–1904), music critic[47]
  • Gideon Klein (1919–1945), composer of classical music[48][49]
  • Eliška Kleinová (1912–1999), pianist, music educator; sister of Gideon Klein
  • Erich Wolfgang Korngold, composer[50]
  • Hans Krása (1899–1944), composer[51][52]
  • Egon Ledeč (1889–1944), music composer[48]
  • Gustav Mahler (1860–1911), music composer and conductor, Czech-born[53][54]
  • Herbert Thomas Mandl (1926–2007), concert violinist, professor at the Janáček Academy of Music in Ostrava, Holocaust survivor who was a contemporary witness to the rich cultural life in the Theresienstadt (Terezín) ghetto
  • Ignaz Moscheles (1794–1870), composer and piano virtuoso[55]
  • Zuzana Růžičková (1927–2017), contemporary harpsichordist, interpreter of classical and baroque music[56]
  • Erwin Schulhoff (1894–1942), composer and pianist[57]
  • Julius Schulhoff (1825–1898), pianist and composer[58]
  • Walter Susskind (1913–1980), conductor[59]
  • Viktor Ullmann (1898–1944), composer, conductor and pianist[60]
  • Jaromír Weinberger (1896–1967), composer[61]

Politicians

  • Victor Adler (1852–1918), socialist politician, born in Prague[62]
  • Madeleine Albright (born 1937), served as the 64th United States Secretary of State[63]
  • Ludwig Czech (1870–1942), leader and several times minister for the German Social Democratic Workers Party in the Czechoslovak Republic
  • Jan Fischer (born 1951), prime minister of the Czech Republic (2009)[64]
  • Bruno Kafka (1881–1931), German-speaking Jewish Czech politician, leader from 1918 to his death of the Czechoslovak German Democratic Liberal Party, member of the National Assembly
  • Ignaz Kuranda, politician[65]
  • Artur London (1915–1986), communist politician and co-defendant in the Slánský trial; born in Ostrava, Silesia, Austria-Hungary[66]
  • Rudolf Margolius (1913–1952), Deputy Minister of Foreign Trade (1949–1952), a victim of the Slánský trial[67]
  • Rudolf Slánský (1901–1952); Communist politician and the party's General Secretary after World War II; fell into disfavour with the regime and was executed after a show trial[68]
  • Michael Žantovský, politician and author; appointed to serve as the Ambassador to Israel in July 2003[69]
  • Vladimír Železný (born 1945), media businessman and politician, member of the European Parliament, founder of TV NOVA

Religious leaders

  • Samuel Abramson, rabbi of Carlsbad[70]
  • Tzvi Ashkenazi, better known as Haham Zevi, chief rabbi of Amsterdam, prominent opponent of the Sabbateans
  • Nehemiah Brüll, rabbi (born Rousínov, Moravia)[71]
  • Israel Bruna, rabbi (born Brno)[72]
  • Aaron Chorin, rabbi (born Moravia)[73]
  • Joseph H. Hertz (1872–1946), Chief Rabbi of the British Empire[74]
  • Isaac ben Jacob ha-Lavan, Bohemian tosafist[75]
  • Judah Loew ben Bezalel (1525?–1609), rabbi[76]
  • Mordecai Meisel, Philanthropist and communal leader at Prague[77]
  • Karol Sidon, playwright, chief rabbi of Prague, and Convert to Judaism

Writers

  • Henri Blowitz, journalist[78]
  • Max Brod (1884–1968), author, composer, and journalist[79]
  • Avigdor Dagan (1912–2006), writer[80]
  • Egon Hostovsky (1908–1973), writer[81]
  • Franz Kafka (1883–1924), novelist[82][83][84]
  • Siegfried Kapper (1821–1879), writer[85]
  • Ivan Klíma (born 1931), novelist, playwright[86]
  • Leopold Kompert (1822–1886), author[87]
  • Heda Margolius Kovály, author and translator[88][89]
  • František R. Kraus (1903–1967), writer, journalist and reporter; wrote one of the first books ever about his experience in Auschwitz, published in 1945
  • Arnošt Lustig (1926–2011), author of novels, short stories, plays and screenplays whose works have often involved the Holocaust[90]
  • Jiří Orten (1919–1941), poet[91]
  • Ota Pavel (1930–1973), writer, journalist and sport reporter
  • Leopold Perutz (1882–1957), German language novelist and mathematician
  • Karel Poláček (1892–1945), writer and journalist[92]
  • Tom Stoppard (born 1937), playwright, known for plays such as The Real Thing and Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead, and for the screenplay for Shakespeare in Love[93]
  • Hermann Ungar (1893–1929), writer of German language and an officer in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Czechoslovakia[94]
  • Jiří Weil (1900–1959), writer, novels Life with a Star (Život s hvězdou) and Mendelssohn is on the Roof[95]
  • Franz Werfel (1890–1945), Czech-born writer; married Mahler's widow[96]

Other

  • Jacob Bassevi (1580–1634), Bohemian Court Jew and financier[97]
  • George Brady (born 1928), brother of Hana Brady[98]
  • Hana Brady (1931–1944), Holocaust victim[99]
  • Izrael Zachariah Deutsch, deaf memoirist[100]
  • Salo Flohr (1908–1983), leading chess master of the early 20th century[101]
  • Tomáš Galásek, football player
  • Petr Ginz (1928–1944), boy deported to the Terezín concentration camp during the Holocaust[102]
  • Isaak Löw Hofmann, Edler von Hofmannsthal (1759–1849), merchant[103]
  • Frank Lowy (born 1930), businessman[104]
  • Richard Réti (1889–1929), chess grandmaster[105]
  • Yoshua Samuel Rusnak (also "Yehoshua Sh'mu'el Rusnak"; died 1915),[106] diasporan Jew and Zionist based in Kosice, Slovakia; many of his family members died in the Holocaust at Auschwitz[107][108][109]
  • Wilhelm Steinitz (1836–1900), first World Chess Champion[110]