Background
Netanyahu was born in Warsaw, Poland, to the writer and Zionist activist Nathan Mileikowsky.
Netanyahu was born in Warsaw, Poland, to the writer and Zionist activist Nathan Mileikowsky.
Netanyahu went to the Reali School in Haifa, from which he graduated in 1930. He studied at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, from which he received his Bachelor of Science, Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy (1942).
Over the course of his work at the Technion he was the Dean of the Faculty of Sciences and established the separate Department of Mathematics. He was the third of nine children. In 1920 the family made aliyah to the Land of Israel.
The family eventually settled in Jerusalem and adopted Hebrew name Netanyahu.
He later returned to Reali in 1935 to teach mathematics there. His advisors were Michael Fekete and Binyamin Amira.
After the graduation he joined the British Army as a volunteer, serving in Egypt and then in Italy as an officer in a unit of the Royal Engineering Corps. He specialized in preparation of maps, which he continued to do during Israel"s War of Independence in 1948.
After he was demobilized in 1946, he became a lecturer at the Technion.
He rose to a professor in 1958, and later became the head of the Mathematics Section, then as Dean of the Faculty of Sciences. His administrative efforts also played an important role towards establishment of the Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. He had long term visits at Stanford University (1953-1954), the Courant Institute (1961), the University of New Mexico (1969), the University of Maryland, College Park (1973), and Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich (1979).
In 1980, Netanyahu retired from the Technion and moved to Jerusalem, where he died of cancer in 1986.
Throughout his long career, Netanyahu collaborated with Paul Erdős, Charles Loewner and other leading mathematicians, continuing and expanding the analytical traditions at the Technion. Personal life
In 1949 Netanyahu married Shoshana Shenburg, his former student at the Reali, who later became the second female justice at the Israel Supreme Court.
They had two children: Nathan (b 1951), a professor of computer science at Bar-Ilan University, and Dan (b 1954), an information systems auditor. The Elisha Netanyahu Memorial Lecture Series was established by the Netanyahu family and the Technion to honor the memory in 1987 with the first lecture by Paul Erdőson
In other years, the speakers included Lars Ahlfors, Robert Aumann, Lipman Bers, Enrico Bombieri, Charles Fefferman, Samuel Karlin, David Kazhdan, Louis Nirenberg, Terence Tao, Wendelin Werner, and Don Zagier.