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Alan B Slifka

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Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Investor

Name
  
Alan Slifka


Religion
  
Judaism

Years active
  
58 years

Spouse
  
Riva Slifka (m. 2004)

Alan B. Slifka wwwbrandeisedunow2011februaryimagesslifka62

Full Name
  
Alan Bruce Slifka

Born
  
October 13, 1929 (
1929-10-13
)
Manhattan, New YorkUnited States

Occupation
  
Securities analyst, investor, philanthropist

Employer
  
Halcyon Asset Management, founder and co-chairmanL.F. Rothschild & Company

Known for
  
The Abraham Fund InitiativesBig Apple CircusJoseph Slifka Center for Jewish Life at Yale UniversityAlan B. Slifka Foundation

Died
  
February 4, 2011, Los Angeles, California, United States

Residence
  
Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States

Parents
  
Joseph Slifka, Sylvia Slifka

Education
  
Ethical Culture Fieldston School, Harvard University, Yale University

Organizations founded
  
The Abraham Fund Initiatives

Alan B Slifka


Alan Bruce Slifka (October 13, 1929 – February 4, 2011) was a New York investor and philanthropist, a co-founder of the Abraham Fund and founding chairman of the Big Apple Circus. He was a native of Manhattan.

Contents

Education

Slifka and his sister were initially home schooled by their mother. This provided an opportunity for the twins to learn the importance of moral values and the basics of coexistence. In the fourth grade, the twins began studying at the Ethical Culture Society's Fieldston School.

Slifka graduated from Yale University in 1951, where he worked on the business staff of campus humor magazine the Yale Record. He then went on to earn a Master's degree in Business Administration at Harvard University in 1953.

Professional background

Following his graduation from Harvard, Slifka joined the financial firm L.F. Rothschild & Company, where he worked as a securities analyst for 32 years, rising to partner before leaving to start his own company, now Halcyon Asset Management.

Philanthropy

In 1977, Slifka became the founding chairman of the New York School for Circus Arts, a non-profit training school whose performing arm is the Big Apple Circus. In 1993, he became founding chairman emeritus. In 1995, in recognition of Slifka's lead gift to a successful capital campaign, the circus's new permanent creative center in Walden, NY was named the Slifka Family Creative Center.

Together with sociologist Eugene Wiener, Slifka was a co-founder in 1989 of The Abraham Fund Initiatives, named for the common ancestor of Arabs and Jews, and served as chairman of the organization since its founding. This was the first nonprofit organization dedicated to furthering coexistence between Israel's Arab and Jewish citizens. The Abraham Fund works to advance a shared society of inclusion and equality between Jews and Arabs in Israel.

The Slifka Program on Intercommunal Coexistence at Brandeis University, create by Slifka in 2001, seeks to build professional expertise and creative leadership in the field of coexistence and offers a master's degree in coexistence and conflict. The Sylvia and Joseph Slifka Israeli Coexistence Scholarship at Brandeis, which Slifka funded in honor of his parents, is awarded each year to two citizens of Israel (one Jewish, one Arab) who are committed to fostering coexistence and harmony.

In recognition of his work with The Abraham Fund Initiatives, Slifka was awarded the Knesset Prize for Coexistence in 2000. Brandeis awarded him an honorary doctorate in 2003.

Alan B. Slifka Foundation

The Alan B. Slifka Foundation was established in New York in 1965. The foundation's goals include harmony not only among Jews and Arabs but also between religious and secular elements of Israeli society. In addition to fostering Jewish values and education, the foundation also promotes biomedical research on sarcoma, autism and Asperger's syndrome.

Personal life

Alan Bruce Slifka was the son of Joseph and Sylvia Slifka. His twin sister is Barbara Slifka. His father owned successful textile and real estate businesses.

At the time of his death he was married to Riva Ritvo-Slifka. He had three sons, Michael, Randolph, and David.

References

Alan B. Slifka Wikipedia