| B |
Burgen, Harry 1893- - Lithuanian Jew of Orthodox background. Became a preacher of the Gospel in what is today Chosen People Ministries.
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| C |
Cassutto, Ernst and Elisabeth -
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| E |
Ehrenberg, Hans 1883-1958 - Hans Philipp Ehrenberg was born to a liberal Jewish family. He became a believer in 1909 in Berlin and became a distinguished theologian with the welfare of the Jewish people on his heart. In 1938 his home was trashed, and he was shortly after that arrested and sent to Sachsenhausen Concentration camp. Intervention by highly-placed Christian friends in the UK secured his release and he and his family found refuge in England. Einspruch, Henry 1892- - Translator of the Bible into Yiddish.
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| F |
Feinstein, Isaac 1904-1941 - Isaac Feinstein, a Jewish believer from Romania, died his last in the summer of 1941 in a cattle car outside the town of Jassy in NE Romania, due to lack of oxygen in the overfull cattle car. He died with his head on the shoulder of a rabbi who was reading the Psalms, with Feinstein explaining how they told of Yeshua. Frank, Arnold 1859-1965 - Slovakian Jew, survivor of two world wars - one of the founders of the Hebrew Christian Alliance and instrumental in saving many Jewish Christians who fled Germany.
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| G |
Gartenhaus, Jacob 1896-1984 -
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| H |
Hellyer, Henry 1880- - Trained for the rabbinate, his search for purity and truth led him to Messiah. Founder of Christian Testimony to the Jews, based in Philadelphia USA
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| J |
Jocz, Jacob 1906-1983 - An outstanding JBY of the twentieth century, and unique among theologians and missiologists. A third-generation JBY who dedicated his life to the Gospel in Poland and in N. America.
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| L |
Landsman, Joseph 1869-1931 - Polish born Talmud scholar, author of many JBY works. Levison, Leon 1881-1936 - Son of a distinguished rabbi in Safed, Leon founded the International Hebrew Christian Alliance and served as its first president.
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| R |
Rosenstock-Hussy, Eugen 1888-1973 - Eugen Rosenstock was born in Berlin to a liberal Jewish family. He was baptised into the Lutheran church at the age of 17 and remained a staunch believer all his life. He became a well known intellectual in Germany, and subsequently in the USA, and championed the establishment and development of what later became the Peace Corps.
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