Judith Lieberman

Doctor Judith Lieberman, (August 14, 1904 — December 1978),[1] was an American educator and school administrator.

[2] Lieberman spent World War I with her paternal grandmother, the unofficial administrator of the Volozhiner Yeshiva.

She joined her immediate family after the war in the United States, and graduated from New York City public high school.

[3] She spent the remainder of the decade in Jerusalem with her husband, and then moved back to New York's Upper West Side with him.

[2] Among her publications were Robert Browning and Hebraism (1934), and an autobiographical chapter which was included in Thirteen Americans, Their Spiritual Autobiographies (1953), edited by Louis Finkelstein.