Before the Holocaust, Jews were a significant part of the population in Lithuania where they numbered around 240,000, including approximately 100,000 in Vilnius, or about 45% of that city's pre-World War II population (Vilnius was also once known as the "Jerusalem of Lithuania"). A large Jewish community also existed in Latvia. In comparison, Estonia and the Nordic countries have had much smaller communities, concentrated mostly in Denmark and Sweden. The following is a list of prominent North European Jews, arranged by country of origin:
Denmark
[edit]
See also: Category:Danish people of Jewish descent and Jews in Denmark
Mogens Ballin, painter
Victor Bendix, composer, conductor and pianist
Susanne Bier, film director
Kim Bodnia, actor
Harald Bohr, mathematician and footballer (Jewish mother)
Niels Bohr, physicist, Nobel Prize (1922) (Jewish mother)
Victor Borge, entertainer
Edvard Brandes, politician, critic and author, minister of finance from 1909 to 1910
Ernst Brandes, economist and editor
Georg Brandes, author and critic, father of Danish naturalism
Marcus Choleva, chief executive officer of KFI
Dagmar Cohn, illustrator
Esther Gehlin, painter
Meïr Aron Goldschmidt, author and editor
Heinrich Hirschsprung, industrialist, art patron (Den Hirschsprungske Samling)
Arne Jacobsen, architect and designer (Jewish mother)
Aryeh Leib ben Asher Gunzberg (c. 1695–1785), rabbi
Bernard Lown (1921–2021), scientist, Nobel prize winner
Aron Gurwitsch (1901–1973), philosopher
Laurence Harvey (1928–1973), actor
Jascha Heifetz (1901–1987), widely regarded as the greatest violinist of the 20th century[6]
Sidney Hillman (1887–1946), political activist
Shemp Howard (1895–1955), comedian and actor
Moe Howard (1897–1975), comedian and actor
Curly Howard (1903–1952), comedian and actor
Jay M. Ipson (born 1935), founder of the Virginia Holocaust Museum
Leo Jogiches (1867–1919), revolutionary
Al Jolson (1886–1950), singer, comedian, and actor
Berek Joselewicz (1764–1809), colonel of the Polish Army
Joseph Kagan, Baron Kagan (1915–1995), clothes manufacturer[7]
Yisrael Meir Kagan (1838–1933), rabbi
Daniel Kahneman (1934–2024), psychologist, Nobel Prize (2002) (Lithuanian parents)
Mordechai Kaplan (1881–1983), founder of Reconstructionist Judaism
Shlomo Kleit (1891–1962), political activist
Aaron Klug (1926–2018), chemist, Nobel Prize (1982)
Gurwin Kopel (1923–1990), artist
Lazare Kopelmanas (1907–1980), international law scholar
Abba Kovner (1918–1987), poet, writer
Abraham Dob Bär Lebensohn (c. 1789/1794–1878), Hebraist, poet, and educator
Micah Joseph Lebensohn (1828–1852), poet and translator
Phoebus Levene (1869–1940), biochemist
Emmanuel Levinas (1906–1995), philosopher
Isaac Levitan (1860–1900), landscape painter
Bernard Lewis (1916–2018), historian
Morris Lichtenstein 1889–1938), rabbi, founder of the Jewish Science
Jacques Lipchitz (1891–1973), cubist sculptor
Jay Lovestone (1897–1990), politician
Alexander Ziskind Maimon (1809–1887), author and scholar of the Talmud
Osip Mandelstam (1891–1938), poet and librettist
Abraham Mapu (1808–1867), Hebrew novelist
Isser Zalman Meltzer (1870–1953), rabbi
Harvey Milk (1930–1978), gay-rights activist
Hermann Minkowski (1864–1909), mathematician
Oskar Minkowski (1858–1931), physiologist
Benjamin Netanyahu (born 1949), Prime Minister of Israel
Mitchell Parish (1900–1993), Lithuanian-born American lyricist[8]
Abram Rabinovich (1878–1943), chess player
Bar Refaeli (born 1985), Israeli supermodel, television host, actress, and businesswoman
Willy Ronis (1910–2009), photographer
Eduardas Rozentalis (born 1963), chess player
Yisroel Salanter (1809–1883), rabbi and Talmudist
Meyer Schapiro (1904–1996), art historian
Alexander Schneider (1908–1993), violinist and conductor
Lasar Segall (1891–1957), painter, engraver, and sculptor
Benjamin Schlesinger (1876–1932), American labor leader and former President of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union
Ben Shahn (1898–1969), artist
Esther Shalev-Gerz (born 1948), artist
Karl Shapiro (1913–2000), poet (Lithuanian parents)
Sam (1878–1905), Lee (1871–1953), and Jacob Shubert (1879–1963), theatre managers and producers (cf. Shubert Brothers)
Joe Slovo (1926–1995), ANC activist
Elijah ben Solomon (1720–1797), rabbi, the Gaon of Vilna
Maximilian Steinberg (1883–1946), classical composer
David Suchet (born 1946), English actor
Helen Suzman (1917–2009), anti-apartheid MP (Lithuanian parents)
Isakas Vistaneckis (1910–2000), chess player
Louis Washkansky (1912–1967), recipient of the world's first human heart transplant
Uriel Weinreich (1926–1967), linguist
David Wolfsohn (1855–1914), second President of the World Zionist Organization
Bluma Zeigarnik (1900–1988), psychologist and psychiatrist
Emanuelis Zingeris (born 1957), politician
William Zorach (1889–1966), painter, sculptor, printmaker, and writer
Louis Zukofsky (1904–1978), poet and professor (Lithuanian parents)
Benjamin Zuskin (1899–1952), actor
Norway
[edit]
See also: Category:Norwegian people of Jewish descent and Jews in Norway
Bjørn Benkow, journalist, known for faking interviews
Jo Benkow, President of the Parliament of Norway
Carl Paul Caspari, professor in theology (Lutheranism)
Leo Eitinger (born in Slovakia), professor of psychiatry at University of Oslo and Holocaust survivor, known mainly for his work on late-onset psychological trauma amongst Holocaust survivors
Victor Goldschmidt, professor in mineralogy
Salo Grenning, pen name Pedro, editorial cartoonists in Verdens Gang
Berthold Grünfeld, specialist in psychiatry, and professor in social medicine until 1993
Imre Hercz, physician and public debater
Bente Kahan, Yiddish singer and actress
Hermann Kahan, Holocaust survivor, activist
Morten Levin, professor of organization and work science
Robert Levin, pianist
Oskar Mendelsohn, historian, known for his two-volume history of Norwegian Jews
Charles Philipson, Supreme Court Justice Judge, Chairman of the Petroleum Law Committee, deputy chairman of the Petroleum Council and chairman of the Riksel Committee
Moritz Rabinowitz, merchant, active in public debate against antisemitism and Nazism before World War II
Øystein Wingaard Wolf, poet and author
Sweden
[edit]
See also: Category:Swedish people of Jewish descent and Jews in Sweden
Olof Aschberg, businessman and banker
Robert Aschberg, journalist, media executive, TV personality
Amalia Assur, first female dentist in Sweden
Lovisa Augusti, opera singer
Jean-Pierre Barda, musician
Mathilda Berwald, née Cohn, musician
Sharon Bezaly, flute soloist
Jonathan Conricus (born 1979), Swedish-Israeli IDF Lieutenant-Colonel (ret), IDF International Spokesperson
Jerzy Einhorn, pathologist and politician
Herbert Felix, entrepreneur
Aron Flam (born 1978), comedian, podcaster, and writer, and actor
Josef Frank, architect and designer
Isaac Grünewald, artist
Lars Gustafsson, writer and scholar
Johan Harmenberg, épée fencer, Olympic fencing medalist[1]
Eli Heckscher, economist
Aaron Isaac, businessman from Swedish Pomerania, pioneer in the history of Sweden's Jewish population
Erland Josephson, actor and writer
Ernst Josephson, painter
Ragnar Josephson, writer and art historian
Anne Kalmering, singer
Mirjam Katzin, academic
Joel Kinnaman, actor
George Klein, pathologist and writer
Oskar Klein, physicist
Oscar Levertin, poet and literary historian
Jacob Marcus, businessman, pioneer in the history of Sweden's Jewish population