David F. Kessler
Quick Facts
Biography
David F. Kessler, OBE, (1906-1999) was a British publisher and author. He was the managing director of The Jewish Chronicle.
Early life
David Kessler was born on June 6, 1906 in Pretoria, South Africa. His father, Leopold Kessler, was a friend of Theodore Herzl, an early proponent of Zionism, and a shareholder of The Jewish Chronicle.
Kessler graduated from the University of Cambridge, where he earned a bachelor's degree in law and economics.
Career
Kessler started his career by working for Antonin Besse, an oil and shipping businessman with ties to the Royal Dutch Shell in Aden, Yemen. He subsequently worked for the Palestine Potash Company, later known as the Dead Sea Works, in Jerusalem.
Kessler became the managing director of The Jewish Chronicle in London in 1935. In 1946, he dismissed the editor, Ivan Greenberg, who was deemed too divisive. Instead, he hired John Maurice Shaftesley until 1958, when he hired William Frankel.
Kessler was the author of two books. He was a founding member of the Minority Rights Group. He served as the chairman of the Falasha Welfare Association and the Wiener Library in London. He became OBE in 1996.
Personal life and death
Kessler had a wife, Matilda, a son, and three daughters. They resided in Stoke Hammond, Buckinghamshire, England, where he died on November 24, 1999.