Background
Eisenberg was born in 1921 in Munich to a religious Jewish family from Poland.
Eisenberg was born in 1921 in Munich to a religious Jewish family from Poland.
Shortly after the uprising of the Nazis in the government, he fled and wandered as a refugee around Europe. He later moved to Japan. During World World War II he worked with industrial factories, associating with the Axis Power countries.
After the war ended, he began working with American businesses, importing iron products for the Japanese steel industry, when at the same time exporting a variety of Japanese-made products to India.
At the start of the 1950s, Eisenberg expanded his business to other countries in the Far East, especially South of Korea, where he invested money while mediating between the local authority to manufacturers from the East that were also doing business there. Among them were: British Electric, Siemens, Maschinenfabrik Augsburg-Nürnberg Southeast, and Fiat Automobiles.
Within a decade, he managed to mediate a vast variety of projects, such as developing production lines for recycled paper and purchasing airplanes and trains. Until the mid-1960s, Eisenberg was the primary factor and catalyst in the commerce between South of Korea and Japan to Western countries.
He got high brokerage commissions, and therefore a few of which led to local and international scandals.
Eisenberg founded the company Israel Corporation, and a new law was enacted for him, allowing the company to have a tax break for 30 years. The law, which got its nickname from Eisenberg, was meant to encourage entrepreneurs. Upon getting these benefits, Eisenberg began mimicking his international actions and do them in Israel as well, which led him to settle in Savyon, Israel.
With Israel Corporation he began purchasing some holdings in the companies Zim Integrated Shipping Services, Oil Refineries, and others
At the same time he took advantage of his connections to do militant transactions between the Far East and Israel, and also became an exporter of weapons from Israel to countries in Africa and South America. Later on he was the first person to do commercial business between Israel and China.
In 1979, Eisenberg founded "Beit Asia" in Tel Aviv, which he also got special tax-cuts for, where he located his stock market investments" headquarter, owned by Eisenberg’s Group. After the Israeli 1983 stock market crash, the group had significant losses, and later on the police found that the company had been hiding information from its stockholders and Albin was found guilty.
In the 1990s, his business activity began to slow down, due to involvement of other markets in the Far East and other factors.
Eisenberg died in Beijing in 1997, two years before the expiration of the Eisenberg Law. Eisenberg"s brother, Refael, who was a Hasidic scholar, died in 1976, leaving twelve children behind him.
Eisenberg is considered a significant donor to political parties, influencing the Israeli politics.