List of Israelis

Flag of Israel ( דגל ישראל )
Location of Israel
Lists of Israelis
 
By ethnicity
Israeli Jews:
Ethiopian Jews

Arab citizens of Israel:
Arab Muslims, Druze, Arab Christians

Various:
Circassians
By descent
Afghan, Algerian, American, Argentine, Armenian, Australian, Austrian

Belarusian, Belgian, Bosnian, Brazilian, British, Bulgarian

Canadian, Chilean, Chinese, Croatian, Czech

Danish, Dutch

Egyptian, Estonian, Ethiopian

Finnish, French

Georgian, German, Greek, Guatemalan

Hungarian

Indian, Iranian, Iraqi, Irish, Italian

Kazakhstani

Latvian, Libyan, Lithuanian

Mexican, Moldovan, Moroccan, Nigerian

Polish

Romanian, Russian

Serbian, Slovak, South African, Sudanese, Swedish, Swiss, Syrian

Tunisian, Turkish

Ukrainian, Uzbekistani

Yemeni
By place of residence
 

Israelis (Hebrew: ישראלים Yiśraʾelim) are the citizens or permanent residents of the State of Israel. The largest ethnic groups in Israel are Jews (75%), followed by Palestinians and Arabs (20%) and other minorities (5%).[1]


Academics

Archaeology

Biology and medicine

Nobel Prize winner Aaron Ciechanover
Nobel Prize winner Avram Hershko
Nobel Prize winner Ada Yonath
  • Aaron Valero – Professor of Medicine, founder of Faculty of Medicine at the Technion, director of government hospital
  • Aaron Ciechanover and Avram Hershko – ubiquitin system; Lasker Award (2000), Nobel Prize in Chemistry (2004)
  • Moshe Feldenkrais – invented Feldenkrais Method used in movement therapy
  • Hossam Haick – inventor of an electric nose for diagnosis of cancer[2]
  • Israel Hanukoglu – structures of cytoskeletal keratins, NADP binding proteins, steroidogenic enzymes, Epithelial Sodium Channels (ENaC)
  • Gavriel Iddan – inventor of capsule endoscopy
  • Danny Ionescu – aquatic microbial ecologist
  • Benjamin Kahn – marine biologist, defender of the Red Sea reef
  • Alexander Levitzki – cancer research; Wolf Prize in Medicine (2005)
  • Yadin Dudai – memory research
  • Gideon Mer – scientist, malaria control
  • Saul Merin – ophthalmologist, author of Inherited Eye Diseases
  • Raphael Mechoulam – chemist, discoverer of tetrahydrocannabinol and anandamide
  • Leo Sachs – blood cell research; Wolf Prize in Medicine (1980)
  • Asya Rolls – psychoneuroimmunologist
  • Michael Sela and Ruth Arnon – developed Copaxone; Wolf Prize in Medicine (1998)
  • Michal Schwartz – neuroimmunology of age-related neurological disease
  • Rahel Straus (1880–1963) – German-Jewish medical doctor and feminist
  • Joel Sussman – 3D structure of acetylcholinesterase, Elkeles Prize for Research in Medicine (2005)
  • Meir Wilchek – affinity chromatography; Wolf Prize in Medicine (1987)
  • Ada Yonath – structure of ribosome, Nobel Prize in Chemistry (2009)
  • Amotz ZahaviHandicap Principle
  • Abraham Zangen – psycholobiology

Computing and mathematics

Nobel Prize winner Robert Aumann
Shafi Goldwasser
Elon Lindenstrauss

Engineering

  • Yaakov Bar-Shalom (born 1941) – electrical engineer
  • David Faiman (born 1944) – solar engineer and director of the National Solar Energy Center
  • Yoram Koren – mechanical engineer
  • Liviu Librescu (1930–2007) – Professor of Engineering Science and Mechanics at Virginia Tech, killed in the Virginia Tech massacre
  • Hagit Messer Yaron (born 1953) – electrical engineer
  • Moshe Zakai (1926–2015) – electrical engineer
  • Jacob Ziv (1931–2023) – electrical engineer

Humanities

  • Aharon Dolgopolsky – linguist: Nostratic
  • Moshe Goshen-Gottstein – Biblical scholar
  • Elias Khoury – law
  • Hans Jakob Polotsky – linguist
  • Chaim Rabin – Biblical scholar
  • Alice Shalvi – English literature, educator
  • Gershon Shaked – Hebrew literature
  • Shemaryahu Talmon – Biblical scholar
  • Emanuel Tov – Biblical scholar
  • Ghil'ad Zuckermann – linguist, revivalist

Philosophy

Physics and chemistry

Josef Imry
Nobel Prize winner Michael Levitt
Nobel Prize winner Dan Shechtman
Nobel Prize winner Arieh Warshel

Social sciences

Nobel Prize winner Daniel Kahneman
Ariel Rubinstein

Activists

  • Uri Avnery – peace activist, Gush Shalom
  • Yael Dayan – writer, politician, activist
  • Esther Eillam – feminist activist
  • Uzi Even – gay rights activist
  • Yehuda Glick – activist for Jewish rights at the Temple Mount
  • Shula Keshet – Mizrahi feminist, activist and artist
  • Hagar Rublev (1954–2000) – peace activist
  • Uri Savir – peace negotiator, Peres Center for Peace
  • Israel Shahak – political activist
  • Natan Sharansky – Soviet-era human rights activist
  • Ronny Edry and Michal Tamir – originators of the Israel-Loves-Iran peace movement and its offshoots

Architects

Athletes

Association football (soccer)

Yossi Benayoun
Avram Grant

Basketball

Omri Casspi
Gal Mekel

Bodybuilding

  • Alana Shipp – American/Israeli IFBB professional bodybuilder
  • Eli Hanania – American/Israeli bodybuilder and model

Boxing

Yuri Foreman
  • Salamo Arouch (The Ballet Dancer) – middleweight champion of Greece, lightweight, welterweight, middleweight. He survived the Holocaust by boxing (over 200 bouts) for the entertainment of Nazi officers in Auschwitz Concentration Camp. His story was portrayed in the 1989 film "Triumph of the Spirit"
  • Sarah Avraham – kickboxer, 2014 Women's World Thai-Boxing Champion in 57–63 kilos (125–140 pounds)
  • Hagar Finer – WIBF bantamweight champion[21]
  • Yuri Foreman – US middleweight and World Boxing Association super welterweight champion[22]
  • Roman Greenberg – ("The Lion from Zion"), International Boxing Organization's Intercontinental heavyweight champion
  • Pavlo Ishchenko – two-time European Amateur Boxing Championships medalist, and European Games medalist
  • Yulia Sachkov – world champion kickboxer

Cycling

  • Mikhail Iakovlev (born 2000) – Olympic cyclist

Fencing

Delila Hatuel
  • Boaz Ellis (born 1981) – foil, 5-time Israeli champion
  • Yuval Freilich (born 1995) – épée, 2019 European Épée Champion
  • Lydia Hatoel-Zuckerman (born 1963) – foil, 6-time Israeli champion[23][24]
  • Delila Hatuel (born 1980) – Olympic foil fencer
  • Noam Mills (born 1986) – épée, junior female world champion, four-time Israeli champion
  • Ayelet Ohayon (born 1974) – foil, European champion
  • Tomer Or (born 1978) – foil, junior world champion
  • Andre Spitzer (1945–1972) – one of 11 athletes and coaches taken hostage and subsequently killed by terrorists in the Munich massacre[25]

Figure skating

Golf

Laetitia Beck

Gymnastics

Linoy Ashram

Judo

Or Sasson
Ariel Ze'evi
Oren Smadja
  • Yael Arad – judoka (Olympic silver: 1992, European champion: 1993, world silver: 1993). first Israeli Olympic medalist; light-middleweight
  • Yarden Gerbi – judoka (Olympic bronze: 2016)
  • Andrian Kordon – European Championship bronze; heavyweight
  • Daniela Krukower – Israeli/Argentine judoka, World Champion (under 63 kg)[33]
  • Timna Nelson-Levy (born 1994) – judoka (Olympic bronze: 2020), European champion
  • Yoel Razvozov – two-time European Championship silver; lightweight
  • Or Sasson – judoka (Olympic bronze: 2016)
  • Oren Smadja – judoka (Olympic bronze: 1992; lightweight)
  • Ehud Vaks – judoka (half-lightweight)[34]
  • Gal Yekutiel – European championship bronze
  • Ariel Ze'evi – judoka (European champion: 2000, 2003, 2004; Olympic bronze: 2004; 100 kg)

Motor racing

Sailing

Gal Fridman
Shahar Tzuberi
  • Zefania Carmel – yachtsman, world champion (420 class)[35]
  • Gal Fridman – windsurfer (Olympic gold: 2004 (Israel's first gold medalist), bronze: 1996 (Mistral class); world champion: 2002)[36]
  • Shai Kakon (born 2002) – Olympic sailor
  • Sharon Kantor (born 2003) – world champion windsurfer
  • Lee Korzits – windsurfer (two-time Olympian and four-time world champion).
  • Lydia Lazarov – yachting world champion (420 class)[35]
  • Nimrod Mashiah – windsurfer; World Championship silver, ranked # 1 in world
  • Tom Reuveny (born 2000) – Olympic champion windsurfing sailor
  • Katy Spychakov – windsurfer; World Championship silver
  • Shahar Tzuberi – windsurfer, Olympic bronze (RS:X discipline); 2009 and 2010 European Windsurf champion[37]

Surfing

Anat Lelior
  • Anat Lelior – female surfer who competed for Israel at the 2020 Olympic Games

Swimming

  • Vadim Alexeev – swimmer, breaststroke[38]
  • Adi Bichman – 400-m and 800-m freestyle, 400-m medley[39]
  • Yoav Bruck – 50-m freestyle and 100-m freestyle
  • Anastasia Gorbenko (born 2003) – backstroke, breaststroke, and freestyle
  • Eran Groumi – 100 and 200 m backstroke, 100-m butterfly
  • Michael "Miki" Halika – 200-m butterfly, 200- and 400-m individual medley
  • Judith Haspel – (born "Judith Deutsch"), of Austrian origin, held every Austrian women's middle and long-distance freestyle record in 1935; refused to represent Austria in 1936 Summer Olympics along with Ruth Langer and Lucie Goldner, protesting Hitler, stating, "We do not boycott Olympia, but Berlin".[40]
  • Marc Hinawi – record holder in the European Games
  • Amit Ivry – Maccabiah and Israeli records in Women's 100 m butterfly, Israeli record in Women's 200 m Individual Medley, bronze medal in 100 m butterfly at the European Swimming Championships.
  • Dan Kutler – of US origin; 100-m butterfly, 4×100-m medley relay[41]
  • Keren Leibovitch – Paralympic swimmer, 4× gold medal winner, 100m backstroke, 50m and 100m freestyle, 200m individual medley
  • Tal Stricker – 100- and 200-m breaststroke, 4×100-m medley relay[42]
  • Eithan Urbach – backstroke swimmer, European championship silver and bronze; 100-m backstroke[43]

Table tennis

  • Marina Kravchenko – table tennis player, Soviet and Israel national teams[44]
  • Angelica Rozeanu – (Adelstin), of Romanian origin, 17-time world table tennis champion, ITTFHoF

Taekwondo

Avishag Semberg
  • Avishag Semberg – taekwondo female athlete (Olympic bronze: 2020)

Tennis

Andy Ram and Jonathan Erlich
Shahar Pe'er
  • Noam Behr[45]
  • Ilana Berger[46]
  • Gilad Bloom[47]
  • Jonathan Erlich – 6 doubles titles, 6 doubles finals; won 2008 Australian Open Men's Doubles (w/Andy Ram), highest world doubles ranking # 5[48]
  • Shlomo Glickstein – highest world singles ranking # 22, highest world doubles ranking # 28
  • Julia Glushko[49]
  • Amir Hadad
  • Harel Levy – highest world singles ranking # 30
  • Evgenia Linetskaya
  • Amos Mansdorf – highest world singles ranking # 18
  • Tzipora Obziler
  • Noam Okun
  • Yshai Oliel
  • Shahar Pe'er – (3 WTA career titles), highest world singles ranking # 11, highest world doubles ranking # 14
  • Keren Shlomo – (3 ITF career titles)
  • Shahar Perkiss
  • Andy Ram – 6 doubles titles, 6 doubles finals, 1 mixed double title (won 2006 Wimbledon Mixed Doubles (w/Vera Zvonareva), 2007 French Open Mixed Doubles (w/Nathalie Dechy), 2008 Australian Open Men's Doubles (w/Jonathan Erlich), highest world doubles ranking # 5
  • Eyal Ran[50]
  • Dudi Sela – highest world singles ranking # 29
  • Anna Smashnova – (12 WTA career titles), highest world singles ranking # 15

Track and field

  • Alex Averbukh – pole vaulter (European champion: 2002, 2006)[51]
  • Ayele Seteng – long-distance runner, was the oldest track and field athlete competing at the 2004 Olympics and 2008 Olympics.
  • Danielle Frenkel – high jump champion
  • Hanna Knyazyeva-Minenko – triple jumper and long jumper; participated in 2012 Summer Olympics
  • Shaul Ladany – world-record-holding racewalker, Bergen-Belsen survivor, Munich Massacre survivor, professor of industrial engineering
  • Lonah Chemtai Salpeter – Kenyan-Israeli Olympic marathon runner
  • Esther Roth-Shachamarov – track and field, hurdler and sprinter (5 Asian Game golds)

Other

Chefs

Michal Ansky
  • Yisrael Aharoni – chef and restaurateur and reality television judge
  • Michal Ansky – female chef and reality television judge
  • Jamie Geller – American born-Israeli chef
  • Erez Komarovsky – first artisanal bread baker in Israel and reality television judge
  • Yotam Ottolenghi – Israeli-British chef
  • Moshik Roth – chef with two Michelin stars and reality television judge
  • Assaf Granit – chef with one Michelin star and reality television judge

Entertainment

Artists

Sigalit Landau
  • Yitzhak Frenkel, École de Paris painter and sculptor
    Yaacov Agam – kinetic artist
  • Ron Arad – designer
  • Mordecai Ardon – painter
  • David Ascalon – sculptor and synagogue designer
  • Maurice Ascalon – sculptor and industrial designer
  • Isidor Ascheim – painter and printmaker
  • Mordechai Avniel – painter and sculptor
  • Yigal Azrouel – fashion designer
  • Ralph Bakshi – animation (director)
  • Eyal ben-Moshe (Eyal B) – animator and director
  • Tuvia Beeri – printmaker
  • Alexander Bogen – painter
  • Rhea Carmi – painter
  • Yitzhak Danziger – sculptor
  • Alber Elbaz – fashion designer
  • Ohad Elimelech – artist, director, editor, photographer, animator, lecturer and graphic designer
  • Osnat Elkabir – dancer, artist and theatre direction
  • Sharon Eyal – dancer, choreographer
  • Gadi Fraiman – sculptor
  • Yitzhak Frenkel Frenel – École de Paris painter and sculptor
  • Gideon Gechtman – sculptor
  • Moshe Gershuni – painter
  • Dudu Geva – artist and comic-strip illustrator
  • Pinhas Golan – sculptor
  • Nachum Gutman – painter
    Moshe Castel, volcanic ash artist
  • Israel Hershberg – realist painter
  • Shimshon Holzman – painter
  • Leo Kahn – painter
  • Shmuel Katz – illustrator
  • Uri Katzenstein – visual artist
  • Dani Karavan – sculptor
  • Joseph Kossonogi – painter
  • Elyasaf Kowner – video artist
  • Sigalit Landau – video, installation, sculpture
  • Shimshon Holzman, water colourist
    Alex Levac – photographer
  • Batia Lishansky – sculptor
  • Ranan Lurie – political cartoonist
  • Lea Nikel – painter
  • Zvi Malnovitzer – painter
  • Tamara Musakhanova – sculptor and ceramist
  • Mushail Mushailov – painter
  • Ilana Raviv – painter
  • Leo Roth – painter
  • Reuven Rubin – painter
  • Hagit Shahal – painter
  • David Tartakover – graphic designer
  • Anna Ticho – painter
  • Igael Tumarkin – sculptor
  • Yemima Ergas Vroman – painter, sculptor, installation artist
  • Sergey Zagraevsky – painter
  • Moshe Ziffer – sculptor

Film, TV, radio, and stage

Gal Gadot
Avi Arad
Natalie Portman
Rotem Sela
Ayelet Zurer

Musicians

Classical composers

Rami Bar-Niv

Classical musicians

Itzhak Perlman
Etti Ankri
Shlomo Artzi
Eyal Golan
Ofra Haza
Noa Kirel
Ninet Tayeb

News anchors

  • Yonit Levi
  • Haim Yavin
  • Miki Haimovich
  • Ya'akov Eilon
  • Yigal Ravid
  • Ya'akov Ahimeir

Poets

Yehuda Amichai

Writers

Nobel Prize winner Shmuel Yosef Agnon

Entrepreneurs

Tech

Andi Gutmans
Yossi Vardi

Other

Fashion models

Bar Refaeli
Esti Ginzburg
Shani Hazan
  • Neta Alchimister (female)
  • Moran Atias (female)
  • Sendi Bar (female)
  • Nina Brosh (female)
  • Chava Mond (female)
  • Pnina Rosenblum (female) – Knesset parliament member for Likud (2005–2006)
  • Orly Levy-Abekasis (female) – Knesset parliament member for Likud (2009–) and minister (2020–2021)
  • Noa Tishby (female)
  • Tami Ben-Ami (female)
  • Sharon Ganish (female)
  • Maayan Keret (female)
  • Michaela Bercu (female)
  • Esti Ginzburg (female)
  • Yael Shelbia (female)
  • Shlomit Malka (female)
  • Tahounia Rubel (female)
  • Yityish Titi Aynaw (female) – Miss Israel 2013
  • Shani Hazan (female) – Miss Israel 2012 at both Miss World 2012 and Miss International 2014
  • Raz Meirman (male)
  • Michael Lewis (male)
  • Agam Rudberg (female)
  • Bar Refaeli (female)
  • Yael Goldman (female)
  • Odeya Rush (female)
  • Gal Gadot (female) – Miss Israel 2004
  • Avigail Alfatov (female) – Na'art Israel (Miss Israel's runner-up) at Miss Universe 2015
  • Miri Bohadana (female) – Na'art Israel (Miss Israel's runner-up)at Miss World 1995
  • Anat Zamir (female) – Na'art Israel (Miss Israel's runner-up) at Miss World 1980
  • Adi Himelbloy (female)
  • Linor Abargil (female) – Miss Israel and Miss World 1998
  • Rina Mor (female) – Miss Israel and Miss Universe 1976
  • Eli Hanania (male)

Military

Moshe Dayan
Ilan Ramon

Politicians

Golda Meir
Benjamin Netanyahu
Ayelet Shaked
Yair Lapid
Meirav Cohen
Amir Ohana

Religious figures

Haredi Rabbis

Avraham Yeshayeh Karelitz
Yissachar Dov Rokeach
Ovadia Yosef

Reform Rabbis

  • Gilad Kariv

Religious-Zionist Rabbis

Other

See also

References

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