Earl Raab, a pre-eminent sociologist, civil rights activist, public intellectual and a leading voice for American Jewish advocacy, passed away on Oct. 24, 2015 in Forest Knolls, California, at age 96.
Raab, a prolific commentator and author on American political culture and the Jewish experience in America, made his home in San Francisco, where he directed the city’s Jewish Community Relations Council from 1951 to 1987.
Born in 1919 on April 2nd and/or 3rd, and raised in New York and Virginia during the Great Depression, Raab attended the City College of New York in the late 1930s, where he joined a group of Trotskyite radicals from which emerged some of America’s leading 20th-century intellectuals. Raab served as an officer in the Army Air Corps during World War II where he met his wife, Kassie. After the war, the couple moved to a dairy farm in Maine, where Earl aimed to focus on his writing career. Better writer than farmer, the couple soon left for San Francisco, where Earl began as director of the JCRC. After retiring from the JCRC, Raab served as the founding director of the Perlmutter Institute for Jewish Advocacy at Brandeis University.
In addition to numerous articles in publications such as Commentary and Public Interest, Raab wrote, among others, “Major Social Problems” (with Gertrude Selznick), “The Politics of Unreason” and “Jews and the New American Scene” (both with Seymour Martin Lipset).
Earl and Kassie were married for 66+ years. He is survived by their children Earl B. Raab and Liz (David) Lauter; grandchildren Morris Raab, Louie Lauter (Mara McDermott), Devorah Lauter (Jean-Bernard Prouhet), Mimi Lauter and Margie Lauter (Andrew Epstein); and great-grandchildren Mollie Lauter, Kassie Prouhet and Rosalyn Lauter.
Funeral services were held. Donations in his memory may be made to the Earl Raab Fund for Public Advocacy through the San Francisco JCRC, 121 Steuart St., Suite 301, San Francisco, CA 94105 or www.jcrc.org.
Sinai Memorial Chapel
Sinai Memorial Chapel