Moishe Zilberfarb
Moishe Zylberfarb Мо́йше Ісакович Зи́льберфарб | |
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Minister of Jewish Affairs | |
In office June 28, 1917 – January 31, 1918 | |
Prime Minister | Volodymyr Vynnychenko |
Preceded by | post created |
Succeeded by | Ze'ev-Wolf Latzky-Bartholdi |
Personal details | |
Born | 1876 Rivne, Volhynia Governorate, Russian Empire |
Died | 1934 (aged 57–58) Warsaw, Poland |
Political party | Fareynikte |
Occupation | statesman, diplomat, writer |
Moishe Zylberfarb (Template:Lang-uk, Yiddish: משה זילבערפֿאַרב) was a Ukrainian politician, diplomat, public activist of Jewish descent. He was one of the authors of the Law of Ukraine about national-individual autonomy (1918)[1] which later was canceled by the Communist regime.
Brief biography
Zylberfarb was born in Rovno in 1876. In 1906 he became a founder of the group Vozrozhdenie and the Jewish Socialist Workers Party (SERP). From the very beginning he was a member of the Central Council of Ukraine (March 1917) as member of the United Jewish Socialist Workers Party. Zylberfarb was a member of Little Council. On July 27, 1917 he became a Jewish representative at the General Secretariat of Ukraine (regional government of the Russian Republic). During the October Revolution Zylberfarb became a member of the Regional Committee in Protection of Revolution in Ukraine. After the independence of Ukraine, Zylberfarb became a Minister of Jewish Affairs in Ukraine. During 1918 to 1920 he was a rector at the Jewish National University[2] and the Society in support of development of Jewish Culture (Culture League) in Kiev. In 1921 Zylberfarb moved to Warsaw where he headed ORT. He died in Otwock in 1934, and was buried in Warsaw.
Works
- Jewish ministry and Jewish autonomy in Ukraine (1919)
References
- ^ Law of Ukraine about national-individual autonomy at the Encyclopedia of History of Ukraine
- ^ Jewish National University at the Encyclopedia of History of Ukraine
External links
- Moishe Zylberfarb at the Encyclopedia of History of Ukraine
- Moishe Zylberfarb at the Russian Jewish Encyclopedia
- Moishe Zylberfarb at the Electronic Jewish Encyclopedia