Ukrainian politician and diplomat
Zylberfarb's grave in Warsaw
Moishe Zylberfarb (Ukrainian : Мо́йше Зи́льберфарб , Yiddish : משה זילבערפֿאַרב ) was a Ukrainian politician, diplomat, and 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 27 July 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
External links
International National Other