Zvi Sliternik

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Zvi Sliternik
צבי סליטרניק
Born 16 May 1897
Ploskirów, Austria-Hungary
Died 1994 (aged 96 or 97)
Israel
Citizenship Israeli
Notable awards Israel Prize (1962)

Zvi Sliternik (Hebrew: צבי סליטרניק‎; born 16 May 1897, died 1994) was an Israeli entomologist.

Biography

Sliternik was born in 1897 in Ploskirów, in the Podolia region of Austria-Hungary (now known as Khmelnytskyi, in Ukraine). He began studying medicine in Russia, but did not complete his studies before emigrating in 1919 to Mandate Palestine. There he met Shoshanah Lissauer, a Jewish tourist volunteer from Berlin, Germany, whom he married in 1929.

He returned to his studies, studying biology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. In 1946, he received a doctorate.

Sliternik began his entomology work in 1921, as a member of a small unit headed by Dr. Israel Kligler, to develop inexpensive and efficient methods of fighting malaria, which ultimately resulted in the total eradication of malaria in 1962.

He was appointed regional supervisor for the elimination of malaria in the Jezreel Valley and supervised the draining of the marshes in the vicinity of Hadera, as well as additional areas throughout the country. Sliternik served as director of entomological service in the IDF in 1948 and was subsequently director of the entomological department in the Israel Ministry of Health from 1949 to 1962.

Awards

  • In 1962, Sliternik was awarded the Israel Prize, in medicine, for his work on the eradication of malaria in Israel.[1]

See also

References

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