(Jewish Group) 18 notable Jews who died in 2022
Every year brings the opportunity to celebrate the accomplishments of well-known Jewish icons in every field and to mourn those we have lost.
Here are 18 Jews who died in 2022 and who leave outsized legacies on politics, the arts, sports and everything in between.
Madeleine Albright
The first woman secretary of state in the United States label will always follow Madeleine Albright, especially because of her success in such a male-dominated field of policy. But regardless of her gender, Albrights moves as a part of Bill Clintons administration left a lasting mark on U.S. peacekeeping efforts around the world. Crucial to her worldview was her refugee story, which she did not fully grasp until after her time in the limelight. Her parents were Czech immigrants who had converted from Judaism to Catholicism and then Episcopalianism to avoid persecution before fleeing Europe. Albright did not like to talk about her parents choice to keep her in the dark, but when she did, it was in the voice of a blunt-edged diplomat who understood how the 20th century robbed some people of agency, and how they did what they had to do to reclaim it. I cant question their motivation. I cant, she told The Washington Post in 1997. Albright died March 23 in Washington, D.C., at 84.
Melissa Bank
Melissa Bank published just two books in her career, but both sets of short stories were bestsellers that explored the lives of Jewish women and still resonate with young readers decades later. Her 1999 debut, The Girls Guide To Hunting And Fishing, held a spot on The New York Times bestseller list for months. The comic misadventures of her two books Jewish protagonists often intersected with Jewish life: In Wonder Spot, Sophie Applebaum plays hooky from Hebrew class, considers taking a job with a Jewish newspaper, and contends with a cousins bat mitzvah and a sister-in-laws passive-aggressive attempts to impose kosher rules on her home. Bank died of lung cancer at 61 in August.
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