The Jewish 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential Jews of All Time

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Authors: Michael Shapiro

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BOOK: The Jewish 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential Jews of All Time
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The
JEWISH
100
The
JEWISH
100
A Ranking of
The Most Influential
Jews of All Time
Michael Shapiro

Paumanok Books Edition - 2012

Copyright © 1994 by Michael Shapiro

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, except by
a
newspaper or magazine reviewer who wishes to quote brief passages in connection with a review.

Published by Paumanok Books

Editorial Offices: 270 Madison Avenue, Suite 1501, New York, NY 10016

Queries regarding rights and permissions should be addressed to:

Paumanok Books, 270 Madison Avenue, Suite 1501, New York, NY 10016

Manufactured in the United States of America
ISBN-13: 978-1470014421, ISBN-10: 1470014424

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Shapiro, Michael

The Jewish 100: a ranking of the most influential Jews of all time / by Michael Shapiro.

      p. cm.

1. Jews—Biography. I.Title. II.Title:Jewishonehundred.
DS115.S465 1994

920.0092924—dc20

93-44621

 

  CIP

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To Barnett, Annie, and Esther

Uncle Charlie and Aunt Jean

Sam and Jean

Benjamin, Gregory, Nathaniel, and Elena

I owe you my life and all my love

… but your name shall be Abraham; for the father of many nations have I made you. And I will make you exceedingly fruitful, and I will make nations from you, and kings shall come out of you. And I will establish My covenant between Myself and you and your seed after you throughout their generations for an everlasting covenant, to be a God unto you and to your seed after you …

—Genesis 17:5

CONTENTS

        
INTRODUCTION

  
1    Moses

  
2    Jesus of Nazareth

  
3    Albert Einstein

  
4    Sigmund Freud

  
5    Abraham

  
6    Saul of Tarsus (Saint Paul)

  
7    Karl Marx

  
8    Theodor Herzl

  
9    Mary

10    Baruch de Spinoza

11    David

12    Anne Frank

13    The Prophets

14    Judas Iscariot

15    Gustav Mahler

16    Maimonides

17    Niels Bohr

18    Moses Mendelssohn

19    Paul Ehrlich

20    Rashi

21    Benjamin Disraeli

22    Franz Kafka

23    David Ben-Gurion

24    Hillel

25    John Von Neumann

26    Simon Bar Kokhba

27    Marcel Proust

28    Mayer Rothschild

29    Solomon

30    Heinrich Heine

31    Selman Waksman

32    Giacomo Meyerbeer

33    Isaac Luria

34    Gregory Pincus

35    Leon Trotsky

36    David Ricardo

37    Alfred Dreyfus

38    Leo Szilard

39    Mark Rothko

40    Ferdinand Cohn

41    Samuel Gompers

42    Gertrude Stein

43    Albert Michelson

44    Philo Judaeus

45    Golda Meir

46    The Vilna Gaon

47    Henri Bergson

48    The Baal Shem Tov

49    Felix Mendelssohn

50    Louis B. Mayer

51    Judah Halevy

52    Haym Salomon

53    Johanan ben Zakkai

54    Arnold Schoenberg

55    Emile Durkheim

56    Betty Friedan

57    David Sarnoff

58    Lorenzo Da Ponte

59    Julius Rosenwald

60    Casimir Funk

61    George Gershwin

62    Chaim Weizmann

63    Franz Boas

64    Sabbatai Zevi

65    Leonard Bernstein

66    Flavius Josephus

67    Walter Benjamin

68    Louis Brandeis

69    Emile Berliner

70    Sarah Bernhardt

71    Levi Strauss

72    Nahmanides

73    Menachem Begin

74    Anna Freud

75    Queen Esther

76    Martin Buber

77    Jonas Salk

78    Jerome Robbins

79    Henry Kissinger

80    Wilhelm Steinitz

81    Arthur Miller

82    Daniel Mendoza

83    Stephen Sondheim

84    Emma Goldman

85    Sir Moses Montefiore

86    Jerome Kern

87    Boris Pasternak

88    Harry Houdini

89    Edward Bernays

90    Leopold Auer

91    Groucho Marx

92    Man Ray

93    Henrietta Szold

94    Benny Goodman

95    Steven Spielberg

96    Marc Chagall

97    Bob Dylan

98    Sandy Koufax

99    Bernard Berenson

100  Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster

        
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

        
INDEX

INTRODUCTION

From Abraham to the death of Simon Bar Kokhba in the tragic revolt against the Romans of 135 C.E., the Jewish people exerted an influence on world civilization more profound and lasting than any other ancient culture. Surely other peoples added their own richness to humanity: Babylonian government, Chinese invention, Egyptian architecture, Greek philosophy, literature, and democracy, Hindu mysticism, Roman imperialism—all contributed much to the forces of history.

Yet the Jews were a people capable of producing Moses and Jesus of Nazareth and inspiring the Prophet of Islam. The beliefs of Christians and Muslims in one God come directly from the Jewish S’hma (“Hear, O Israel, the LORD our
GOD,
the
LORD
is One!”). Those words, first uttered in a desert almost devoid of life, blossomed into the faiths of countless billions.

When the Romans massacred Bar Kokhba and his rebels, the survivors were either sold into slavery or dispersed into the empire. Except for the flowering of Jewish expression in pre-Inquisition Spain, no Jew, until Baruch de Spinoza in the seventeenth century, was permitted to leave any mark on Western civilization. Almost 1,600 years were spent in seclusion and bare survival. Jews did not participate to any noticeable degree in the Italian Renaissance or the Elizabethan Age. Nonetheless, during these centuries of hiding and Diaspora, a succession of rabbis of genius and an observant people kept the Jewish religion and culture intact.

Only when leaders such as Moses Mendelssohn and the Rothschilds pulled themselves and their people out of the ghetto that was their lot in Europe (and with the special help of Napoleon) did Jewry again participate in the development of a world community. The period from the Enlightenment in the late 1700s through the present day has witnessed the third greatest period of Jewish culture and influence.

This book ranks the 100 most influential Jews of all time. In their areas of human endeavor each of them worked a special influence on mankind. They changed the way we live and think. Even the few who touched only the souls and minds of Jews are important to us because of their defining presence on Jewish identity.

Some of the Jewish 100 modified their Judaism into something new. Saul of Tarsus became Paul, disciple of a man he claimed was the Jewish Messiah. Spinoza applied a logic that carried him straight out of Judaism. Karl Marx imposed an almost biblical sense of history to prove the imperative of his political ideal. Whether their modifications improved life will always generate discussion and argument. Their special examples prove why examining the influence of the Jewish 100 is so compelling.

Another source of debate is the relative weight given to different spheres of human involvement. Figures from the Bible are not necessarily more influential than some contemporary people. Neither is entertainment always less crucial to humanity than religion or science.

Some of the Jewish 100 have had the benefit of thousands of years to work their unique influence. The weight of centuries would seem to favor the ancients over the moderns. However, it would be unfair to belittle the accomplishments of an Albert Einstein because a King David preceded him by three thousand years. Einstein will remain influential into the next millennium as mankind either suffers nuclear conflagration or hooks onto the speed of light to blast far into space.

This overview of the Jewish 100 is not designed to be a reference book. Most of the lives of the Jewish 100 are very adequately described in encyclopedias and learned biographies. Rather, in the Talmudic tradition of presentation and analysis, the Jewish 100 have been ranked and examined in their order of influence on the world, not just on Jews. The rankings are open for discussion. Not all the Jewish 100 were great and good men (though most were), but all altered conventions or directed society into what they viewed as righteousness, seeking to improve life not only for their minority but for all of God’s children.

The
JEWISH
100
1

Moses
(Thirteenth century
B.C.E.
)

H
e was a prince in Egypt, then a killer, an outcast, a shepherd, a liberator of slaves, a receiver of God’s laws, a judge, a conqueror, and a prophet. Snatched from the Nile, he was raised by Pharaoh’s sister, attended by an Israelite woman (actually his mother). Only a slave brought up as royalty could have had the courage and know-how to lead the oppressed in such a revolt. The Jews’ flight from Egypt was, remarkably, the one successful rebellion of an enslaved people in ancient times. The Exodus, that singular event in history, transformed nomads into a power that changed earthly life forever.

The Exodus, rather than the Creation, defined the Jewish people. The laws given by God directly to Moses in the desert became known as the Sinai covenant, with the Ten Commandments, or Decalogue, its core. Simple justice and respect for life were established in Sinai as the controlling forces of humanity.

In the ancient Egyptian language, Moses, or Mosheh, means “born of” or “is born”; the Hebrew
masheh
translates as “drawn of.” Whatever the origins (which seem to combine the strongest strains of ancient Egyptian and Hebraic cultures), Moses’ life story dominates the Bible. He was the most exemplary of the Hebrew prophets and the most influential Jew in all history. As either a model or a real man, he brought to human life a concern for the downtrodden, an idealism, a hope, a system of laws by which people can survive each other, whether lost in the wilderness for forty years or seated in the courts of great palaces of stone and marble. Through Moses, God directed mankind. Yet Moses spoke sluggishly, relying on his brother Aaron for eloquent speech.

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