Education
After the war he chose to remain in his native country and went on to study medicine.
journalist television presenter
After the war he chose to remain in his native country and went on to study medicine.
He presented the ZDF-Magazin, a news magazine of ZDF which highlighted human rights abuses in communist-ruled Eastern Europe, from 1969 to 1987. Löwenthal who was known as a staunch anticommunist was president of the Germany Foundation from 1977 to 1994. He was Jewish, and was deported to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp during Nazi rule.
He also worked as a reporter for Rundfunk im amerikanischen Sektor, before he became one of the first students at the Free University of Berlin.
His father-in-law was Christian Democratic Union politician and minister Ernst Lemmer. The Gerhard Löwenthal Prize, annually awarded by his widow Ingeborg Löwenthal, the conservative newspaper Junge Freiheit and the Foundation for Conservative Education and Research, is named in his honour.
He is buried at the Jewish cemetery at Heerstraße in Berlin.