Earl Raab, longtime San Francisco JCRC director, dies at 96

Raab also was a commentator and author on American political culture and the Jewish experience in America.

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(JTA) — Earl Raab, a sociologist, Jewish community advocate and longtime director of the San Francisco Jewish Community Relations Council, has died.

Raab, who was also a commentator and author on American political culture and the Jewish experience in America, died Oct. 24 in Forest Knolls, California. He was 96.

He served as director of the San Francisco Jewish Community Relations Council from 1951 to 1987. Raab also was a co-founder of the Jewish Public Affairs Committee of California. An award in his name is given annually to a community activist “who best exemplifies Mr. Raab’s high standard of communal activism and advocacy for residents of our state.”

After he left the JCRC, Raab was the founding director of the Perlmutter Institute for Jewish Advocacy at Brandeis University.

Rabb wrote articles for publications including Commentary and Public Interest. He also was the author of several books.

He was raised in New York and Virginia during the Great Depression and attended the City College of New York in the late 1930s. He was an officer in the Army Air Corps during World War II. Following the war he tried dairy farming in Maine and soon after left for San Francisco.

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