LC control no. | n 79085408 |
---|---|
Descriptive conventions | rda |
Personal name heading | Sharansky, Natan, 1948- |
Variant(s) | Shcharansky, Anatoly, 1948- Sharansky, Anatoly, 1948- Shcharansky, Natan, 1948- Sharansḳi, Anaṭoli, 1948- Щаранский, Анатолий, 1948- Shcharanskiĭ, Anatoliĭ, 1948- Sharansḳi, Natan, 1948- Shcharanskiĭ, Natan, 1948- שרנסקי, אנטלי, -1948 שרנסקי, נתן, -1948 |
Associated country | Israel |
Located | Jerusalem |
Address | natansharanskyoffice@gmail.com |
Birth date | 1948-01-20 |
Place of birth | Donet︠s︡k (Ukraine) |
Affiliation | Institute for the Study of Global Antisemitism and Policy |
Profession or occupation | Refuseniks Political prisoners Politicians |
Special note | Non-Latin script references not evaluated. |
Found in | Shcharansky, Avital. Next year in Jerusalem, 1979 (subj.) CIP galley p. 3 (Anatoly, called Natan in Hebrew) N. Y. Times Index, 1977 (Shcharansky, Anatoly) Lichtman, R. Megillat Natan, c1981: t.p. (Natan) p. 3, etc. (Anatoly Sharansky; Anatoly Shcharansky; Anatoly, whose Hebrew name was Natan) Anatoliĭ Shcharanskiĭ, 1985: t.p. verso (Anaṭoli Sharansḳi [in Hebrew]) Enc. Judaica decennial book, 1973-1983, c1982: p. 539 (Anatoly Shcharansky) His Fear no evil, 1988: CIP t.p. (Natan Sharansky) data sheet (b. Jan. 20, 1948) His Lo ira raʻ, c1989: t.p. (Natan Sharansḳi) t.p. verso (Natan Sharansky [in rom.]) Lo levad, 2023: t.p (נתן שרנסקי = Natan Sharansḳi) t.p. verso (Natan Sharansky [in rom.] Facebook, viewed July 1, 2024 : (Natan Sharansky, Chair of ISGAP, BYHMC - Chairman of the Board, Former Prisoner of Zion and Deputy Prime Minister of Israel, Former Chairman of JAFI and grandfather of seven.) Wikipedia, Oct. 11, 2021 (Natan Sharansky (20 January 1948) is an Israeli politician, human rights activist, and author who, as a refusenik in the Soviet Union during the 1970s and 1980s, spent nine years in Soviet prisons. He served as Chair of the Executive of the Jewish Agency from June 2009 to August 2018. Natan Sharansky currently serves as the Chairman of the Institute of the Study of Global Antisemitism and Policy (ISGAP). ... He took his current Hebrew name in 1986 when he was freed from Soviet incarceration as part of a prisoner exchange and received an Israeli passport with his new name.) |