Background
Frankel was born in London, the son of Isaac Frankel, an Orthodox Jew, the beadle of the Artillery Lane synagogue in Spitalfields, and a stallholder in Petticoat Lane.
(If William Frankel were to choose a motto he could do no ...)
If William Frankel were to choose a motto he could do no better than carpe diem. He seized each opportunity that came his way; escaping the blitz led to his reading law at Cambridge and a chance meeting in New York led to him becoming general manager and then Editor of the Jewish Chronicle. Born into the Hasidic community in London's East End, Frankel's life expanded immeasurably beyond these confines into ever-wider social, professional, and intellectual circles. He describes vividly his childhood, his professional development, and his encounters with prime ministers, political leaders, writers, artists, and musicians.
https://www.amazon.com/Tea-Einstein-Memories-Willliam-Frankel/dp/1870015975/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=Tea+With+Einstein+and+Other+Memories&qid=1612619177&s=books&sr=1-1
2006
Frankel was born in London, the son of Isaac Frankel, an Orthodox Jew, the beadle of the Artillery Lane synagogue in Spitalfields, and a stallholder in Petticoat Lane.
He attended the Davenant Foundation School, at that time located in the East End; the Regent Street Polytechnic (the University of Westminster);then the University of London, graduating with honours in law.
He read for the bar, becoming a barrister in 1944 as a member of the Middle Temple. He also became general secretary of the Mizrachi Organisation of Great Britain and Ireland, a religious Zionist group. He joined The Jewish Chronicle as general manager in 1955. In 1967, he was interviewed by Bernard Braden about contemporary controversies in the press and the future of the Middle East.In 1968–69, he was visiting professor at the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York City. He acted as special adviser to The Times on Jewish and Israeli affairs, and held a number of public or honorary posts, including president of the Mental Health Review appeals tribunal (1978–89), chairman of the Social Security Appeal Tribunal (1979–89); an executive of the Wiener library, the Holocaust archives based in London; president of the New Israel Fund since 1997; and was awarded an honorary fellowship of Girton College, Cambridge.
He wrote the books Friday Nights (1973), Israel Observed (1980), Survey of Jewish Affairs (1982–1992), and Tea With Einstein and Other Memories (2006).
(If William Frankel were to choose a motto he could do no ...)
2006(William Frankel was born into the Hasidic community in Lo...)
1973He was married twice. His first marriage in 1939 to Gertrude Reed was dissolved. In 1973, he married an American, Claire Newman. There was a son and a daughter by his first marriage.