Moshe Sherer

"[3] He was an active presence in the United States capitol for better than half-a-century, advocating the interests and articulating the views of Orthodox Jewry.

In 1975, after the infamous “Zionism is Racism” United Nations resolution, Sherer, then-president of Agudath Israel of America, wrote that “Though the resolution was supposedly aimed only at secular ‘Zionism’… the slander is an attack on the entire Jewish people.” Even if the hatred was aimed only at certain Jews, he continued, “we (Agudath Israel adherents) would feel precisely the same responsibility to come to the defense of our brethren.

"[10] That same year Sherer renewed advocacy regarding "Who is a Jew" (Mee Hu Yehudi)[11] and retaining a "One People, One Conversion" standard.

'"[7] Matzav.com headlined "10 years in the making"[13] for the 2009-published biography titled Rabbi Sherer: The Paramount Torah Spokesman of Our Era (Yonoson Rosenblum).

[14] The review by Yeshiva World[15] includes Sherer saying that his 1938 encounter with Elchonon Wasserman was "a turning point in my life."