Moisés Bensabat Amzalak was a Portuguese Jewish economist, academic, and communal leader, born in Lisbon on 4 October 1892 and deceased there on 6 June 1978. His importance in Lisbon lies in the unusual combination of two long public roles: a major career in Portuguese higher education and decades of leadership within the Jewish Community of Lisbon.
Academic and institutional life
Amzalak began teaching in 1922 at the Instituto Superior do Comércio de Lisboa. In 1931, he participated in the founding of the Instituto Superior de Ciências Económicas e Financeiras, later associated with today’s ISEG, University of Lisbon. He served as Director of ISCEF from 1933 to 1944 and later as Rector of the Technical University of Lisbon from 1956 to 1962. Therefore, his name belongs not only to Portuguese Jewish history, but also to the institutional history of economic education in Portugal.
Jewish leadership and wartime Lisbon
His public legacy is also closely connected to the Comunidade Israelita de Lisboa, which he led for more than five decades, from 1927 until 1978. During the Second World War, Lisbon became a major transit point for Jewish refugees escaping Nazi-occupied Europe. In this context, Amzalak presided over the community’s refugee-support section, while other Jewish relief structures in Portugal provided food, clothing, medical care, and organized assistance.
Refugee aid and international networks
The refugee-support framework in Lisbon was strengthened in June 1940, when Portugal authorized the transfer of the HIAS-HICEM central office from Paris to Lisbon. Historical accounts connect this authorization to Amzalak’s ability to negotiate within the Portuguese state at the highest level. Even so, his wartime role should be understood within a broader network of Jewish communal institutions, international Jewish organizations, and Portuguese political circumstances, rather than as the work of one person alone.
Moisés Bensabat Amzalak and Jewish Lisbon
Places in Lisbon associated with Moisés Bensabat Amzalak include the Shaaré Tikva Synagogue, the main synagogue of the Jewish Community of Lisbon, and the ISEG campus at Rua do Quelhas. Together, these places connect his biography to two central dimensions of modern Lisbon: the rebuilding of organized Jewish life and the development of Portuguese academic institutions.
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Sources & Bibliography
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