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Leib Yaffe

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Leib Yaffe
אריה לייב יפה
Leib Yaffe
Born
Aryeh Leib Yaffe

(1876-06-05)June 5, 1876
Grodno, Belarus
DiedMarch 11, 1948(1948-03-11) (aged 71)
Jerusalem, Mandatory Palestine
Cause of deathAssassination (car bomb)
NationalityBelarusian, Israeli
Alma materUniversities in Germany
Occupation(s)Poet, journalist, editor, Zionist leader
OrganizationsHaaretz, Keren Hayesod
Known forDirector-general of Keren Hayesod, editor of Haaretz
MovementZionism
Leib Yaffe with Hayim Bialik

Aryeh Leib Yaffe (June 5, 1876 - March 11, 1948) (Hebrew: אריה לייב יפה) was a Hebrew poet, journalist and editor of Haaretz newspaper.

Leib Yaffe was born in Grodno, Belarus. He spent his university years in Germany. A life-long champion of the Zionist cause, he immigrated to Palestine in 1920, where he became chief editor of Haaretz. He founded and served as director-general of Keren Hayesod.[1] In 1924, he visited Pinsk to promote the Zionist cause and received a warm welcome from the Jewish community.[2]

In 1942, he was sent on a mission to South America, and in December of that year he traveled to United States as an emissary of the Zionist Movement.[3]

On March 11, 1948, he and 12 others were killed by a car bomb in the courtyard of the Jewish Agency building in Jerusalem.[4]

There are streets named after him in Jerusalem's Talpiot neighborhood, in Herzliya, and in Beersheba.

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