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  1. Meir Bar-Ilan (Hebrew: מֵאִיר בַּר-אִילָן; () April 10, 1880 – () April 17, 1949) was an orthodox rabbi, author, and religious zionist activist, who served as leader of the Mizrachi movement in the United States and Mandatory Palestine. Bar-Ilan University, founded in 1955, was named in his honour.

  2. Moshav Beit Meir, named after Rav Bar-Ilan, is a religious moshav of some 90 families, located in the midst of a nature reserve in the Jerusalem hills (about nine miles from Jerusalem) off the Jerusalem-Tel Aviv highway. It enjoys a panoramic view of the country stretching some 35 miles to the Mediterranean.

  3. Meir BAR-ILAN | Professor Emeritus | Emeritus | Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan | BIU | Department of Jewish History | Research profile. About. 28. Publications. 6,545. Reads. 55. Citations....

  4. E-Mail: Meir.Bar-ilan@biu.ac.il. URL: http://faculty.biu.ac.il/~barilm/ Born: New York, November 5, 1951. Married: 5 children. Citizenship: USA / Israel . Education: 1980 Bar-Ilan University, Israel B. A. 1983 Bar-Ilan University, Israel Ph. D. Academic Employment. 1980-82 Bar-Ilan University, Israel Instructor

  5. 5 days ago · Meir Bar-Ilan. Quick Reference. (1880–1949), orthodox rabbi and leader of the religious Zionist Mizrachi movement (See Religious Parties in Israel). Born in Volozhin, son of Naphtali Tsevi Yehuda Berlin, Bar-Ilan studied at yeshivot in ... From: BAR-ILAN, MEIR in The Oxford Dictionary of the Jewish Religion » Subjects: Religion.

  6. mizrachi.org › wp-content › uploadsRabbi Meir Bar-Ilan

    eir Bar-Ilan (Berlin) was born in Volozhin, Russia, son of the Netziv (Rabbi Naftali Zevi Yehuda Berlin). Undoubtedly, the young Meir was influenced by his father’s deep commitment to the settlement of Eretz Yisrael. When the Netziv died in 1894, Meir began to travel from yeshiva to yeshiva; first to Telz, then Brisk and finally to Novardok ...

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  8. By Rafael Medoff. In 1943, at a time when no organized Jewish lobby in Washington existed, Rabbi Meir Bar-Ilan undertook an extraordinary one-man lobbying mission to Capitol Hill in an attempt to save European Jewry. His name is not found in most books about American Zionism.

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