Background
Don, Yehuda was born on the 21st of June 1930 in Budapest, Hungary. Arrived in Israel, 1947. Son of Jacob and Leah (Filut) Don.
David H. Zysman Hall, a Moorish Revival building on Yeshiva University's Wilf Campus, is home to Yeshiva University High School for Boys and houses the former main beit midrash (Torah study hall).
(An Analytical Appraisal of the Israeli Kibbutz)
An Analytical Appraisal of the Israeli Kibbutz
https://www.amazon.com/Industrialization-Rural-Collective-Analytical-Appraisal/dp/0566056305/ref=sr_1_3?dchild=1&qid=1612539141&refinements=p_27%3AYehuda+Don&s=books&sr=1-3&text=Yehuda+Don
1989
(This volume is a pioneering effort to examine the social,...)
This volume is a pioneering effort to examine the social, demographic, and economic changes that befell the Jewish communities of Central Europe after the dissolution of the Habsburg Empire. It consists of studies researched and written especially for this volume by historians, sociologists, and economists, all specialists in modern Central European Jewish affairs.The era of national rivalry, economic crises, and political confusion between the two World Wars has been preceded by a pre-World War I epoch of Jewish emancipation and assimilation. During that period, Jewish minorities had been harbored from violent anti-Semitism by the Empire, and they became torchbearers of industrialization and modernization. This common destiny encouraged certain common characteristics in the three major components of the Empire, Austria, Hungary, and the Czech territories, despite the very different origins of the well over one million Jews in those three lands.The disintegration of the Habsburg Empire created three small, economically marginal national states, inimical to each other and at liberty to create their own policies toward Jews in accord with the preferences of their respective ruling classes. Active and openly discriminatory anti-Semitic measures resulted in Austria and Hungary. The only liberal heir country of the Empire was Czechoslovakia, although simmering anti-Semitism and below surface discrimination were widespread in Slovakia. While one might have expected Jewish communities to return to their pre-World War I tendencies to go their independent ways after the introduction of these policies, social and economic patterns which had evolved in the Habsburg era persisted until the Anschluss in Austria, German occupation in Czechoslovakia, and World War II in Hungary. Studies in this volume attest to continuing similarities among the three Jewish communities, testifying to the depth of the Empire's long lasting impact on the behavior of Jews in Central Europe.
https://www.amazon.com/Social-Economic-History-Central-European/dp/0887382118/ref=sr_1_2?dchild=1&qid=1612539141&refinements=p_27%3AYehuda+Don&s=books&sr=1-2&text=Yehuda+Don
1990
Economics researcher economics educator
Don, Yehuda was born on the 21st of June 1930 in Budapest, Hungary. Arrived in Israel, 1947. Son of Jacob and Leah (Filut) Don.
From 1950 to 1958 Don studied at Hebrew University, there he acquired Bachelor of Arts and Master of Science degrees. Then, he got the Doctor of Philosophy degree after studying at the London School of Economics from 1958 to 1961.
Yehuda Don immigrated to Israel from Hungary in 1947. He studied economics and history at the Hebrew University and the London School of Economics. He is professor of Economics at Bar-Ilan University, Israel, Yeshiva University, New York City, and head of the Research Institute of the Economics of Jewish Communities. Moreover, he was a dean of the College of Administration.
(This volume is a pioneering effort to examine the social,...)
1990(An Analytical Appraisal of the Israeli Kibbutz)
1989Don married Malka Raff on the 4th of April, 1954. They brought up 3 children: Shlomit, Jeremy, Jacob.