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  1. Bernard Lecache (16 August 1895 – 14 August 1968) was a French journalist. In 1927, he founded the League Against Pogroms, which the following year, became the International League Against Anti-Semitism, and in 1979, became the International League against Racism and Anti-Semitism .

  2. Bernard Lecache, né le 16 août 1895 dans le 3 e arrondissement de Paris et mort le 14 août 1968 à Cannes [1], est un journaliste français, fondateur en 1928 de la Ligue internationale contre l'antisémitisme (LICA), dont il reste président jusqu'à sa mort.

    • 16 août 18953e arrondissement de Paris
    • Cimetière de Montmartre
    • Abraham Bernard Lecache
  3. En 1927, el periodista francés Bernard Lecache creó "La Liga Contra los pogroms", y puso en marcha una campaña de los medios de comunicación en apoyo de Sholom Schwartzbard que asesinó a Simon Petliura el 25 de mayo de 1926 en el Barrio Latino de París.

  4. In 1927, French journalist Bernard Lecache created "The League Against Pogroms" and launched a media campaign in support of Sholom Schwartzbard, who assassinated Symon Petliura on May 25, 1926, in the Latin Quarter of Paris. Schwartzbard viewed Petliura as responsible for numerous pogroms in Ukraine.

  5. Bernard Abraham Lecache, président fondateur de la Ligue internationale contre l'antisémitisme: (Paris (3e), 16 août 1895 – Cannes, 16 août 1968). Archives Juives , 40, 140-144. https://doi.org/10.3917/aj.401.0140

    • Emmanuel Debono
    • 2007
  6. 10 de may. de 2019 · It was within this climate—and in the direct aftermath of the violence that broke out in Hebron and Jerusalem in 1929—that the International League Against Anti-Semitism (LICA) was founded under the leadership of Bernard Lecache, the son of Jewish immigrants from eastern Europe.

  7. I n the summer of 1937, reporter Bernard Lecache described North Africa as ‘palm groves, mirages of the South, the gentle heat of oases, seas bluer than the sky, mosques and medinas, pleasant, silent cities subject to the whims of Africa, veiled women and, behind it all, the pleasing lure of adventure. Tourist offices are never short of promises.’.