Moshe Chelouche

Moshe "Musa" Chelouche (Hebrew: משה שלוש, Moshe Shlush, April 7, 1892 – February 26, 1968) was a Jewish politician and businessman in Mandatory Palestine and Israel who served in 1936 for 10 days as the Mayor of Tel Aviv.[1]

Moshe Chelouche

Life

Chelouche was born in Jaffa in the Ottoman Empire. He graduated from the local Frères school. His father was Yosef Eliyahu Chelouche, a businessman, his father's father a rabbi, and this mother's father had been the representative of Hovevei Zion. Both his parents were of Moroccan descent.

Among Moshe Chelouche's many public functions was that of honorary consul of Bulgaria.

gollark: Just steal the WASM VM?
gollark: No, it's "MACRON Assembler Confusingly Reinvents Other Necessities".
gollark: So Macron is in fact an assembler.
gollark: Oh, and now I want to make it a trendier™ client-rendered webapp for some reason.
gollark: This is why Minoteaur 4 will require 500MB of free RAM and at least 3072 CUDA cores.

References

  1. Shchori, Ilan (1993). "ראש עיר ל-10 ימים: פרשת בחירתו של משה שלוש כראש עירית תל אביב" [Mayor for Ten Days: Election Affairs of Moshe Chelouche as the Mayor of Tel Aviv]. עת-מול: עתון לתולדות ארץ ישראל ועם ישראל (י"ח (4): ע' 3–5 ed.).
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