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Bio of Leonard Fein

Leonard Fein is a writer and teacher. His most recent book is Against the Dying of the Light: A Story of Love, Loss, and Hope. In 1974, he founded Moment magazine, which became America's leading independent magazine of Jewish affairs, and where he served as editor and publisher for 13 years. In 1985, he founded Mazon: A Jewish Response to Hunger, which has become the American Jewish community's principal vehicle for participation in the campaign against world hunger. And in 1996, he founded the National Jewish Coalition for Literacy, a project for mobilizing the American Jewish community to provide volunteer tutors for the Read America program. The NJCL now has tutoring programs in 45 American cities.

In the 1960s, Dr. Fein taught Political Science at MIT, where he also served as Deputy Director of the MIT/Harvard Joint Center for Urban Studies. In 1970 he joined the faculty of Brandeis University, where he was Professor of Politics and Social Policy and, for six years, the Klutznick Professor of Contemporary Jewish Studies.

Among his other books are Where Are We? The Inner Life of America's Jews, which was a Book-of-the-Month Club selection and Israel: Politics and People, which was, for ten years, a required text in all Israeli universities. His more than 900 articles and essays have appeared in dozens of newspapers, magazines, and journals, including The New York Times, The New Republic, Commentary, Commonweal, The Nation, and the Los Angeles Times. He writes a syndicated OpEd column for the Forward.

Fein's lectures have taken him to more than 400 American communities, 60 college campuses, and more than a dozen foreign countries; he has been the keynote speaker at more than 100 national conventions. He has served as a consultant to a wide variety of organizations, including among others the Harvard Graduate School of Education, the United Jewish Appeal, the New Israel Fund, Facing History and Ourselves, and the Reebok Foundation's Program in Human Rights.

He is a board member of Americans for Peace Now and has been on the board of some 40 organizations, domestic and international. He has been invited to testify before a number of Congressional committees, has been an advisor in four presidential campaigns and in numerous Congressional races across the country, and served for two years as Chair of the Policy Committee of the National Jewish Democratic Council.

From 1996 to the year 2000, Fein served as Director of the Commission on Social Action of the Reform Jewish movement.

In 1991, he was awarded an honorary doctorate by the Hebrew Union College; in 1994 the National Foundation for Jewish Culture honored him with its first award for achievement in Jewish scholarship; in 1999, the Jewish Council on Public Affairs honored him for his lifetime contributions to social justice. In June of 2000, he was honored by his alma mater, the University of Chicago, "for creative leadership in public service that has benefited society and reflected credit on the University."