William B. Helmreich

American sociologist (1945–2020) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William Helmreich (August 25, 1945 – March 28, 2020) was a Swiss-born American professor of sociology at the City College of New York Colin Powell School for Civic and Global Leadership and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York.[1] He was also a published author.[2][3][4]

Born(1945-08-25)August 25, 1945
DiedMarch 28, 2020(2020-03-28) (aged 74)
AwardsNational Jewish Book Award for Contemporary Jewish Life & Practice, 2015 GANYC Award for Outstanding Achievement in Book Writing
Quick facts Born, Died ...
William Benno Helmreich
Born(1945-08-25)August 25, 1945
DiedMarch 28, 2020(2020-03-28) (aged 74)
AwardsNational Jewish Book Award for Contemporary Jewish Life & Practice, 2015 GANYC Award for Outstanding Achievement in Book Writing
Academic background
Alma materYeshiva University (BA)
Washington University in St. Louis (MA, PhD)
Academic work
Discipline
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Helmreich was a distinguished professor at the City University of New York[4] who specialized in race and ethnic relations, religion, immigration, risk behavior, the sociology of New York City, urban sociology, consumer behavior, and market research.

Early life

Helmreich was born in 1945 in Zürich, Switzerland,[5][6] the son of Holocaust survivor parents.[7] In 1946, he was brought to the US as an infant,[8][3] and grew up in New York City on Manhattan’s Upper West Side.[9] He studied in the Ner Yisroel and Kamenitz Yeshivas.[10]

Career

Helmreich wrote about his early years in a book he named "Wake Up, Wake Up, to Do the Work of the Creator" (a phrase spoken in Yiddish by those who went house-to-house to awaken worshippers for daily prayer).[11]

When asked about recordings of "many of the famous roshei yeshiva of yesteryear" whom he interviewed, "Do you still have the recordings?" he replied "At one time I thought I did, but it seems that all I have are the transcripts." These he donated to his alma mater,[12] Yeshiva University.[13][14][15]

Works

  • The Black Crusaders (1973)
  • The things they say behind your back (1982)
  • The World of the Yeshiva (1982)
  • Flight Path (1989)
  • Against All Odds (1992)
  • The Enduring Community (1998)
  • What Was I Thinking (2010)
  • The New York Nobody Knows (2013)
  • The Brooklyn Nobody Knows (2016)
  • The Manhattan Nobody Knows (2018)

The World of the Yeshiva

Helmreich revised his 1982 The World of the Yeshiva 18 years later[1] by comparing sociological changes "among the strictly Orthodox" since his 1980 research. Two areas about the new edition highlighted by The New York Times are the doubling in those doing full-time "collegiate and graduate"-level religious studies and population growth.

Death

Helmreich died March 28, 2020, at age 74 of COVID-19 in Great Neck, New York.[16][5]

References

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