Israel Rogosin

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Israel Rogosin
Born March 15, 1887
Valozhyn, Russian Empire
Died April 1971 (aged 83–84)
United States
Occupation Industrialist
Children Lionel Rogosin
Parent(s) Samuel Eliezer Rogosin
Hanna Rogosin

Israel Rogosin (March 15, 1887 - April, 1971) was an eminent American industrialist in the textile industry and a philanthropist.[1]

Early life

Rogosin was born to Samuel Eliezer and Hanna in Valozhyn, then part of the Russian Empire (now in Belarus). His father came to the United States in 1890 upon request of the head of the Yeshiva in Valozhyn, the Netziv, in order to collect funds for it.

Samuel Rogosin founded a small textile mill in Brooklyn in 1895 and was joined by his wife and four children a year later. Samuel decided to become a head of a Yeshiva and therefore left the mill management in Israel's hands, Israel was 16 years old then. The mill employed about 200 workers in 1912 and due to Israel's successful management and acquisition of other mills, Rogosin employed in 1920 about a thousand workers in five mills. The Beaunit Corporation was founded in 1921.

Rogosin Industries

Rogosin founded Rogosin Industries Ltd. in April 1956 as a rayon yarn and tow plant. Upon request of the Israeli finance minister then, Pinchas Sapir, the plant was moved in 1958 to the newly established town of Ashdod in Israel after the Israeli government supplied an area of 1000 dunams for its establishment.[2]

In 1963 Rogosin sold his shares in the Beaunit Corp.. At that time the company employed about 10,000 employees with an annual revenue of 150 million dollars.[1]

Later life and legacy

In 1966 Rogsin donated 1 million dollars to the establishment of a Center for Jewish Ethics in New York.

Israel Rogosin died in Allenhurst, New Jersey. His only son Lionel Rogosin, an independent American filmmaker, was born in 1924.

The Rogosin Institute, a not-for-profit medical treatment and research institution for kidney disease, in New York city is named after Israel Rogosin.

He donated "$2.5 million through the Jewish Agency's Education Fund toward the construction of ten high schools throughout Israel." In his honor, Ashdod's main street and two of its schools named after him.[1] Three of the high schools he funded were located in Ashdod.[3]

References

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External links