Natan Datner
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Natan Datner
Natan is a masculine given name, a surname and the Hebrew origin of the name Nathan which may refer to: Given name: * Natan Hockenstien (Also known as Nator Tots) (born 2008) Poet, Son, Entrepreneur * Natan Bernot (1931-2018), Yugoslav slalom canoeist, 1963 World Championship C-2 silver medalist * Natan Brand (1944–1990), Israeli classical pianist * Natan Carneiro de Lima (born 1990), Brazilian footballer * Natan Eidelman (1930-1989), Soviet Russian author and historian * Natan Gamedze (born 1963), Swazi convert to Judaism, Haredi rabbi and lecturer * Natan Jurkovitz (born 1995), French-Swiss-Israeli basketball player for Hapoel Be'er Sheva of the Israeli Basketball Premier League * Natan Panz (1917–1948), Russian-born Jewish football player from Mandatory Palestine and Irgun member * Natan Peled (1913-1992), Israeli politician * Natan Rakhlin (1906-1979), Soviet orchestra conductor * Natan or Nathan Rapoport (1911-1987), Polish Jewish sculptor and painter * Natán Rivera (b ...
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Natan Bernot
Natan Bernot (11 April 1931 – 22 August 2018)
was a Slovenian mechanical engineer, energy engineering and energy development specialist and a former Yugoslavia, Yugoslav slalom canoeing, slalom canoeist from Slovenia who competed from the mid-1950s to the late 1960s. With his brother Dare Bernot, Dare, he won a silver medal in the C-2 event at the 1963 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships in Spittal an der Drau, Spittal. In his professional work Natan Bernot favoured a complex approach to the world's energy issues. A new area of study, the energiology should address the complex links between energy development, technology and social issues, especially labour and education. Energiology is expected to provide new insight and guidance for policies in the relevant areas.


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Natan Rybak
Natan Rybak (Рибак, Натан; 3 January 1913 – 11 September 1978) was a Ukrainian poet and socialist-realist writer of Jewish origin. Rybak published 3 collections of poetry in the 1930s. He published around 20 collections of short stories mostly in the 1930s and 1940s. He is best known for his novels. He was awarded the Stalin Prize in 1950 for volume 1 of the novel ''Pereiaslavs’ka rada''. The novel ''Pomylka Onore de Bal’zaka'' was filmed in 1969. Bibliography The bibliography is a selection from ''Encyclopedia of Ukraine''. *''Harmaty zherlamy na skhid'' (1934) (in English ''Cannons with Muzzles Facing East'') *''Kyïv'' (1936) ('' Kiev'') *''Dnipro'' (2 volumes, 1937–8) (The Dnieper) *''Pomylka Onore de Bal’zaka'' (1940) (in English ''The Mistake of Honoré de Balzac'' filmed in 1969) *''Zbroia z namy'' (1943) (in English ''The Weapons Are with Us'') *''Pereiaslavs’ka rada'' (volume 1 in 1948, was awarded the Stalin Prize in 1950 and volume 2 in 1953) ...
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Nathan (given Name)
Nathan is a masculine given name. It is derived from the Hebrew verb meaning ''gave'' ( standard Hebrew Natan, Yiddish Nussen/Nosson, Tiberian Hebrew Nāṯān). The meaning of the name in Jewish culture could be rendered "he has given" "gift from god" In the Bible *Nathan (prophet), a prophet who lived in the time of Kings David and Solomon * Nathan (son of David), son of David and his wife Bathsheba Notable people with this name * Rabbi Nathan (other), multiple people * Nathan of Gaza, 17th century prophet A * Nathan Adams (born 1991), footballer * Nathan Adams (programmer) (born 1991), video game developer * Nathan Adrian (born 1988), American swimmer * Nathan Aké (born 1995), footballer currently playing for Manchester City * Nathan Alterman (1910–70), Israeli poet, journalist, and translator * Nathan Amos (born 1979), South African born-Israeli rugby player * Nathan Azarcon Filipino bass player and nationalist B * Nathan Beauregard (1890s–1970), American ...
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Shuli Natan
Shulamit "Shuli" Natan ( he, שׁוּלָמִית „שׁוּלִי” נָתָן (born March 16, 1947) is an Israeli singer. She is best known for singing " Jerusalem of Gold" (''Yerushalayim Shel Zahav''), written by Naomi Shemer. Singing career Shuli Natan's albums feature Israeli songs, traditional Jewish melodies and songs by Shlomo Carlebach. She achieved fame with a heartfelt rendition of "Jerusalem of Gold" in 1967. Her 1999 CD ''Open Roads'' includes covers of songs which were popular in Israel at the time, such as David D'Or's "Watch Over Us, Child" and Rami Kleinstein's "Never-Ending Miracles". Natan accompanies herself on the guitar. She sings Israeli songs, folk songs from around the world, Hassidic and Yiddish songs and songs of the Mizrahi Jewish community. She sings in Hebrew, English, French, Ladino and Spanish. Albums *'' Beloved Songs'' *'' Songs of Praise'' *'' Open Roads'' *'' Mostly Carlebach'' *1973 אנעים זמירות ושירים אאר ...
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Émile Natan
Émile Natan (1906–1962) was a Romanian-born French film producer. He was the brother of Bernard Natan, the head of Pathé-Natan.Andrew p.365 Selected filmography * '' Accused, Stand Up!'' (1930) * ''Little Lise'' (1930) * '' Levy and Company'' (1930) * '' Gloria'' (1931) * ''All That's Not Worth Love'' (1931) * '' The Dream'' (1931) * ''Orange Blossom'' (1932) * ''Beauty Spot'' (1932) * '' The Wonderful Day'' (1932) * '' The Levy Department Stores'' (1932) * ''Once Upon a Time'' (1933) * '' Toto'' (1933) * '' Koenigsmark'' (1935) * '' The King'' (1936) * '' Tricoche and Cacolet'' (1938) * '' After Love'' (1948) * '' Imperial Violets'' (1952) * '' The Beautiful Otero'' (1954) * ''The Triumph of Michael Strogoff ''The Triumph of Michael Strogoff'' (French: ''Le triomphe de Michel Strogoff'') is a 1961 French-Italian historical adventure film directed by Viktor Tourjansky and starring Curd Jürgens, Capucine and Claude Titre. It is inspired by the 1 ...'' (1961) Refere ...
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Efrat Natan
Efrat Natan is an Israeli artist. Biography Efrat Natan was born and grew up on Kibbutz Kfar Ruppin in the Beit She'an Valley. She studied with Raffi Lavie. Her art was influenced by life on the kibbutz and utopian ideals. Her sculpture "Swing of the Scythe" (2002) is in the permanent exhibition of the Israel Museum. Composed of scythes arranged in a circle, the work draws on Natan's childhood memories growing up on a kibbutz as well as the myth of the Zionist pioneer, symbolizing the renewed relationship between the Jews and the land. Awards and recognition * 1979 Beatrice S. Kolliner Award for a Young Israeli Artist, Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel * 2002 Prize to Encourage Creativity, Ministry of Science, Culture and Sport * 2006 Ministry of Science, Culture and Sport Prize * 2006 Ministry of Education Prize for the Fine Arts * 2009: Mifal Hapayis Prize for the Fine Arts See also *Visual arts in Israel Visual arts in Israel refers to plastic art created first in ...
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Bernard Natan
Bernard Natan (born Natan Tannenzaft; 14 July 1886 – October 1942) was a French-Romanian film entrepreneur, director and actor of the 1920s and 1930s. Natan was deported to Auschwitz after the studio he owned went bankrupt, and his reputation was destroyed with wrongful accusations of pornography and fraud which then led to his conviction. He deserves to be remembered for more than these untruths,Waugh, Thomas. ''Hard To Imagine.'' New York: Columbia University Press, 1996. Slade, Joseph. "Bernard Natan: France's Legendary Pornographer." ''Journal of Film and Video.'' 45:2–3 (Summer-Fall 1993). Natan certainly worked in mainstream cinema from his youngest days, working his way up from projectionist and chemist to cinematographer and producer. He eventually acquired the giant French motion picture studio Pathé in 1929. Pathé collapsed in 1935, and then Natan was convicted of fraud. However, he laid the foundation for the modern film industry in France and helped revolutioni ...
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Nathan Zach
Nathan Zach (13 December 1930 – 6 November 2020; Hebrew: נתן זך) was an Israeli poet. Widely regarded as one of the preeminent poets in the country's history, he was awarded the Israel Prize in 1995 for poetry. He was also the recipient of other national and international awards. Zach was a professor of Hebrew and comparative literature at the University of Haifa. Biography Born in Berlin to a German-Jewish officer and an Italian Catholic mother, the Seitelbach family fled to the Land of Israel in 1936 following the rise of the Nazi regime. The family settled in Haifa. He served in the Israel Defense Forces as an intelligence clerk during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. In 1955, he published his first collection of poetry (''Shirim Rishonim'', he, שירים ראשונים), and also translated numerous German plays for the Hebrew stage. At the vanguard of a group of poets who began to publish after Israel's re-establishment, Zach has had a great influence on the develo ...
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Natan Yonatan
Nathan Yonathan ( he, נָתָן יֹונָתָן; 20 September 1923 – 12 March 2004) was an Israeli poet. His poems have been translated from Hebrew and published in more than a dozen languages, among them: Arabic, Bulgarian, Chinese, Dutch, English, French, German, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Vietnamese, and Yiddish.General reference for entry: Introduction, ''Within the Song to Live'', Gefen, 2005. Biography Natan Yonatan was born Nathan Klein, in Kiev in the Ukraine in 1923. In 1925, his family immigrated to Mandate Palestine. They were among the early settlers (1935), of Kfar Ma'as, an agricultural village near Petah Tikva. Yonatan was active in the Hashomer Hatzair youth movement and in 1945 joined kibbutz Sarid in the Jezreel Valley. He was a member of Sarid for 46 years. From 1991 until his death, he resided in the suburbs of Tel Aviv. He fathered two sons with his first wife Tzefira: Lior—who fell in action in the Yom Kippur War at age 21—and Ziv, musici ...
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Natan Spigel
Natan Spigel (also: Nathan, Szpigiel/Spiegel/Szpigel) (1892–1942) was a Jewish painter born in Poland.http://www.shtetlinks.jewishgen.org/lodz/noted.htm, Shtetlinks, Noted Citizens of Lodz, Szpigiel (SPIEGEL), Natan (1900-1943), Retrieved February 1, 2011. Spigel was a key member of the influential Expressionist group Yung-yidish. He exhibited his works throughout Europe until his internment in Radomsko ghetto in 1939. Natan was murdered in Treblinka in 1942, and only about 20 of his works survived the Shoah-Holocaust. Life and artistic career Natan Spigel was born into an Orthodox Jewish family in Łódź, now in Poland, in 1892. ( see autobiographic letter to Prof.Otto Schneid ). The remnants of his family are now based in London. He studied art as a young man and then in 1910 traveled to Rome on sponsorship, where he continued his studies with Henryk Glicenstein. His first major success, in Paris, was the invitation to show in the 1924 Salon d'Automne, although his first ...
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Natan Slifkin
Natan Slifkin (also Nosson Slifkin) ( he, נתן סליפקין; born 25 June 1975 in Manchester, England), popularly known as the "Zoo Rabbi," is a British-born Israeli Modern Orthodox community rabbi and the director of the Biblical Museum of Natural History in Beit Shemesh, Israel. Slifkin is best known for his interests in zoology, Judaism's relationship to evolution, Jewish and biblical history, and his writing (which is controversial among the Haredi community) on these topics. Biography Slifkin was born and raised in Manchester, United Kingdom, where he studied at a local yeshiva. He left in 1995 to continue his studies in the Medrash Shmuel yeshiva and Mir Yeshiva in Jerusalem, Israel. He was ordained at Ohr Somayach Institutions, where he taught Talmud and contemporary Judaism. He now lives with his family in Ramat Beit Shemesh, where he runs the Biblical Museum of Natural History. Slifkin has a master's degree in Judaic Studies from the Lander Institute in Jerusalem ...
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Natan Sharansky
Natan Sharansky ( he, נתן שרנסקי; russian: Ната́н Щара́нский; uk, Натан Щаранський, born Anatoly Borisovich Shcharansky on 20 January 1948); uk, Анатолій Борисович Щаранський, group="Note" is an Israeli politician, human rights activist and author who spent nine years in Soviet prisons as a refusenik during the 1970s and 1980s. He served as Chairman of the Executive for the Jewish Agency from June 2009 to August 2018. Sharansky currently serves as chairman for the Institute for the Study of Global Antisemitism and Policy (ISGAP), an American non-partisan organization. Biography Sharansky was born into a Jewish family on in the city of Stalino (now Donetsk) in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic of the Soviet Union. His father, Boris Shcharansky, a journalist from a Zionist background who worked for an industrial journal, died in 1980, before Natan was freed. His mother, Ida Milgrom, visited him in prison ...
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