List of Jewish American businesspeople
(Redirected from List of Jewish American business figures)
This is a partial list of notable Jewish American business executives. For other Jewish Americans, see Lists of Jewish Americans. |
Advertising and public relations
editAerospace
edit- Henry Crown (1896–1990), founder of the Material Service Corporation (merged with General Dynamics)[1][2]
- Jesse Itzler (1968–), co-founder of NetJets and co-owner of NBA's Atlanta Hawks[3][4]
- Abraham Karem (1937–), Iraqi-born founder of Karem Aircraft[5]
- Si Ramo (1913–2016), co-founder of TRW Inc.[6][7]
- Bernard L. Schwartz (1925–2024), long-time CEO of Loral Space & Communications[8]
- Al Schwimmer (1917–2011), American-Israeli founder of Israel Aerospace Industries[9][10]
Cosmetics
editEnergy and mining
edit- Guma Aguiar (1977–2015), Brazilian-born energy industrialist, co-founder of Leor Energy L.P.; disappeared in June 2012[11][12]
- Arthur Belfer (1906–1993), Polish-born founder of the Belco Petroleum Company, one of the precursor companies of Enron Corporation[13]
- Louis Blaustein (1869–1937), Lithuanian-born co-founder (along with his son Jacob) of the American Oil Company (1922)[14]
- Jacob Blaustein (1892–1970), American-born co-founder (along with his father Louis) of the American Oil Company (1922)[14]
- Marvin Davis (1925–2004), chairman of the Davis Petroleum Corp., briefly owner of 20th Century Fox and the Beverly Hills Hotel; member of the Davis family[15]
- Max Fisher (1908–2005), founder of the Aurora Gasoline Company, once one of the largest gas station chains in the Midwest[16]
- Robert Friedland (1950–), American-Canadian co-founder of Ivanhoe Energy Inc. and chairman of Ivanhoe Mines Ltd.[17]
- Avram Glazer (1960–), former chairman and CEO of Zapata Corp. (now HRG Group, Inc.), co-chairman of family-owned EPL's Manchester United F.C.; member of the Glazer family[18]
- Joseph S. Gruss (1903–1993), Ukrainian-born founder of Gruss & Company[19]
- Jack J. Grynberg (1932–2021), Polish-born oil and natural gas developer, founder of Oceanic Exploration Co.[20][21]
- Meyer Guggenheim (1828–1905), Swiss-born mining magnate; member of the Guggenheim family[22][23]
- Armand Hammer (1898–1990), long-time CEO and president of the Occidental Petroleum Corporation, co-founder of Isramco[24][25][26]
- Leon Hess (1914–1999), founder of Hess Corporation and former owner of NFL's New York Jets[27]
- Ludwig Jesselson (1910–1993), German-born metal trader who served as president and CEO of Phibro[28]
- Adolph (1849–1938) and Leonard Lewisohn (1847–1902), German-born mining magnates, founders of Lewisohn Bros.[29]
- George Lindemann (1936–2018), chairman and CEO of the Southern Union Company[30][31]
- Benedict I. Lubell (1909–1996), founder of the Lubell Oil Company[32]
- Samuel Newhouse (1853–1930), mining magnate; developed Newhouse, Utah[33]
- Andrew Perlman (1975–), co-founder of GreatPoint Energy[34]
- Samuel Ruben (1900–1988), co-founder of Duracell Inc.[35]
- Charles Schusterman (1935–2000), Russian-born founder of the Samson Investment Company[36]
Financial services
editFood
editManufacturing and distribution
editMiscellaneous
edit- Juval Aviv (1947–), Israeli-American founder of corporate investigations firm Interfor International[37][38]
- Larry Baer, CEO of MLB's San Francisco Giants[39]
- Henry (1922–2019) and Richard Bloch (1926–2004), founders of tax preparation company H&R Block, Inc.[40]
- Al Davis (1929–2011), owner of the NFL's Oakland Raiders[41]
- Heidi Fleiss (1965–), former madam, owner of the Nevada-based Flying S Ranch Ultralight Flightpark, an ultralight private use airport[42]
- Orit Gadiesh (1951–), Israeli-American corporate strategist, chairwoman of global management consultancy Bain & Company[43]
- Jonathan Greenstein (1967–), founder of auction house J. Greenstein & Company[44]
- Ami James (1972–), Israeli-American entrepreneur, owner of the Miami-based Love Hate Tattoo Studio, and nightclub Love Hate Lounge[45][46]
- Jules Kroll (1941–), founder of corporate investigation firm Kroll, Inc.[47]
- Terry Lenzner (1939–2020), founder of Investigative Group International (IGI)[48]
- Jason Levien, co-owner of D.C. United Holdings (holds MLS' D.C. United), co-owner of EFL Championship's Swansea City A.F.C. and NBL Australia's Brisbane Bullets, former CEO of NBA's Memphis Grizzlies[49]
- Ira A. Lipman (1940–2019), founder and chairman of security company Guardsmark[50]
- Moishe Mana (1956–), Israeli-born founder of Moishe's Moving Systems, GRM Information Management and MILK Studios[51]
- Barry Minkow (1966–), founder of carpet-cleaning company ZZZZ Best Co.[52]
- Morris Mirkin (1919–1985), founder of Budget Rent-a-Car[53][54]
- Abraham Saperstein (1902–1966), British-born founder of the Harlem Globetrotters; former owner of NLB's Chicago Brown Bombers and the Birmingham Black Barons[55][56]
- Louis Sloss (1823–1902), co-founder of the Alaska Commercial Company[57]
- Casey Wasserman (1974–), founder of sports marketing and talent management company Wasserman[58][59]
- Mark Weinberger (1964/1965–), former chairman of multinational professional services firm Ernst & Young (EY)[60][61]
- Sheldon Yellen (1958–), CEO of BELFOR Property Restoration[62][63]
- Daniel Yergin (1947–), vice chairman of research and information company, IHS Markit[64]
Music industry
editNewspapers and publishing
editPharmaceuticals and healthcare
edit- Arie S. Belldegrun (1949–), Israeli-American (co-)founder of Kite Pharma and biotechnology companies Agensys, Allogene Therapeutics[65]
- Howard Birndorf (1950–), co-founder of biotechnology companies Hybritech, Inc., Gen-Probe (merged with Hologic) and IDEC Pharmaceuticals (merged with Biogen)[66][67]
- Alan Cohen (1954–), founder of Andrx Pharmaceuticals[68]
- Phillip Frost (1936–), entrepreneur, chairman and CEO of OPKO Health, former Vice chairman of Teva[69]
- Alex Grass (1927–2009), founder of the Rite Aid Corporation[70]
- Bennett Greenspan (1952–), co-founder of gene testing company Gene by Gene, Ltd. (Family Tree DNA)[71][72]
- Rachel Haurwitz (1985–), co-founder of gene editing company Caribou Biosciences[73]
- Joel Landau, co-founder of nursing home operator company The Allure Group and healthcare services company AlphaCare[74]
- Jeremy Levin (1954–), South African-born chairman of Ovid Therapeutics Inc., former CEO of Teva[75]
- Arthur D. Levinson (1950–), CEO of biotechnology company Calico, former chairman of Genentech[76]
- Al Mann (1925–2016), founder of biotechnology companies Pacesetter Systems and the MannKind Corporation[77]
- Stewart Rahr (1946–), founder of Kinray Inc.[78][79]
- Shlomo Rechnitz (1971–), health care magnate, co-founder of TwinMed LLC[80]
- Richard Roberts (1957–), former owner of URL Pharma (acquired by the Takeda Pharmaceutical Company in 2012)[81]
- Martine Rothblatt (1954–), founder of biotechnology company United Therapeutics, co-founder of Sirius Satellite Radio[82][83]
- Mortimer (1916–2010) and Raymond Sackler (1920–2017), former owners of Purdue Pharma (known for OxyContin); members of the Sackler family[84]
- Leonard Schleifer (1953–), founder of biotechnology company Regeneron Pharmaceuticals[85][86]
- Cheryl Shuman, founder of the Beverly Hills Cannabis Club[87]
- Daniel E. Straus (1956–), founder of CareOne LLC and minority owner of NBA's Memphis Grizzlies[88]
- Samuel D. Waksal (1947–), French-born founder of ImClone Systems, Kadmon Corporation[89][90][91]
- Herbert Wertheim (1939–), founder of eye care products manufacturing company Brain Power Incorporated (BPI)[92][93]
- Ron Zwanziger (1954–), Israeli-American founder of diagnostic testing devices manufacturing company Alere, Inc.[94]
Real estate
editRetail
editTechnology and software
edit- Rony Abovitz (1971–), founder of Magic Leap, co-founder of the MAKO Surgical Corp.[95]
- Leonard Adleman (1945–), co-founder of RSA Security LLC[96]
- Aron Ain, chairman of the Ultimate Kronos Group (UKG)[97]
- Beny Alagem (1953–), Israeli-American co-founder of Packard Bell, owner of the Beverly Hilton hotel[98]
- Kobi Alexander (1952–), Israeli-American co-founder of Comverse Technology[99]
- Steve Ballmer (1956–), former long-time CEO of the Microsoft Corporation, founder of USAFacts and owner of NBA's Los Angeles Clippers[100][101]
- Werner Michael Blumenthal (1926–), former chairman and CEO of Burroughs Corporation and Unisys[102]
- Julian A. Brodsky (1933–), co-founder of the Comcast Corporation[103]
- Safra Catz (1961–), Israeli-born CEO and co-president of the Oracle Corporation[104]
- Alon Nisim Cohen (1968–), Israeli-born co-founder of CyberArk[105]
- Bram Cohen (1975–), author of the BitTorrent protocol, co-founder of BitTorrent, Inc.[106]
- Jared Cohen (1981–), CEO of technology incubator company Jigsaw (formerly Google Ideas)[107]
- Michael Dell (1965–), founder of DELL[108]
- Larry Ellison (1944–), co-founder of the Oracle Corporation[109]
- David Frankel, South African-born tech investor, co-founder of Internet Solutions (IS), the largest ISP in Africa[110]
- Gideon Gartner (1935–2020), Mandatory Palestine-born founder of Gartner, Inc.[111]
- Levy Gerzberg (1945–), Israeli-American founder of the Zoran Corporation[112]
- Rob Glaser (1962–), founder of RealNetworks, Inc. (RealPlayer), partner at Accel[113][114]
- Andrew Grove (1936–2016), former COO, chairman and CEO (1st) of Intel[115]
- Andi Gutmans, Swiss-American co-founder of Zend Technologies, co-creator of PHP, General Manager at Amazon Web Services (AWS)[116]
- Eli Harari (1945–), Israeli-American co-founder of the SanDisk Corporation[117]
- David (1944–) and Orion Hindawi (1980–), founders of cybersecurity firm Tanium Inc.[118][119]
- Irwin M. (1933–) and Paul E. Jacobs (1962–), Qualcomm Incorporated[120]
- Andy Jassy (1968–), CEO of Amazon, co-founder of Amazon Web Services (AWS), co-owner of NHL's Seattle Kraken[121]
- Philippe Kahn (1952–), French-born creator of the camera phone, co-founder of the Borland Software Corporation[122]
- Dan Kaminsky, co-founder of cybersecurity firm White Ops[123]
- Mitch Kapor (1950–), founder of Lotus Software, co-founder of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)[124][125]
- Phil Katz (1962–2000), founder of PKWARE, Inc., creator of the Zip file format; died of alcoholism in 2000 at age 37[126][127]
- Steve Kirsch (1956–), founder of OneID, co-founder of the Frame Technology Corp. (now Adobe FrameMaker)[128]
- Edwin H. Land (1909–1991), founder of the Polaroid Corporation[129]
- Sandy Lerner (1955–), co-founder of Cisco Systems and cosmetics brand Urban Decay[130]
- Daniel Lewin (1970–2001), American-Israeli co-founder of Akamai Technologies Inc.; 9/11 victim[131]
- Joseph Lubin (1964–), Canadian-American founder of blockchain software technology company ConsenSys, co-founder of Ethereum[132]
- Ken Oshman (1940–2011), former CEO of the Echelon Corporation, co-founder of the ROLM Corporation[133][134]
- Brian L. (1959–) and Ralph J. Roberts (1920–2015), the Comcast Corporation; members of the Roberts family[135][136]
- Lior Ron (1977–), Israeli-American co-founder of self-driving truck company Otto, former Product Lead for Google Maps[137]
- Ben Rosen (1933–), founding investor and former chairman of the Compaq Computer Corporation, co-founder of venture capital firm Sevin Rosen Funds[138]
- Andy Rubin (1963–), co-developer of the Android operating system, co-founder of Android, Inc., Danger Inc. and Playground Global[139]
- Michael G. Rubin (1972–), founder of eBay Enterprise, Inc. (formerly GSI Commerce, Inc.)[140]
- Henry Samueli (1954–), co-founder of the Broadcom Corporation, owner of NHL's Anaheim Ducks (founded in 1993 by Disney as "the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim")[141]
- Steve Sarowitz (1965/1966–), founder of the Paylocity Corporation[142]
- Dan Schulman (1958–), former president and CEO of PayPal, and chairman of the Symantec Corporation, former CEO of Virgin Mobile[143]
- Ivan Seidenberg (1946–), former chairman and CEO of Verizon Communications, partner at Perella Weinberg Partners[144]
- Charlie Shrem (1989–), co-founder of BitInstant (defunct) and Intellisys Capital, former Vice chairman of the Bitcoin Foundation[145][146][147]
- Joel Spolsky (1965–), co-founder of the Stack Exchange Network, founder of Fog Creek Software, creator of Trello[148][149]
- Kirill Tatarinov, Russian-born former CEO of Citrix Systems, Inc., former executive VP of Microsoft Business Solutions[150]
- Jack Tramiel (1928–2012), Polish-born founder of Commodore International and the Atari Corporation (bought from Warner Communications in 1984)[151]
- Alan Trefler (1956–), founder of Pegasystems[152]
- Kenneth D. Tuchman (1959–), founder of TeleTech[153]
- Andrew Viterbi (1935–), co-founder of Qualcomm Incorporated, inventor of the Viterbi algorithm[154]
- Gary Winnick (1947–), founder of telecommunications company Global Crossing[155][156]
- Stephen Wolfram (1959–), British-American founder of Wolfram Research[157]
- Amit Yoran, CEO of Tenable, Inc., former president of RSA Security, former CEO of Netwitness, co-founder of Riptech[158]
- Charles Zegar (1948–), co-founder of Innovative Market Systems (later renamed Bloomberg L.P.)[159]
- John Zimmer (1984–), co-founder of on-demand transportation company Lyft[160]
- Nir Zuk (1971–), Israeli-American co-founder of cybersecurity company Palo Alto Networks[161]
New media
edit- Robert A. Altman (1947–2021), co-founder of ZeniMax Media (owns id Software, Arkane Studios, Bethesda Softworks)[162]
- Sam Altman (1985–), former president of Y Combinator and co-founder of OpenAI[163]
- Amir Ashkenazi, Israeli-American co-founder of Adap.tv and Shopping.com[164][165]
- Scott Belsky (1980–), founder of Behance[166]
- Marc Benioff (1964–), co-founder of cloud computing company Salesforce[167]
Trip Hawkins - EA sports
- Sergey Brin (1973–), Russian-born co-founder of Google, Inc., president of Alphabet Inc., director at X[168][169]
- Jay S. Cohen (1968–), online gambling pioneer, co-founder of WSEX[170]
- Dan Doctoroff (1958–), chairman of urban innovation organization Sidewalk Labs and smart cities tech company Intersection, former president of Bloomberg L.P.[171]
- Greg Fischbach (1942–), co-founder of Acclaim Entertainment[172]
- Mark Ghermezian, Canadian-American co-founder of mobile marketing company Braze, Inc.[173][174]
- Craig Taro Gold (1969–), co-founder of eVoice and Teleo[175]
- Justin Hartfield, founder of the Ghost Group and Weedmaps[176]
- Gary Kaplan (1959–), founder of the online sports betting company, BetonSports.com[177]
- Jonathan Klein (1960–), South African-born co-founder of Getty Images[178]
- Josh Kopelman (1972–), founder of Half.com, First Round Capital, chairman of Philadelphia Media Network, LLC[179][180]
- Jan Koum (1976–), Ukrainian-American co-founder of WhatsApp, Inc.[181]
- Jon Kraft, co-founder of Pandora Media, Inc. and Thrively[182]
- Gary Kremen (1963–), founder of Match.com; first registrant of Sex.com (Kremen v. Cohen)[183]
- Eric Lefkofsky (1969–), co-founder of Groupon[184]
- Max Levchin (1975–), Ukrainian-born co-founder of PayPal and financial technology company Affirm; member of the "PayPal Mafia"[168][185]
- Aaron Levie (1985–), CEO and co-founder of Box Inc.[186]
- Joey Levin, CEO of media and Internet company IAC/InterActiveCorp (holds Vimeo LLC, Match Group, Inc., Tinder, Ask.com)[187]
- David Litman (1957–), co-founder of Hotels.com[188][189]
- Talmon Marco, Israeli-American co-founder of Viber, founder of Juno[190]
- Andrew Mason (1981–), co-founder of Groupon[191]
- Yuri Milner (1961–), Russian-born Israeli-American tech investor, co-founder of DST Global, former chairman and CEO of Mail.Ru (owns VKontakte)[192][193]
- Michael Morhaime (1967–), co-founder of Blizzard Entertainment[194][195]
- Adam (1979–) and Rebekah Neumann (1978–), co-founders of WeWork[196][197]
- Craig Newmark (1952–), founder of Craigslist[198]
- Shaul Olmert (1975–), Israeli-American co-founder of online publishing platform EX.CO (formerly Playbuzz), former VP of digital products for MTV Networks[199]
- Jon Oringer (1974–), founder of Shutterstock[200]
- Larry Page (1973–), co-founder of Google, Inc., CEO of Alphabet Inc.[201]
- Andrew Paulson (1958–2017), co-founder of SUP Media (LiveJournal)[202]
- Mark Pincus (1966–), co-founder of social game developing company Zynga[203][204][205]
- Ruth Porat (1957–), British-American CFO of Alphabet Inc.[206]
- Jeff Pulver (1962–), VoIP pioneer, co-founder of Vonage[207]
- Sean Rad (1986–), co-founder of Tinder[208][209]
- Bob Rosenschein (1953–), American-Israeli founder of Curiyo, co-founder of Answers.com[210]
- Jeffrey J. Rothschild (1954–) founding engineer and shareholder of Facebook.[211]
- David O. Sacks (1972–), South African-born co-founder of Yammer, CEO of Zenefits, founding COO of PayPal[212]
- Sheryl Sandberg (1969–), COO of Facebook, Inc., former VP of global online sales and operations at Google[213]
- Terry Semel (1943–), former chairman and CEO of both Yahoo! and Warner Bros.[214][215]
- Jeremy Stoppelman (1977–), co-founder of Yelp[216]
- Aaron Swartz (1986–2013), co-creator of RSS (web feed) and Reddit[217]
- Jeff Weiner (1970–), CEO of LinkedIn[218]
- Devin Wenig (1966–), former president and CEO of eBay Inc.[219]
- Rus Yusupov (1984–), Tajik SSR-born co-founder of video hosting service Vine, and HQ Trivia[220]
- Mark Zuckerberg (1984–), co-founder of Facebook, Inc.[221]
Television, film and video
editTourism and hotels
edit- Sheldon Adelson (1933–2021), casino magnate, founder of the Las Vegas Sands Corporation (owns the Venetian, the Palazzo, Marina Bay Sands), co-founder of the Interface Group (COMDEX)[222][223]
- Micky Arison (1949–), Israeli-American chairman of Carnival Corporation & plc, the world's largest travel leisure company and owner of NBA's Miami Heat; member of the Arison family[224][225][226][227]
- Severyn Ashkenazy (1936–), Polish-born hotelier, former co-owner of the Viceroy L'Ermitage Beverly Hills[228][229]
- Mel Bernstein (1945–), Colorado-based paintball park and military museum owner[230][231]
- Paul Binder (1942–), co-founder of the Big Apple Circus[232]
- Ernie Blake (1913–1989), German-born founder of Taos Ski Valley[233]
- Alan Faena (1963–), Argentine-American Miami Beach-based hotelier, owner of the Faena Hotel Buenos Aires[234][235]
- Gene Freidman, Russian-born founder of Taxi Club Management (TCM)[236][237]
- Rande Gerber (1962–), nightlife industry entrepreneur, founder of the Gerber Group, co-founder of tequila label Casamigos[238]
- Dan Gilbert (1962–), founder of Detroit-based Jack Entertainment LLC and co-owner of NBA's Cleveland Cavaliers[239]
- Joe Gold (1922–2004), founder of Gold's Gym International, Inc. and World Gym International[240]
- Bernie Goldstein (1929–2009), founder of Isle of Capri Casinos, Inc.[241]
- David Grutman (1974–), Miami-based nightlife mogul, co-founder of the Miami Marketing Group (MMG)[242]
- Efrem Harkham, Israeli-born Beverly Hills-based hotelier, owner of the Luxe Rodeo Drive Hotel[243][244]
- Jeremy Jacobs (1940–), chairman of hospitality company Delaware North, owner of NHL's Boston Bruins[245]
- Alfred Kaskel (1901–1968), Polish-born founder of Doral Hotels and Resorts (Doral Beach Hotel) and Carol Management (Doral Country Club)[246][247]
- Jake Kozloff (1901–1976), Russian-born casino manager, former owner of the Frontier hotel & casino[248]
- Bill Miller (1904–2002), Russian-born former night club and casino operator[249]
- Sam Nazarian (1975–), Iranian-American founder of SBE Entertainment Group (Mondrian Hotels, Delano South Beach, Delano Las Vegas); member of the Nazarian family[250][251]
- Ben Novack (1907–1985), former developer and owner of the Fontainebleau Miami Beach[252][253]
- Eli Ostreicher (1984–), British-American founder of Regal Wings, a B2B luxury air service provider; brother of investor Jacob Ostreicher[254]
- Alberto Perlman (1977–), Colombian-American co-founder of Zumba Fitness, LLC[255]
- Jason Pomeranc, hotelier, co-founder of the SIXTY Collective and the Thompson Hotels Group[256][257]
- Jay Pritzker (1922–1999), co-founder of the Hyatt Hotels Corporation (now led by his son, Thomas Pritzker (1950–)); member of the Pritzker family[258][259]
- Eugene Remm, Russian-born co-founder of the EMM Group (now Catch Hospitality Group)[260][261]
- Harris Rosen (1939–), Florida-based founder of Rosen Hotels & Resorts[262]
- Ed Savitz (1942–1993), former Philadelphia-based amusement arcade owner[263]
- Izak Senbahar, Turkish-born hotelier, co-founder of the Alexico Group[264][265]
- Bugsy Siegel (1906–1947), co-founder of the Flamingo casino and Murder, Inc., former co-owner of the El Cortez Hotel and Casino[266]
- David A. Siegel (1935–), founder of Westgate Resorts[267][268]
- Gordon Sondland (1957–), founder of Provenance Hotels[269][270]
- Noah Tepperberg (1975–), NYC-based co-founder of Strategic Hospitality Group (owns Tao, Lavo, Marquee New York)[271][272]
- Jonathan Tisch (1953–), chairman of Loews Hotels, co-chairman of family-owned Loews Corporation and co-owner of NFL's New York Giants; member of the Tisch family[273][274]
- Sid Wyman (1910–1978), co-owner of Las Vegas casinos Sands, Riviera, Royal Nevada, and The Dunes.[275][276]
- Steve Wynn (1942–), Las Vegas casino owner, founder of Wynn Resorts[277]
Restaurants
edit- Burt Baskin (1913–1967), co-founder of ice cream and cake restaurants chain Baskin-Robbins[278][279]
- George Cohon (1937–2023), American-born Canadian founder of McDonald's of Canada and Russia[280]
- Nathan Handwerker (1892–1974), Polish-born co-founder of Nathan's Famous, Inc. (later led by his son, Murray (1921–2011))[281]
- Reuben and Rose Mattus (1912–1994; 1916–2006), founders of Häagen-Dazs (ice cream)[282]
- Rich Melman (1942–), co-founder of Lettuce Entertain You Enterprises (LEYE) restaurants[283]
- Danny Meyer (1958–), founder of the Union Square Hospitality Group (owns Shake Shack Inc., Gramercy Tavern)[284]
- Arnie Morton (1922–2005), co-founder of Morton's The Steakhouse[285]
- Clifford S. Perlman (1926–2016), co-founder of Lum's restaurant chain and former owner of Las Vegas' Caesars Palace luxury hotel[286]
- William Rosenberg (1916–2002), founder of Dunkin' Donuts[287][288]
- Howard Schultz (1953–), former executive chairman of Starbucks and owner of NBA's Seattle SuperSonics; co-founder of venture capital fund Maveron[289]
- Daniel Schwartz (1980/1981–), co-chairman of Restaurant Brands International Inc. (RBI), the parent company of Burger King, Tim Hortons and Popeyes[290]
- Zev Siegl (1942–), co-founder of the Starbucks Corporation[291][292]
See also
edit- Lists of Jewish Americans
- Businesspeople
References
edit- ^ "RECOGNIZING THE 90TH BIRTHDAY OF LESTER CROWN". Congress.gov. Jun 11, 2015.
- ^ Charles D. Ellis (2001). Wall Street People: True Stories of Today's Masters and Moguls. p. 241. ISBN 978-0-471-23809-6.
- ^ David R. Cohen (Apr 29, 2015). "Jewish Investor Buying Hawks". The Atlanta Jewish Times.
- ^ Natalie Robehmed (Jan 14, 2014). "How To Pitch Successfully From Rapper-Turned-Entrepreneur Jesse Itzler". Forbes. Retrieved March 31, 2015.
- ^ Peter Finn (Dec 23, 2011). "Rise of the drone: From Calif. garage to multibillion-dollar defense industry". Washington Post.
- ^ "Aerospace pioneer Simon Ramo dies at 103". JTA.org. June 2016. Retrieved 2019-09-10.
Aerospace pioneer Simon Ramo, father of America's intercontinental ballistic missile system and son of Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe, has died at 103.
- ^ "TRW co-founder Simon Ramo: The epitome of a 'Renaissance man'". LA Times. June 2010. Retrieved 2019-09-10.
A Salt Lake City native whose family traces its history to Jewish "conversos," who converted to Christianity in Inquisition-era Spain
- ^ "Grants from Jewish sources announced". The Jewish Post. 2002.
- ^ Tom Tugend (May 12, 2015). "Israeli Air Force, particularly its scrappy beginnings, inspires 3 films". JTA.org.
- ^ Alan D. Abbey (Jun 14, 2011). "The Eulogizer: Industrialist Felix Zandman and IAI founder Al Schwimmer". JTA.org. Retrieved 2019-08-25.
- ^ Moshe Harush (Jun 21, 2012). "U.S. Jewish Energy Mogul Guma Aguiar Goes Missing Off U.S. Coast". Haaretz.
- ^ Julie K. Brown (Jun 30, 2012). "Without a trace: the strange disappearing act of Guma Aguiar". Miami Herald. Retrieved 2019-09-05.
- ^ "47 Jewish Leaders, Representing All Groups, to Meet with Pope Today". JTA.org. 1965.
- ^ a b Jack Eisen (May 2, 1985). "What's In a Name?". Washington Post. Retrieved 2019-08-26.
Amoco was, as local long-timers will recall, a retailer begun from scratch by a Russian Jewish immigrant who started selling gasoline from a horse-drawn cart in Baltimore in 1910.
- ^ Mark Seal (Nov 2005). "The Man Who Ate Hollywood". Vanity Fair.
- ^ "About Max". The Max M. Fisher Archives. Retrieved 2021-04-18.
- ^ "All in the family: Mining roots run deep in these seven families". Mining Markets. Jun 3, 2010.
- ^ Roger Blitz (Jan 15, 2010). "Men in the News: The Glazers". FT.
- ^ Eric Pace (Jul 5, 1993). "Joseph Gruss, 91, Philanthropist Who Supported Jewish Schools". New York Times. Retrieved 2019-09-05.
- ^ David Horovitz (Nov 14, 2005). "Jewish oilman sues Israel for thwarting drilling bid". Jerusalem Post.
- ^ Hadas Magen (Nov 15, 2015). "Grynberg: Gas would have been cheaper if I found it". Globes.
- ^ Nicholas Fox Weber (2005). "The world belonged to them". LA Times.
- ^ Phyllis Appel (2013). The Jewish Connection. Greystone Books. p. 65. ISBN 978-1-301-06093-1.
Meyer married Barbara at Keneseth Israel synagogue in 1852
- ^ Jo Ann Lewis (Dec 27, 1996). "ARMAND HAMMER'S AFTERLIFE". Washington Post.[dead link ]
- ^ "Armand Hammer Dead at 92 on Eve of His Bar Mitzvah". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Dec 12, 1990.
- ^ "THE RIDDLE OF ARMAND HAMMER". New York Times. Nov 29, 1981.
- ^ Tina Davis; Jessica Resnick-Ault (2015). Hess: The Last Oil Baron. Bloomberg Press. p. 34. ISBN 978-1-118-92344-3.
- ^ Storli, Espen (30 August 2013). "Ludwig Jesselson (1910-1993)". Immigrant Entrepreneurship. Retrieved 28 May 2018.
- ^ Albrecht, Henning (2011). "Adolph Lewisohn (1849-1938)". German Historical Institutes. Retrieved 2009-08-25.
He came from an old and well-established Jewish family
- ^ "2010 Honor Roll" (PDF). Jewish Federation of Palm Beach County. p. 10. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-10-30. Retrieved 2017-04-25.
- ^ "Hakol (Vol. 76)" (PDF). Temple Beth Sholom (Miami Beach, Florida). Aug 2016. p. 25. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-04-26. Retrieved 2019-06-02.
- ^ "Funeral Services Set for Tulsa Arts Patron Benedict I. Lubell". Tulsa World. Dec 14, 1996. Retrieved 2019-06-01.
- ^ Rochlin, Harriet; Rochlin, Fred (2000). Pioneer Jews: A New Life in the Far West. ISBN 978-0-618-00196-5.
- ^ Daniel Fisher (Oct 13, 2007). "$100 Oil? We Love It". Forbes. Archived from the original on December 15, 2007.
- ^ "Jew Designated As 'inventor of the Year' by Washington Institute". JTA.org. 1966. Retrieved 2019-08-18.
- ^ Peter Lattman (Nov 25, 2011). "K.K.R.'s Energy Billionaires Club". New York Times.
- ^ "A trained Mossad killer — or a cab driver?". The Times. 2006.
- ^ "The Larouche Connection". New York. October 1992. p. 24.
- ^ "S.F. Giants exec brings Jewish values to the Major Leagues". J. The Jewish News of Northern California. October 1995. Retrieved 2019-05-01.
When he thinks about baseball, Larry Baer also thinks about being Jewish
- ^ "H&R Block". JVL. Retrieved 2018-10-07.
- ^ Bryan Curtis (Aug 19, 2007). "Just Live, Baby!". New York Times.
- ^ Dana Kennedy (Aug 20, 1993). "Heidi Fleiss' Hollywood sex scandal". EW.
- ^ Abigail Klein Leichman (Aug 14, 2018). "10 prominent Israelis at the head of US businesses". ISRAEL21c.
- ^ Sara Levine (Oct 30, 2018). "This Orthodox Jew Is Auctioning Off Marilyn Monroe's Siddur". Jew in the City.
I [Greenstein] still had a connection to Jewish history and being traditionally and ethically Jewish.
- ^ Myers, D.G. (2009). "The Judaism Rebooters". Commentary. Retrieved 2019-12-30.
Ami James, an Israeli-born tattoo artist in Miami, who told Heeb that he is regularly asked how he can incise marks on himself, since Jews are commanded not to do so
- ^ "Ami James on: Tattoo by Jews". Contemporary Jewish Museum. 2019.
(0:37) James: "I'm a Jew"
- ^ William Finnegan (Oct 19, 2009). "The Secret Keeper — Jules Kroll and the world of corporate intelligence". New Yorker.
- ^ Terry, Lenzner (2013). The Investigator. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-698-14899-4.
I played football [...] at [...] Harvard, where I was the first jewish captain
- ^ Sokolove, Michael (Oct 29, 2006). "From Tel Aviv to the Space Needle, by Way of Slovenia". The New York Times. Retrieved 2020-10-23.
[...] "But look," Levien said, "I'm Jewish -- I had my bar mitzvah in Israel [...]"
- ^ Roberts, Sam (September 29, 2019). "Ira Lipman, Security Man Who Spoke Out For Public Safety". The Boston Globe – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Gregory Jaynes (Feb 24, 1988). "About New York; Moishe's Rise: From Sneakers To Moving Vans". New York Times. Retrieved 2019-06-12.
- ^ John Gittelsohn (Feb 23, 2009). "Ex-con serves God and fights fraud". Orange County Register. Retrieved 2019-12-03.
[...] "I'm the first Jew, ex-con, short seller the world has ever seen," Minkow says.
- ^ Walker, Danna Sue (Oct 11, 2011). "People & Places: Gala to honor pillars in Tulsa Jewish community". Tulsa World.
- ^ "Morris Mirkin, Founder of Rental Car Company, Dies". LA Times. Jun 30, 1985.
- ^ David B. Green (Mar 15, 2007). "The Short Jew Who Invented the Harlem Globetrotters Passes On". Haaretz.
- ^ Michael Carasik (Dec 4, 2011). "Jews and black baseball". Jerusalem Post.
- ^ "Louis Sloss: Jewish 49er & Pioneer of San Francisco & Alaska". Jewish Museum of the American West.
- ^ "Interview: Casey Wasserman". National Museum of American History. Retrieved 2021-06-11.
- ^ Davis, David (Oct 27, 2002). "A Well-Nourished Mogul". The Los Angeles Times.
- ^ "Trump names Jewish billionaire Stephen Schwarzman to head economic advisory team". JTA.org. Dec 2, 2016.
- ^ YJP. "CEO Forum".
- ^ "From welfare kid to "Jewish businessman," "Undercover Boss" shares his recipe for success". Connecticut Jewish Ledger. 2011-08-31.
- ^ Feintzeig, Rachel (Oct 4, 2016). "Rock 'n' Role-Play: A CEO's Burning Love For Elvis". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2018-10-01.
- ^ "Trump names Jewish billionaire to head economic advisory team". Times of Israel. 2 December 2016.
Others include Daniel Yergin, an authority on the role energy plays in international affairs...
- ^ Shavit, Ari (2013). My Promised Land: The Triumph and Tragedy of Israel. Random House. p. 172. ISBN 978-0-8129-8464-4.
- ^ "Howard Birndorf Interview". UC San Diego. 2008. Retrieved 2019-12-03.
- ^ "Services". The Detroit Jewish News. Mar 1, 1963.
The Bar Mitzvahs of Howard Birndorf [...] will be observed
- ^ Mendelsohn, Ezra (March 31, 2009). Jews and the Sporting Life: Studies in Contemporary Jewry XXIII. Oxford University Press. p. 98. ISBN 978-0-19-538291-4.
- ^ "Billionaire Doctor Prescribes Small Teva Deals for Israeli Giant". Bloomberg News. Mar 5, 2013.
- ^ "Alex Grass, former Rite Aid CEO and UJA chair, dies". JTA.org. 2009.
- ^ Ancestry.com (2010), U.S. Public Records Index, Volume 1 [database on-line], Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.
- ^ "Obituary: Maurice I. "Bud" Greenspan". Omaha World-Herald. Jul 17, 2009.
- ^ "Jewish Insider's Daily Kickoff: May 18, 2018". Haaretz. 2018.
- ^ Nathan-Kazis, Josh (Apr 1, 2016). "Hasidic Businessman Who Flipped AIDS Home Part of Sect With Cozy Ties to Mayor Bill de Blasio". The Forward. Retrieved 2019-08-08.
- ^ "B'nai B'rith Honors Dr. Jeremy Levin". B'nai B'rith International. 2013.
- ^ Fred Rosenbaum (2009). Cosmopolitans: A Social and Cultural History of the Jews of the San Francisco Bay Area. UC Press. p. 350. ISBN 978-0-520-94502-9. Retrieved 2018-07-13.
- ^ Avishay Artsy (Mar 4, 2016). "Alfred E. Mann, Jewish philanthropist, medical device-maker, 90". Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles. Retrieved 2018-11-20.
Mann was born in Portland, Ore., to a Jewish immigrant family.
- ^ Felice Friedson (Feb 13, 2014). "Billionaire Stewart Rahr sets sights on Israel". Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles.
- ^ Josh Hasten (Jan 30, 2014). "Stewart Rahr revs up United Hatzalah with $1.3 million ambucycle donation". Jewish News Syndicate.
- ^ Emily Siegel (Jan 15, 2016). "Meet Shlomo Rechnitz, the 'Mitzvah Mogul' Blindsided by Powerball Hoax". The Forward.
- ^ Mark Oppenheimer (Oct 16, 2014). "The Beggars of Lakewood". New York Times. Retrieved 2015-09-08.
- ^ Lisa Miller (Sep 4, 2014). "The Trans-Everything CEO". NY Mag.
Martin Rothblatt was raised by observant Jewish parents in a working-class suburb of San Diego; his father was a dentist. His mother, Rosa Lee, says she always believed her first child was destined for greatness.
- ^ Neely Tucker (Dec 12, 2014). "Martine Rothblatt: She founded SiriusXM, a religion and a biotech. For starters". Washington Post.
- ^ Patrick Radden Keefe (October 2017). "The Family That Built an Empire of Pain". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2019-01-22.
Arthur and his brothers [Mortimer and Raymond], the children of Jewish immigrants from Galicia and Poland, grew up in Brooklyn during the Depression.
- ^ New York Times: "Paid Notice: Deaths – Schleifer, Charles Baker December 4, 2011
- ^ Forbes: "Regeneron Chief Leonard Schleifer Becomes A Billionaire After 25 Year Search For New Drugs" by Matthew Herper February 25, 2014
- ^ Daniel Koren (Dec 3, 2013). "Shalom Life: High Society: An Exclusive Interview with Cheryl Shuman". Retrieved 2020-05-28 – via cherylshuman.com.
- ^ The Jewish Standard: "The spirit of innovation - Daniel Straus of CareOne talks about investing, health care, and life" by Joanne Palmer February 16, 2017
- ^ Andrew Pollack (Oct 31, 2010). "ImClone Ex-Chief Embarks on New Biotech Venture". New York Times.
- ^ "Newsletter Fall/Winter 2006" (PDF). Center for Jewish History. 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-02-27.
- ^ Ian Blecher (Apr 22, 2002). "The Wacky Dr. Waksal". New York Observer.
- ^ Berg, Madeline (Feb 19, 2019). "The Greatest Investor You've Never Heard Of: An Optometrist Who Beat The Odds To Become A Billionaire". Forbes. Retrieved 2019-07-03.
- ^ Bell, Trudy E. (Fall 2014). "Herbert A. Wertheim: Bettering the World" (PDF). The Bent of Tau Beta Pi.
- ^ Craig M. Douglas (Aug 8, 2008). "Boston's barbarian?". Boston Business Journal.
- ^ Ewalt, David M. (November 2, 2016). "Inside Magic Leap, The Secretive $4.5 Billion Startup Changing Computing Forever". Forbes. Retrieved 2012-05-04.
Abovitz comes from an Orthodox Jewish background and was planning to leave work early to observe the Sabbath
- ^ "Interview: Leonard (Len) Max Adleman" (PDF). Association for Computing Machinery. Aug 18, 2016.
- ^ "CEO Forum: A Conversation With Aron Ain". JewishBoston.com. 2015. Retrieved 2020-09-08.
Aron Ain, CEO of Kronos, [...] will speak on how he integrates Jewish values into his business life in a talk entitled, 'Jewish Values and Leading a Billion-Dollar Company.'
- ^ "Ex-pat Israelis celebrate success at Leadership Council Gala". Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles. Mar 15, 2012. Retrieved 2019-08-30.
- ^ Stecklow, Steve (Jun 12, 2008). "On the Lam and Living Large: Comverse Ex-CEO Parties in Namibia". WSJ.
- ^ "Steve Ballmer". JVL.
- ^ "World's Chairman Council" (PDF). Jewish National Fund.
- ^ Arntzenius, Linda. "Michael Blumenthal's Search for Answers Takes Him Full Circle Back to Berlin". Princeton Magazine. Kingston, New Jersey. Retrieved 9 May 2016.
- ^ Nathan Guttman (Mar 2, 2014). "Brian Roberts' Jewish Roots and Outsized Ambition Drive Comcast's Rise in Media". The Forward.
- ^ "Safra Catz". JWA.
- ^ Batya Feldman (Dec 21, 2011). "Data security co Cyber-Ark raises $40m". Globes.
- ^ "Meet the Visionaries Behind JFE". Jews For Entrepreneurship Network.
- ^ Austin Carr (Oct 22, 2017). "Can Alphabet's Jigsaw Solve Google's Most Vexing Problems?". Fast Company.
- ^ Marcie Cohen Ferris, Mark I. Greenberg. Jewish roots in southern soil: a new history, University Press of New England, 2006, p. 300.
- ^ Cohen, Adam. "Speak, Oracle". Retrieved 23 June 2018.
- ^ "David A. Frankel, MBA 2003 / Profile". Harvard Business School.
He was missing his wife, a neurologist who had stayed back home, and as a traditional Jew with the high holidays looming, he felt utterly alone.
- ^ "Humanorah Vol. 29, No. 3" (PDF). Society for Humanistic Judaism. 2007. p. 14.
- ^ Alix Wall (Sep 13, 2013). "From Israel to Alcatraz, 68-year-old is in the swim". J. The Jewish News of Northern California. Retrieved 2019-10-18.
- ^ Ray Rogers (Oct 15, 2015). "17 Top Music Execs On Giving Back, The Charities They Support and Their Love For UJA". Billboard.
- ^ "New Year, New Page". Jewish United Fund. Dec 27, 2013.
- ^ "Intel's Grove: Something foul in Silicon Valley". CNET. Retrieved 2017-01-10.
- ^ Gutmans, Andi [@andigutmans] (Jul 3, 2019). "@Roi always wonder if the response would be the same if we didn't tell them we are jewish in the upfront survey form!" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ Abigail Klein Leichman (Nov 24, 2014). "From Tel Aviv to the White House". ISRAEL21c.
- ^ Lizette Chapman (Apr 13, 2017). "Tanium's Family Empire Is in Crisis". Bloomberg News.
- ^ Brian Solomon (May 2015). "Meet Tanium, The Secret Cybersecurity Weapon Of Target, Visa And Amazon". Forbes.
- ^ "QualComm founder a fan long before 'Start-Up Nation'". Times of Israel. 2014. Retrieved 2019-09-16.
- ^ "WEDDINGS / Elana Caplan And Andrew Jassy". The New York Times. 1997-08-24. Retrieved 2021-11-05.
- ^ Feldman, Lee (Nov 11, 2016). "Engaging neighbors takes more than a check". Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle.
- ^ Kaminsky, Dan [@dakami] (Jun 16, 2018). "You don't get to tell a Jew [Kaminsky] he can't talk about the Holocaust [...]" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ Wall, Alix (Nov 2, 2017). "Meet the Oakland philanthropists trying to diversify the tech world". J. The Jewish News of Northern California.
- ^ Garling, Caleb (Aug 24, 2013). "Mitchell Kapor seeks to meld business, social good". San Francisco Chronicle.
- ^ Lee Hawkins Jr. (May 20, 2000). "The short, tormented life of computer genius Phil Katz - katzbio.txt". The Journal Sentinel (Milwaukee).
- ^ Jeffrey A. Tannenbaum (Jun 19, 2000). "The Rise and Fall of a Software Star; Phil Katz Loved Code — and Liquor". The Wall Street Journal.
- ^ Jo Ellen Green Kaiser (Dec 19, 2008). "Madoff: Rethinking Jewish Fundraising". Jewcy.
- ^ David B. Green (Nov 28, 2012). "This Day in Jewish History: Introducing the Polaroid Camera". Haaretz.
- ^ Lydia Strohl (2012-05-17). "Striving to Keep Organic Farming Sustainable". Washingtonian. Retrieved 2018-08-31.
- ^ Judy Maltz (Nov 11, 2011). "He Went Down Fighting". Haaretz.
- ^ Avishai Ovadia (Jun 6, 2018). "Freedom for Developers, Entrepreneurs and Business". Forbes.
- ^ Dan Pine (Aug 11, 2011). "Ken Oshman, benefactor of Oshman Family JCC, dies at 71". J. The Jewish News of Northern California.
- ^ "Our History". Oshman Family JCC.
- ^ Guttman, Nathan. "Brian Roberts' Jewish Roots and Outsized Ambition Drive Comcast's Rise in Media". The Forward.
- ^ New York Times: "Ralph Roberts, Cable TV Pioneer Who Built Comcast, Dies at 95". Retrieved June 20, 2015
- ^ Eliran Rubin (Aug 22, 2016). "Meet Lior Ron, the Israeli Tech Guru at the Center of the Self-Driving Revolution". The Forward.
- ^ Taylor III, Alex (1996). "Gentlemen, Start Your Engine - Ben Rosen, 63, Of Personal Computer Fame, Has Teamed With His Rocket Scientist Brother, Harold, 70, To Pioneer A Radical Way To Power The Family Car". Fortune.
Failure would be new to the Rosens. They were born into a strict Jewish household in New Orleans
- ^ "Why the 6th version of Android will not be called Kugel". ZDNet. Mar 5, 2012.
- ^ Stanley Green (Oct 13, 2013). "Chinese Online Giant Alibaba Invests $206 Million In Michael Rubin's Internet Shopping Aggregator ShopRunner".
- ^ "Broadcom's co-founders built a behemoth as a formidable team". LA Times. May 28, 2015.
- ^ "The city's newest billionaire doesn't plan to die one". Crain's Chicago Business. 26 April 2019. Retrieved 3 May 2019.
- ^ Karen Zuriel Harari (Jun 20, 2016). "PayPal seeks to offer better financial services to the poor". Ynetnews. Retrieved 2019-02-18.
- ^ Lewis, Mark (2002-03-11). "Ivan Seidenberg, On Top At Last". Forbes. Retrieved 2017-01-05.
- ^ "A 26-year old Bitcoin entrepreneur was handed prison time, and the experience only confirmed his belief in the cryptocurrency". Business Insider. Dec 3, 2016.
- ^ Nathaniel Popper (May 19, 2015). "The Man Bitcoin Built - and Then Destroyed". The Forward.
- ^ "The coin prince: inside Bitcoin's first big money-laundering scandal". The Verge. Feb 4, 2014.
- ^ "The Evolution of Joel Spolsky". Managing Greatness. May 15, 2010.
- ^ "Joel's Web Page". Archived from the original on 2018-11-03. Retrieved 2017-03-19.
- ^ "CEO Leadership, Innovation and Diversity Symposium". YJP. 2017.
- ^ Douglas Martin (Apr 10, 2012). "Jack Tramiel, a Pioneer in Computers, Dies at 83". New York Times.
- ^ "CEO Innovation, Growth & Diversity Symposium". Young Jewish Professionals (YJP). 2019.
- ^ Steve Silbinger (2000). The Jewish Phenomenon: Seven Keys to the Enduring Wealth of a People. Taylor Trade Publishing. ISBN 1-56352-566-6.
- ^ "Andrew J. Viterbi". ETHW. Retrieved 2017-01-05.
- ^ "Founder Escapes Charges in Global Crossing Failure". LA Times. 14 December 2004.
- ^ Tugend, Tom (September 30, 1999). "Gary Winnick Steps Out Front: 'The Wealthiest Man in Los Angeles' is driven to succeed and to give to the Jewish community". The Jewish Journal. Archived from the original on May 4, 2016 – via Wayback Machine.
- ^ "Honor Roll — Dr. Stephen Wolfram". IT History Society.
- ^ "A Big Sale for (U.S.) Military Veterans Elad and Amit". Haaretz. 22 August 2002. Retrieved 23 June 2018.
- ^ Jacob Berkman (Dec 10, 2010). "Zuckerberg among nine new Jewish individuals and families to take the Giving Pledge". JTA.org.
- ^ Daniel J. Solomon (Jan 30, 2017). "Lyft's Jewish Co-Founder Donates $1 Million to ACLU to Fight Immigration Ban". The Forward.
- ^ Rachael King (May 5, 2015). "IDT to Start a Cybersecurity 'Yeshiva'". WSJ.
- ^ Mark Potts (Oct 8, 1984). "Robert Altman Joins Ranks of 'Super Lawyers'". Washington Post.
- ^ Tad Friend (October 2016). "Sam Altman's Manifest Destiny". The New Yorker.
Let's send the Jewish gay guy!" Altman said. "That'll work!
- ^ Orr Hirschauge (Aug 7, 2013). "AOL Acquires Israeli-formed Startup Adap.tv for Whopping $405 Million". Haaretz.
- ^ "ICON's 3RD ANNUAL CONFERENCE". Israel Collaboration Network (ICON). 2016.
- ^ Sacha Pfeiffer (Dec 13, 2007). "Philanthropic shift". Boston.com.
- ^ "Salesforce co-founder Benioff buys Time magazine for $190 million". Times of Israel. Sep 17, 2018.
Jewish cloud computing pioneer and wife purchase media property from Meredith Corp., joining ranks of tech moguls snapping up legacy publications
- ^ a b "Nice Soviet Jewish Boys Making It Big in Silicon Valley". Haaretz. Feb 20, 2014.
- ^ Guy Rolnik (May 22, 2008). "'I've Been Very Lucky in My Life'". Haaretz.
- ^ Beth Raymer (2010). Lay the Favorite. Random House. p. 103. ISBN 978-0-385-52645-6.
- ^ E.B. Solomont (Mar 1, 2015). "The Closing with Dan Doctoroff". The Real Deal. Retrieved 2018-11-27.
- ^ "Annual Report 2013" (PDF). Hillel International.
- ^ Brent Jang (Jan 4, 2000). "The empire that 'Papa' built". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 2019-03-05.
- ^ Irit Avissar (Oct 27, 2010). "Canadian Jewish family in talks to buy Clal Insurance". Jerusalem Post.
- ^ Taro Gold (Feb 2, 2016). "'God Is Gay, Too': Notes From My Eight-year-old Self". HuffPost.
- ^ Paul Berger (Sep 17, 2015). "How a Jewish Business School Drop-Out Created a Marijuana Empire". The Forward.
- ^ Hinman, Kristin (October 10, 2007). "Double Down - Gary Kaplan put all of his chips on BETonSPORTS and drew the worst hand of his life. Now hes making tuna casserole in a St. Louis jail". Riverfront Times.
Kaplan's attorneys explained that Kaplan had long thought of relocating to Israel by virtue of his Jewish birthright, but offered no explanation for the phony Peruvian documents.
- ^ "Next to these big shots, Gates isn't in the frame". The Independent. Apr 2, 2005.
- ^ Niv Elis (Aug 22, 2016). "Who was the most influential Jew in business and tech this past year? Vote Now!". Jerusalem Post.
- ^ Foundation for Jewish Camp (2017). "Annual Support".
- ^ "WhatsApp Founder Jan Koum's Jewish Rags-to-Riches Tale". The Forward. Feb 20, 2014.
- ^ "Jon Kraft". The Jewish Graduate Student Initiative.
- ^ Renee Ghert-Zand (Oct 27, 2010). "From Sex.com to Clean and Green". The Forward.
- ^ "JCamp 180" (PDF). 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-03-20. Retrieved 2017-03-20.
- ^ Gary Rivlin (Oct 28, 2007). "After Succeeding, Young Tycoons Try, Try Again". New York Times.
Levchin was born and raised in Kiev, Ukraine, a Jew living under Soviet rule for 16 years.
- ^ Roy Goldenberg (Jan 21, 2016). "A Jewish awakening in Silicon Valley". Globes.
- ^ "Speakers". The Israel Conference. 2011. Archived from the original on 2017-04-16. Retrieved 2017-04-15.
- ^ "Texas-Israel Chamber of Commerce promotes economic development". Texas Jewish Post. Jul 10, 2008.
- ^ Torah Day School of Dallas (May 14, 2018). "The 15th Annual Gala".
- ^ Brett Forrest (Aug 24, 2012). "The Skype Killers of Belarus". Bloomberg News.
- ^ Jake Slagel (3 December 2015). "Our interview with Groupon and Detour founder Andrew Mason".
- ^ Michael Wolff (Oct 21, 2011). "How Russian Tycoon Yuri Milner Bought His Way Into Silicon Valley". Wired. Retrieved 2018-08-23.
- ^ Ron Kampeas (May 22, 2018). "Know your oligarch: A guide to the Jewish machers in the Russia probe". JTA.org. Retrieved 2018-09-01.
- ^ "2015 Annual Report" (PDF). Birthright Israel. 2015.
- ^ "Newsletter Vol. 24, No. 33" (PDF). University Synagogue. Nov 2012.
- ^ "A Young Billionaire's Priorities". Chabad of Arizona.
- ^ Kate Aronoff (Winter 2017). "Thank God It's Monday". Dissent.
- ^ "Craiglists founder speaks out". Ynet#Ynetnewsnews. November 2005.
- ^ "Interviews: Shaul Olmert". PBS Frontline/World. 2006. Retrieved 2019-11-09.
- ^ "CEO Forum". Young Jewish Professionals (YJP).
- ^ "The World's 50 Richest Jews". Jerusalem Post. Sep 7, 2010.
- ^ "Russia Growls at LiveJournal Deal". Wired. Nov 8, 2006.
- ^ "The Temple Chronicle No. 11" (PDF). Congregation Emanu-El (San Francisco). Sep 2016.
- ^ "Eighth Annual Family Gala: An Evening of Elements". Contemporary Jewish Museum. Dec 2016.
- ^ Svetlana Poprinsky (Apr 5, 2017). "Mark Pincus, Founder of Zynga in Big Money Divorce". Jewish Voice.
- ^ Anthony Weiss (Mar 25, 2015). "New Google CFO Ruth Porat's family a mirror of American Jewry". Times of Israel.
- ^ Alan Weinkrantz (Aug 30, 2015). "Jeff Pulver's Marathon Return to Israel". Times of Israel.
- ^ Vanessa Grigoriadis (Oct 27, 2014). "Inside Tinder's Hookup Factory". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2018-09-06.
Rad is an L.A.-born Jewish-Persian-American whose parents emigrated from Iran in the 1970s and made a mint in the American consumer electronics business. He grew up as part of the close-knit Persian community in Beverly Hills.
- ^ Jared Sichel (Aug 27, 2014). "Meet the Jewish founders of Tinder". Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles. Retrieved 2018-09-06.
- ^ Bob Rosenschein (Oct 11, 2016). "3rd Re-Birth-Day and Happy Yom Kippur!".
- ^ "The World's Jewish Billionaires". Forbes Israel. February 2, 2023.
- ^ Sarit Menahem (Sep 10, 2009). "Mapping the Family of Man". Haaretz.
- ^ Joanna C. Valente (Feb 1, 2017). "Sheryl Sandberg Opened Up About Her Jewish Immigrant Family Past". Kveller. Retrieved 2019-02-16.
- ^ "A-listers Turn out for Israel's Hollywood Bash". JTA.org. Sep 25, 2008. Retrieved 2019-11-08.
- ^ "Business Leadership Council". Jewish Community Federation, S.F. (JCF).
- ^ "Yelp's Jeremy Stoppelman: a profile". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2017-01-10.
- ^ "Lessons of Aaron Swartz, the Internet's Own Boy". The Forward. Jun 26, 2014.
- ^ "The Top Ten CEOs at U.S. Tech Companies". baselinemag.com. Archived from the original on 2014-04-13. Retrieved 2017-01-05.
- ^ "Weddings – Cindy Horowitz, Devin Wenig". New York Times. Mar 29, 1993.
- ^ "Russian and Tech Divisions Event Honors Rus Yusupov". UJA-Federation of New York. Jun 18, 2015. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
- ^ Ben Sales (Oct 2, 2017). "How Mark Zuckerberg is embracing his Judaism". JTA.org.
- ^ Connie Bruck (Jan 11, 2012). "The Kingmaker". The New Yorker.
- ^ "Adelson often gives money, space to community". Las Vegas Sun. 1999. Retrieved 2019-12-21.
The Indians do predate us," Adelson said. "But I'm Jewish, and we have been discriminated against a lot longer than the Indians have been
- ^ Michael Kaminer (Jan 19, 2012). "Jewish Billionaire Owns Sunken Cruise Ship". The Forward.
- ^ Susan Miller Degnan (Apr 10, 2017). "Why is this night different for Jewish Heat season-ticket holders?". Miami Herald.
- ^ William A. Orme Jr. (Apr 16, 2000). "The New Israel: Land of Milk and Money". New York Times.
- ^ "Ted Arison, worlds wealthiest Jew, dies in Tel Aviv". J. The Jewish News of Northern California. Oct 8, 1999.
- ^ "Exiled Jews Invest In Restoring Jewry's Place in Poland". The Ledger. Sep 8, 2007. Retrieved 2020-08-05.
- ^ Gross, Daniel (Jan 27, 2015). "Poland's Jewish Culture Rises From the Ashes of Persecution". Newsweek. Retrieved 2020-08-05.
- ^ Dan Wilcock (Jun 2, 2005). "Breathing fire". Colorado Springs Independent.
- ^ Sam Tezak (Dec 19, 2016). "Dragon Man: Repurposing artifacts of the American past". Cipher.
- ^ Glenn Collins (Nov 11, 1993). "AT WORK WITH: Paul Binder; A Big Top With a Vision to Match". NY Times.
"I'm a Jewish guy from Brooklyn [...]," Mr. Binder said
- ^ Lance Bell (Mar 2009). "Ernie Blake, Taos Ski Pioneer" (PDF). New Mexico Jewish Historical Society (NMJHS).
- ^ Holly Brubach (Nov 17, 2015). "Flying High". W.
His family, Sephardic Jews who emigrated from Syria to Argentina in the 1920s, had a successful textile business.
- ^ Michael Kaminer (May 13, 2019). "Multi-Millionaire and Argentinean Hotelier Alan Faena Opens Up About His Rabbinic Heritage". The Forward.
[The Forward] Has anyone ever made your Jewishness an issue in your business dealings? [Faena] No, [...]
- ^ Matthew Abrahams (Jul 23, 2014). "Taxi bigs rip Uber -- and its 'upper-middle-class' clientele". New York Post.
- ^ Esther Cohen (Apr 3, 2015). "Uber-Stressed Taxi Mogul Gets a Break". Jewish Voice.
- ^ "Cindy's Joy". People. 1999. Retrieved 2019-12-16.
- ^ "Give fired coach David Blatt a championship ring, Israeli lawmaker urges Cavs' Jewish owner". JTA.org. Jun 22, 2016.
- ^ Gil Troy (Jul 20, 2017). "The Man Who Gave America a Rock-Hard Six-Pack". The Daily Beast.
- ^ "US-Israeli consortium plans $50-70m Eilat casino". Globes. Dec 1, 2005.
- ^ Evan S. Benn (Oct 2, 2015). "Miami nightlife impresario David Grutman to open Komodo restaurant in Brickell". Miami Herald.
- ^ Laibl Wolf (2010). Practical Kabbalah: A Guide to Jewish Wisdom for Everyday Life. p. 11. ISBN 978-0-307-55921-0.
- ^ Harold Myerson (Jun 17, 1998). "Central Americans Invade Beverly Hills". LA Weekly.
- ^ Jason Schwartz (Apr 2013). "Trouble in Wellington for Jeremy Jacobs". Boston.
- ^ Oser, Alan S. (Jul 8, 1983). "About Real Estate; A Family of Builders Develops Its Farm". New York Times.
- ^ "Leading Builder Behind Doral Club p. 12-B". The Jewish Floridian. May 11, 1962.
- ^ "Southern Nevada Jewish Heritage Project — Jake Kozloff". UNLV. Retrieved 2020-09-07.
- ^ Judith Miller (2016). The Story: A Reporter's Journey. Simon & Schuster. pp. 30. ISBN 978-1-4767-1602-2. Retrieved 2019-02-02.
Bill Miller, Jewish and Russian-born, was one of those larger-than-life, self-made Americans.
- ^ "Sam Nazarian: Sam I Am". W. Aug 1, 2005.
- ^ Natan Odenheimer (Apr 1, 2017). "From 'Tehrangeles' with love: The epic family history of some of LA's wealthiest Persian Jews". Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 2018-09-03.
- ^ Zerivitz, Marcia Jo (2009). Jews of Greater Miami. Jewish Museum of Florida. ISBN 978-0-7385-6719-8.
- ^ Glatt, John (2013). The Prince of Paradise: The True Story of a Hotel Heir, His Seductive Wife, and a Ruthless Murder. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-1-250-03573-8.
novack.
- ^ "Investing in Service: Interview with Regal Wings Founder Eli Ostreicher". Under30Media. Jul 15, 2014.
- ^ Patricia R. Olsen (May 22, 2010). "Born for Business". New York Times. Retrieved 2018-08-16.
- ^ "Jason Pomeranc and Stephen Brandman announce new venture with the Do Not Disturb Restaurant Group". 7 May 2009.
- ^ New York Times: "Search for Family's Lost History Leads to Mass Grave in Poland" by Julie Satow May 4, 2016
- ^ The Economist: "Jay Pritzker, pioneer of the modern hotel chain, died on January 23rd, aged 76" January 28, 1999
- ^ "Annual Report 2016" (PDF). The Jerusalem Foundation.
- ^ Hannah Lawrence (Feb 1, 2010). "The Young Jewish Professionals Hold Their Winter Gala". Guest of a Guest.
- ^ YJP. "Entrepreneurs: Speakers".
- ^ "Ground Breaking Ceremony" (PDF). Rosen Jewish Community Center. 2015.
- ^ Michael deCourcy Hinds (Apr 2, 1992). "Philadelphia Suspect: A Troubled Life". New York Times.
- ^ Haim Handwerker (Jun 2, 2005). "Manhattan Transfer". Haaretz.
Izak Senbahar, also Jew of Iraqi origin
- ^ "2016 Annual Report". Alpha Epsilon Pi.
- ^ David Sedley (Nov 22, 2017). "Bugsy Siegel's daughter gets Las Vegas Jewish burial". The Times of Israel. Retrieved 2020-08-31.
- ^ Leslie Doolittle (2000). "TIMESHARE BARON WEDS FORMER BEAUTY QUEEN". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved 2020-08-30.
She (Victoria) tossed rose petals up and down the aisle throughout the traditional Jewish ceremony
- ^ "GROWTH: HOSPITALITY". KEHILLAH: Orlando Jewish History. Retrieved 2020-08-31.
- ^ "EU Nominee Gordon Sondland Testifies Confirmation Hearing". C-SPAN. Jun 21, 2018. Retrieved June 22, 2018.
- ^ Friedman, Gordon R. (Jul 11, 2018). "Portland hotelier who gave $1 million to Trump confirmed as ambassador". The Oregonian.
- ^ "Mazel Tov, Various Other 20-or-30-Something Jewish New Yorkers!". Gawker. Nov 2005.
- ^ "UJA-Federation of NY Holds 2nd Annual Downtown Division Event". Jewish Voice. June 2012.
- ^ The Jewish Federation of Palm Beach County (2017). "Fed: NFLTeam Owners: Perspectives on Football, Philanthropy and Jewish Values".
- ^ "Candlelight Wedding Joins 2 Billionaire Families". New York Times. Apr 19, 1988.
- ^ "Sidney Wyman, Nevada Gambler, Owner of Las Vegas Strip Hotels". The New York Times. June 28, 1978.
- ^ Marschall, John P. (February 1, 2008). Jews in Nevada: A History. University of Nevada Press. p. 173. ISBN 978-0-87417-737-4.
Most of the hotel builders were Jewish Americans: Sidney Wyman, Al Gottesman, and Jake Gottleib with the early tears of the Dunes
[permanent dead link ] - ^ Munk, Nina (June 2005). "Steve Wynn's Biggest Gamble". Vanity Fair. Retrieved 2020-08-31.
Because he sensed his career might be sidetracked once people knew he was Jewish, Michael Weinberg changed his professional name to Michael Wynn, in honor of Ed Wynn, a popular comedian of the era
- ^ "Baskin, Burt". American National Biography.
- ^ Kasten, Jerry (May 13, 2020). "If It's Jewish ice cream, it's got to be good!". Texas Jewish Post. Retrieved 2020-08-31.
- ^ Michael Kaminer (Jun 22, 2012). "Canadian McDonald's Founder Honored". The Forward.
- ^ Jonathan Deutsch (2010). Gastropolis: Food and New York City. Columbia University Press. p. 265. ISBN 978-0-231-13652-5.
- ^ Naomi Zeveloff (Jul 1, 2011). "Frozen Friday: 'I'm Related to the Makers of Häagen-Dazs'". The Forward.
- ^ Jeff Borden (Jun 3, 1995). "JUST DESSERTS". Crain's Chicago Business.
- ^ Steve Lipman (2015). "Plan To End Tips: Tikkun Olam Or Not?". The Jewish Week.
- ^ "HPHS Jewish "Fame and Fortune" Alumni" (PDF). Chicago Jewish History. 31 (4). Chicago Jewish Historical Society: 10. Fall 2007. Retrieved 2019-08-11.
- ^ Southern Nevada Jewish Community Digital Heritage Project. "Clifford Perlman". UNLV.
- ^ Green, David B. (2013-06-10). "This Day in Jewish History 1916: Dunkin' Donuts' Founder Is Born". Haaretz. Retrieved 2017-01-11.
- ^ Oliver, Myrna (Sep 23, 2002). "William Rosenberg, 86; Dunkin' Donuts Founder Pioneered Franchising Businesses". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2020-08-31.
With a wife and children to support, he [Rosenberg] aided the World War II effort by working as an electrician at Bethlehem Steel, where he became the first Jewish union representative
- ^ Shana Lebowitz (May 30, 2015). "From the projects to a $2.3 billion fortune -- the inspiring rags-to-riches story of Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz". Business Insider.
- ^ "Israeli Tops Fortune Magazine List of Leading Young Entrepreneurs". Haaretz. Sep 26, 2015.
- ^ Sandy Rashty (Feb 21, 2014). "Mr Start-up spills the beans on Starbucks' success -- and defends tax avoidance row". The JC.
- ^ "The Jewish Community of Seattle". The Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot.
Further reading
edit- Aris, Stephen (1970). The Jews in Business. Cape. ISBN 978-0-224-61953-0.
- Birmingham, Stephen (1999). "The Rest of Us": The Rise of America's Eastern European Jews. Syracuse University Press. ISBN 978-0-8156-0614-7.
- Chapman, Peter (2010). The Last of the Imperious Rich: Lehman Brothers, 1844-2008. Penguin. ISBN 978-1-59184-309-2.
- Wiener Cohen, Naomi (1999). Jacob H. Schiff: A Study in American Jewish Leadership. Brandeis University Press. ISBN 978-0-87451-948-8.
- Foxman, Abraham (2010). Jews and Money: The Story of a Stereotype. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-230-62385-9.
- Gabler, Neal (2010) [1988]. An Empire of Their Own: How the Jews Invented Hollywood. Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-307-77371-5.
- Goldberg, J. J. (1996). Jewish Power: Inside The American Jewish Establishment. Addison Wesley. ISBN 978-0-201-32798-4.
- Gurock, Jeffrey (1997). Central European Jews in America, 1840-1880: Migration and Advancement. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-91921-0.
- Krefetz, Gerald (1982). Jews and Money: The Myths and the Reality. Ticknor & Fields. ISBN 978-0-89919-129-4.
- Marschall, John P. (2008). Jews in Nevada: A History. University of Nevada Press. ISBN 978-0-87417-737-4.
- Norwood, Stephen Harlan; Pollack, Eunice G. (2008). Encyclopedia of American Jewish History, Band 1. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-85109-638-1.
- Pfeffer, Jacob (1917). Distinguished Jews of America: A Collection of Biographical Sketches of Jews who Have Made Their Mark in Business, the Professions, Politics, Science, Etc. Distinguished Jews of America Pub. Co.
- Sachar, Howard Morley (2007). A History of the Jews in the Modern World. Knopf. ISBN 978-0-307-42436-5.
- Shapiro, Edward S. (1995). A Time for Healing: American Jewry since World War II. JHU Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-5124-7.
- Sombart, Werner (2015) [1913]. The Jews and Modern Capitalism. Martino Fine Books. ISBN 978-1-61427-763-7.