Jump to content

Yuval Elizur

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Sorenaaryamanesh (talk | contribs) at 10:13, 10 December 2012. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.


Yuval Elizur (born October 21, 1927) worked as a journalist for 51 years until his retirement in 2005. He is also a published author of eight books on the Israeli economy, globalization, and economic warfare, including Who Rules Israel, which was published in the United States by Harper and Row in 1973. Since his retirement, Yuval has been researching the effect of Jewish Ultra-Orthodoxy on Israel. He currently lives in Jerusalem.


Biography:

Yuval Elizur was born in Jerusalem on October 21st, 1927. His father’s family came to Israel from Lithuania in the 1840's to escape assimilation. During Yuval’s childhood, his father left the walled Old City of Jerusalem in order to join the new Zionist arrivals.

From 1945-1947, Yuval served in the Palmach, the striking force of the Haganah (Defense), the illegal army of the majority of Israeli Jews in Palestine. After the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948, he became an Intelligence Officer in the newly established Israel Air Force. As a teenager, Elizur dreamed of becoming a journalist, and found a way to balance the quest for a career in writing with duty to country in the Palmah. [1]

In 1953, Yuval finished an undergraduate degree in economics from the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. In 1954, he obtained an MSc in Journalism from Columbia University and became the first Israeli to attend the Pulitzer School. While in New York, he met his wife, Judith Neulander, who had obtained a PhD in Political Science from Harvard University.

After returning to Jerusalem, Yuval started working as a journalist for Ha’aretz and later for Ma’ariv, where he worked for 38 years until retiring in 2005 from his position as Deputy Editor. [2] He also served as the Israeli correspondent for The Washington Post and The Boston Globe.[3] During his years as a journalist, he took two leaves of absence in order to serve in the Israeli Foreign Office, mainly on the subject of economic warfare. Between 1964 and 1966, he served as Consul at the Consulate General of Israel in New York


Published works

  • Who Rules Israel (1973) [4]
  • A Memoir of Life in Journalism [5]
  • The War Within (2013)

References: