Nathan Mileikowsky

Nathan Milikowsky (Hebrew: נתן מיליקובסקי; 15 August 1879 – 4 February 1935) was a Russian-born Zionist political activist, Rabbi, and writer.

[1] Already while Milikowsky attended yeshiva he began to make speeches and lectures and was in contact with the Zionist activist Yehuda Zvi Yabzrov who encouraged him to engage in this field.

[1] At the age of 20, Mileikowsky began promoting Zionism in the Siberia region, following a request to do so by the Zionist leader Yechiel Chlenov.

In 1913, the Hebrew newspaper Ha-Tsefirah reported about a major event held in Lodz organized by the members of the Mizrachi movement.

In 1926, the newspaper "Dos Yiddishe Folk" reported that the American Zionist Rabbi Milikowsky lectured in 700 places through nine months.

[7] Rabbi Milikowsky argued that the evidence indicated that they did not commit the assassination and that their execution could lead to a civil war, which would harm the Zionist enterprise.