Tuesday, June 2nd | 17 Sivan 5786

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The Top 100 People Positively Influencing Jewish Life, 2025

In honor of The Algemeiner‘s 12th annual gala, we are proud to present our “J100” list — 100 individuals who have positively influenced Jewish life over the past year.

This year’s list was shaped under extraordinary circumstances.

For the entirety of the past year, Israel was at war — fighting for its survival against Hamas, Hezbollah, the Houthis, and Iran itself. While Israel struck decisive blows against Iran’s terror network and worked to restore deterrence, Israeli society endured profound loss and strain: funerals, trauma, displacement, and economic hardship. At the same time, Jews around the world faced a historic surge in antisemitism, reaching record levels following Hamas’s Oct. 7 massacre.

Above all, the Jewish world carried the unbearable weight of the hostages held in Gaza. As the year drew to a close, there were signs of progress and hope. Yet the soul of the Jewish people couldn’t fully heal until all hostages — the living and the dead — were home. We are grateful that at the time of this writing and for the first time in more than a decade, no hostages remain in Gaza.

At no point in recent memory has it been more essential to stand together — and to recognize those who, through courage, leadership, moral clarity, and creativity, strengthened Jewish life during an extraordinarily difficult year. The J100 reflects the resilience and diversity of the Jewish people, who for millennia have endured against all odds — and will do so again.

Why a List — Without Rankings

We live in an age of lists. From business to culture to politics, lists promise clarity amid information overload, while also fueling comparison and competition. Judaism, however, has long been wary of ranking human worth. How does one measure the value of a person? Is not every individual created with infinite dignity?

For that reason, the J100 is not a ranking. It does not attempt to order greatness or assign hierarchy. Instead, it seeks to highlight 100 individuals — Jewish and non-Jewish — whose actions over the past year had a demonstrably positive impact on Jewish life and Israel. Without their leadership, advocacy, acumen, creativity, or courage, Jewish life today would be diminished.

This list should not be read as an endorsement of ideology or worldview. Jews famously disagree on nearly everything. Rather, the J100 is a snapshot of Jewish life today: broad, diverse, imperfect, and vibrant — intended to provoke reflection about what we value and whom we choose to uplift.

Individuals, Institutions, and Impact

Some honorees are recognized for personal contributions; others for the roles they play leading governments, organizations, or institutions. Some are long-established figures; others are emerging voices. Together, they reflect both the foundations sustaining Jewish life and the new branches shaping its future.

What unites them is not uniformity of thought, but meaningful influence — tangible contributions to the strength, security, and vitality of Jewish life during a year of immense challenge.

The Heroes We Cannot List

No list — not of 100, not of 1,000 — could capture the countless quiet acts that define Jewish life: parents raising families with devotion; educators shaping young souls; caregivers, volunteers, and anonymous philanthropists sustaining communities. Jewish life is decentralized, and many who transform their local communities may be unknown beyond them.

These heroes deserve recognition beyond any list. The J100 therefore focuses on individuals with global or international impact — writers, educators, activists, officials, and leaders whose influence extends across borders. Seen together, the list is less a catalogue than a mosaic — many colors forming a single picture.

Looking Ahead

As the J100 enters its second decade, our vision is expanding. Beyond an annual list and gala, we are building the J100 into a year-round platform — through events, conversations, and the “J100 Podcast” — bringing together leading voices, emerging leaders, and engaged audiences committed to strengthening Jewish life and elevating public discourse.

In the spirit of The Algemeiner, we hope this list raises standards, sharpens conversations, and inspires the next generation to lead with courage, responsibility, and moral clarity. When the quality of Jewish life is raised, the quality of all lives is raised.

We thank our honorees, our supporters, our readers, and the Jewish people — and friends of the Jewish people — whom we are privileged to serve.

A Note on a New Approach

In an effort to broaden the J100 community and reflect the evolving landscape of Jewish life, we made a deliberate choice this year to include as many new inductees as possible, repeating prior honorees only when their impact during this particular year made inclusion unmistakably warranted.

At the same time, we recognize the importance of continuity and shared purpose. This year’s gala will therefore bring together both new inductees and J100 alumni, including a dedicated J100 VIP reception designed to foster connection, conversation, and collaboration among those who continue to shape Jewish life in meaningful ways.

Together, they represent a growing, engaged community committed not only to recognition but also to ongoing impact.

***Disclosure: Algemeiner staff and their immediate families were disqualified for inclusion. Some honorees are friends or associates of The Algemeiner. As a media organization with many relationships, we did not believe it appropriate to exclude qualified individuals solely on that basis and therefore placed particular emphasis on fairness and objectivity.

The Algemeiner J100 Team

1 .

IN MEMORIAM

Moshe Hauer

Rabbi

The voice of American Orthodoxy fell silent on October 14, 2025, when Rabbi Moshe Hauer passed away at 60 after suffering a heart attack. As executive vice president of the Orthodox Union since 2020, Rabbi Hauer shepherded the largest Orthodox Jewish organization in North America through some of its most turbulent years. Born in Montreal, Canada and raised in Baltimore, he studied at Ner Israel Rabbinical College before leading Bnai Jacob Shaarei Zion in Baltimore for two decades. But it was his leadership after October 7 that defined his final chapter. Rabbi Hauer guided the OU's response to the Nova music festival massacre with moral clarity, speaking truth when others equivocated. He championed Jewish day school education, understanding it as the bedrock of Jewish continuity in an increasingly hostile world. In 2024, as antisemitism surged on college campuses, he worked tirelessly to ensure Orthodox voices weren't drowned out by those who would compromise Jewish values for acceptance. His colleagues remembered him as someone who brought "wisdom, warmth, and unwavering dedication" to every challenge. Rabbi Hauer's legacy lives in the thousands of families he counseled, the communities he strengthened.

IN MEMORIAM

2 .

IN MEMORIAM

Rabbi Eli Schlanger, of Blessed Memory, assistant rabbi at Chabad of Bondi in Sydney, was murdered on December 14, 2025, when two gunmen opened fire on the "Chanukah by the Sea" celebration he had organized at Bondi Beach. He was 41 years old, a father of five children including a two-month-old son. Born in England and ordained at the central Lubavitch yeshiva in Crown Heights, Schlanger had served Sydney's Jewish community for 18 years. Throughout 2024, as synagogues burned and Jewish homes were vandalized across Australia, he refused to retreat. When asked how Jews should respond to rising hatred, his answer was defiant: "Be more Jewish, act more Jewish and appear more Jewish." Just weeks before his murder, he had written to Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, pleading with him to stand with Israel. Approximately 2,000 people had gathered for the menorah lighting when the gunfire erupted. Fifteen people were killed, including a 10-year-old girl and Alex Kleytman, a Holocaust survivor who died shielding his wife. The day after the attack, 1,000 people put on tefillin at Bondi Beach in his honor.

IN MEMORIAM

3 .

IN MEMORIAM

Charlie Kirk

Activist

Charlie Kirk was assassinated on September 10, 2025, while speaking at Utah Valley University. He was 31 years old. The co-founder and CEO of Turning Point USA, Kirk had transformed his organization from a small campus group into one of the most influential conservative youth movements in America, playing a crucial role in galvanizing young voters for Donald Trump. Throughout 2024 and into 2025, Kirk positioned himself as a vocal defender of Israel and the Jewish people, even as he faced accusations of antisemitism from some quarters. During the 2024 pro-Palestinian campus protests, he urged Republican crackdowns and repeatedly stated that antisemitism was "a lie from the pit of Hell." In July 2025, he warned his followers that "Jew hate has no place in civil society. It rots the brain, reject it." Kirk had visited Jerusalem in 2019, telling an audience that he had defended Israel his whole life, and in August 2025 declared he had "a bulletproof resumé showing my defense of Israel." In his final months, Kirk had begun observing the Jewish Sabbath, turning off his phone from Friday evening to Saturday night. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called him two weeks before his death to invite him to Israel, describing him after his assassination as "a lion-hearted friend of Israel" who "fought the lies and stood tall for Judeo-Christian civilization." Israel posthumously honored Kirk with an award for combating antisemitism at a conference in Jerusalem. He is survived by his wife, Erika, and their two young children.

IN MEMORIAM

4 .

IN MEMORIAM

Norman Podhoretz, one of American Jewry's most consequential public intellectuals, died on December 7, 2025, at age 95. For 35 years, he transformed Commentary magazine from a sleepy Jewish quarterly into the intellectual engine room of the conservative movement, championing Israel when it was unfashionable and defending Jewish interests without apology. The son of Jewish immigrants from Galicia, he grew up in Brownsville, Brooklyn, and rose through Columbia and Cambridge on the strength of his formidable mind. His political evolution from 1960s liberal to Reagan-era hawk made him both lightning rod and legend. In his 1980 essay "The Abandonment of Israel," he excoriated American Jews for failing to defend the Jewish state with the passion they brought to other progressive causes. Throughout 2024, even in his final year, his writings remained prophetic as a new generation grappled with the same questions he'd asked decades earlier. He is survived by his wife, writer Midge Decter, their four children, and a body of work that will frame Jewish conservative thought for generations.

IN MEMORIAM

5 .

IN MEMORIAM

Ran Gvili

Sergeant

Sergeant Ran Gvili was 23 years old when Hamas terrorists murdered him as he defended Kibbutz Alumim on October 7, 2023, and abducted his body to Gaza. The kibbutz-born soldier with a warm smile and love for music was declared killed in captivity on January 8, 2024, but his body has never been returned. Throughout 2024, as other hostages were recovered—some alive, most dead—his family endured the unique agony of knowing he was gone but unable to bring him home for burial. His parents, Adi and Eitan, became fixtures at hostage square rallies, holding photos of their son and demanding that Prime Minister Netanyahu prioritize the return of all bodies. His girlfriend, Nofar, wore his dog tags and spoke about the future they'd planned—marriage, children, a life that Hamas stole. His friends remembered him as someone who brought light to every room, a soldier who believed in protecting his country but never imagined he'd need protecting himself. Until his body returns, the wound of October 7 cannot begin to heal.

IN MEMORIAM

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