Background
Cohen, Henry was born on June 5, 1922 in New York City. Son of Abraham and Sadie (Sheftel) Cohen.
Cohen, Henry was born on June 5, 1922 in New York City. Son of Abraham and Sadie (Sheftel) Cohen.
He graduated from Thomas Jefferson High School in Brooklyn, then from the City College of New York, and received a master"s degree in Urban Planning from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
During World World War II, he served as an infantryman in the United States. Army. He later served as research director of the New York City Planning Department and as Deputy City Administrator under Mayor Robert F. Wagner, Junior. Later, he was First Deputy Administrator of the New York Human Resources Administration under Mayor John Lindsay.
After leaving the city government, Cohen became the founding Dean of the Milano School for Management and Urban Policy at The New School.
Cohen served in the United States. Army infantry, fighting in the Battle of the Bulge and crossing the Bridge at Remagen. After the German surrender, he was assigned to military administration.
In January 1946, at the age of 23, he was appointed director of, aided by a multinational team from the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration. By then, the camp had an exclusively Jewish population, composed of 5,600 refugees who had survived the Holocaust. Cohen worked to ensure favorable living conditions for the camp"s residents.
He worked with a democratically elected Camp Committee that granted a degree of administrative autonomy to its residents.
The camp sponsored rehabilitation activities that included school for children, adult education and vocational training, a thriving cultural life with musical and theatrical performances, and the publication of a weekly newspaper. Besides maintaining the camp"s physical conditions, particularly sanitation, Cohen endeavored to contain the black market trade that was of particular concern to the American army administration in the sector. Conflict with the Army
During his tenure, Cohen became aware of what he considered widespread anti-Semitism among United States. Army personnel, including expressions of such attitudes in official administrative reports.
An incident in May 1946, involving GIs who reportedly threatened several Jewish camp residents visiting in the nearby town of Wolfratshausen, provoked a riot by several hundred camp residents, who surged forth from the camp, heading for the town.
Cohen and his staff quelleds the riot, but still drew the animosity of the American army. An operations report filed on July 23, 1946, by the 9th Infantry Division Assistant
Chief of Staff, accuses Cohen of incitement and fails to mention any impropriety on the part of American soldiers. The recurring friction between the Army and Cohen prompted a campaign for his eventual removal from the director"s post.
After returning to the United States, he received a master"s degree in Urban Planning from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, then served as Director of Research of the New York City Planning Department.
He was Deputy City Administrator of New York City during the Wagner Administration. Later he was First Deputy Administrator of the New York Human Resources Administration during the Lindsay Administration. After leaving the city government, Cohen became the Founding Dean of the Milano School for Management and Urban Policy at The New School.
This included providing for Jewish religious observance and supporting the activities of Zionist political parties and youth movements.
Vice chairman American Jewish Committee, New York City, 1973-1984. Chairman Consumers Credit Counselling of New York, 1980-1983. Member Overseas Council, United Jewish Appeal, New York City, since 1988.
Board directors Cooperative American Relief Everywhere, New York City, 1985-1989. With United States Army, 1944-1946, Germany. Fellow National Academy Public Administration, American Planning Association, Phi Beta Kappa.
Married Evelyn Fuhrman, November 10, 1948. Children: Alison Rose, Daniel Cohen.