Aryeh Tartakower (; 1897–1982) was a Polish-born Israeli political activist, historian and sociologist. He was the Director of the Department of Relief and Rehabilitation of the World Jewish Congress during World War II. He was the Chair of the Department of Sociology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and the author of many books about Jewish refugees and Israel.
Tartakower joined the World Zionist Actions Committee in 1927. He served as the Director of the Department of Relief and Rehabilitation and Deputy Director of the Institute of Jewish Affairs at the World Jewish Congress in New York City from 1939 to 1946. He alerted U.S. government officials about the fascist past of Romanian emigrant Valerian Trifa in 1962. Tartakower subsequently served as the chair of its cultural department. He also joined the executive committee of the World Hebrew Confederation in 1959. By 1976, he served as the chair of the Falasha Relief Committee, where he helped Ethiopian Jews emigrate to Israel.
Tatakower taught sociology at the Institute of Jewish Sciences in Warsaw, Poland from 1932 to 1939. After he made aliyah in 1946, he served as the Chair of the Department of Sociology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He was the author of many books in Polish, English, Yiddish and Hebrew.
|
|