List of West European Jews
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List of Jews by country |
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(*most are Jewish) |
Apart from France, established Jewish populations exist in the Netherlands, Belgium and Switzerland. With the original medieval populations wiped out by the Black Death and the pogroms that followed it, the current Dutch and Belgian communities originate in the Jewish expulsion from Spain and Portugal, while a Swiss community was only established after emancipation in 1874. However, the vast majority of the population in the Netherlands and a large proportion of the one in Belgium were killed in the Holocaust, and much of the modern Jewish population of these countries (as well as of Switzerland) derives from post-Holocaust arrivals from Eastern Europe. Here is a list of some prominent West European Jews, arranged by country of origin.
Contents |
Belgium
- Chantal Akerman, director
- Zora Arkus-Duntov, father of the Chevrolet Corvette (Belgian-born)
- Natacha Atlas, singer (Jewish father; Belgian-born)
- Lt-General Louis Bernheim, WWI General
- Gérard Blitz, Olympic water polo medallist, co-founder of Club Med
- Diane von Furstenberg, fashion designer
- Camille Gutt, finance minister; head of the IMF
- Paul Hymans, liberal leader; president of the League of Nations
- George Koltanowski, chess player
- Claude Lévi-Strauss, anthropologist (Belgian-born)
- Alfred Lowenstein, financier (Jewish mother)
- Chaim Perelman, philosopher (Polish born)
- Ilya Prigogine, chemist, Nobel Prize (1977)
- Henry Spira, animal rights activist
- Elias M. Stein, mathematician (Belgian-born)
- Gilbert Stork, chemist
- Olivier Strelli, fashion designer
Ireland
- Henri Bergson, philosopher (Anglo-Irish mother)
- John Desmond Bernal, molecular biologist (Jewish father)
- Agnes Bernelle, entertainer
- Robert & Ben Briscoe, lord mayors of Dublin
- Daniel Day Lewis, actor (Jewish mother)
- Josephine Hart, author (unconfirmed)
- Walter Heitler, physicist
- Chaim Herzog, Israeli president
- Sam Obernik, singer
Luxembourg
- Hugo Gernsback, science-fiction pioneer (unconfirmed)
- Emil Hirsch, reform rabbi
- Gabriel Lippmann, French physicist (Luxembourg-born)
Monaco
- Franz Schreker, composer (Jewish father)
Netherlands
- Tobias Asser, jurist, Nobel Peace Prize (1911)
- Alfred Ayer, philosopher (Dutch mother)
- Frieda Belinfante, conductor (Jewish father)
- Carina Benninga, field hockey player, Olympic flag bearer
- Bart Berman, pianist (Jewish mother)
- Sarah Bernhardt, actress (Dutch Jewish single mother)
- Job Cohen, mayor of Amsterdam
- Anne Frank, diarist
- Samuel Gompers, labor union leader (Dutch parents)
- Samuel Goudsmit, physicist
- Jacob Israël de Haan, poet
- Etty Hillesum, writer
- Xaviera Hollander, writer (Jewish father)
- Hendrik S. Houthakker, economist
- Izaak Kolthoff, chemist
- Leo Lionni, illustrator (Jewish father)
- Karl Marx, social theorist (Dutch mother)
- Harry Mulisch, author (Jewish mother)
- Abraham Pais, historian of science
- David Ricardo, economist (Dutch parents)
- Tom Okker, tennis player
- Samuel Sarphati, physician, city planner
- Leo Smit, composer
- Baruch Spinoza, philosopher
- Sjaak Swart, Ajax footballer (Jewish father)
5 out of the 12 members of the 1928 Olympics Dutch Women's Gymnastics Team – the first ever women's gymnastics gold medalists – were Jewish, as was one of the two coaches. All but one of the six perished in the Holocaust.
Switzerland
- Jeff Agoos, US soccer international
- Ernest Bloch, composer
- Felix Bloch, physicist, Nobel Prize (1952)
- Alain de Botton, writer
- John M. Brunswick, founder of the Brunswick Corporation
- Albert Cohen, novelist
- Arthur Cohn, film producer
- Ruth Dreifuss, Swiss president (1999)
- Camille & Henry Dreyfus, inventors of Celanese
- Al Dubin, lyricist
- Albert Einstein, physicist, Nobel Prize (1921)
- Edmond Fischer, biochemist, Nobel Prize (1992) (Jewish father)
- Robert Frank, photographer
- Meyer Guggenheim, businessman
- Jeanne Hersch, philosopher
- Viktor Korchnoi, chess player (Jewish mother)
- Mathilde Krim, AIDS researcher (convert)
- Meret Oppenheim, surrealist artist
- Rachel, stage actress (Swiss-born)
- Tadeus Reichstein, chemist, Nobel Prize (1950)
- Edmond Safra, banker
- Jean Starobinski, literary critic
- Sigismond Thalberg, pianist, composer
- Charles Weissmann, biochemist