Leonard Abrahamson (1896–1961), Gaelic scholar, who switched to medicine and became a professor, was born in Russia, grew up in
Newry where he attended the local
Christian Brothers school and lodged with the Nurock family in Dublin while studying at
Trinity College Dublin[2]
Max Abrahamson, lawyer; author of "Engineering Law and the ICE(Institute of Civil Engineers) Contract" which became known worldwide as "the engineers' bible"
Rabbi
Yitzhak HaLevi Herzog, Chief Rabbi of Ireland from 1919 to 1937, later of the British Mandate of Palestine and Israel
Chaim Herzog, sixth
President of Israel and British
World War II veteran. During and after his service in the British Army, he was also known as "Vivian Herzog" ("Vivian" being the English equivalent of the Hebrew name "Chaim")
Louis Lentin, director (documentary films, television, theatre)
Ronit Lentin, Head of Sociology, director of the MPhil in Race, Ethnicity, Conflict, Department of Sociology and founder member of the Trinity Immigration Initiative, Trinity College, Dublin
Con Leventhal (1896–1979), lecturer, essayist, and critic
Abraham Weeks (or Abraham Wix) was a London born conscientious objector, who had moved to Ireland to avoid conscription, [13] who joined he
Irish Citizens Army and was killed during 1916
Easter Rising (A Jewish comrade who joined on Easter Monday and died in action),[14] Weeks had been assigned to the ICA Garrison in the GPO[15]
District Judge
Hubert Wine, family court judge and prominent member of Dublin's Jewish community[16]
^"Faculty Bio: David Marcus". The Jewish Theological Seminary. The Jewish Theological Seminary. Archived from
the original on 14 May 2011. Retrieved 26 May 2011.