Gilles-William Goldnadel
Gilles-William Goldnadel (born 1954) is an Israeli lawyer, author and columnist.
Gilles-William Goldnadel | |
---|---|
Born | Rouen, Seine-Maritime, France | 12 January 1954
Nationality | French Israeli |
Education | Lycée des Bruyères |
Alma mater | Pantheon-Sorbonne University |
Occupation | Lawyer, author, columnist |
Spouse(s) | Béatrice Vonderweidt |
Children | 1 son, 1 daughter |
Parent(s) | Henri Goldnadel Victoria Schwartz |
Early life
Gilles-William Goldnadel was born on 12 January 1954 in Rouen, in northern France.[1][2] He is a secular Ashkenazi Jew.[1] His father. Henri Goldnadel, was of Polish Jewish descent, while his mother, Victoria Schwartz, is of Russian Jewish descent.[1][2]
Goldnadel grew up in Gournay-en-Bray, where they owned a clothing store.[1] He was educated at the Lycée des Bruyères in Rouen.[2] He received a master's degree in Law from Pantheon-Sorbonne University.[2]
Career
Goldnadel is a lawyer.[1] He has defended Israeli businessman Arcadi Gaydamak and Italian journalist Oriana Fallaci, among many others.[1] In 1996, he defended Maurice Arreckx.[3] In 2014, he defended Patrick Buisson, former President Nicolas Sarkozy's advisor.[4] In 2015, he defended Florian Philippot, a French politician, against the absolute monarchy of Qatar.[4][5]
An author, Goldnadel has written eight books, three of which with Jean-Claude Gawsewitch. In 2011, he wrote the preface of Vendée : du génocide au mémoricide by Reynald Secher, suggesting the War in the Vendée led to a genocide.[6] He is also a columnist, writing for Le Figaro and Valeurs Actuelles, two conservative French publications.[6][7] He protects freedom of speech in French media.[1] In a March 2015 column in Le Figaro, he suggested antisemitism and islamophobia were not comparable.[8]
Philanthropy
Goldnadel first visited Israel in 1971.[1] He serves as the President of the Association France-Israël.[8] He has served on the Steering Committee of the CRIF since 2010.[6][9] He is a zionist, and supports Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.[1] He is a member of The Republicans.[5]
Personal life
Goldnadel became an Israeli citizen in 2000.[1] He is married to Béatrice Vonderweidt,[2] a former model, now a painter whose work was exhibited at the French Institute of Tel Aviv in 2008.[1][10] She is a gentile.[1] They reside in Neuilly-sur-Seine, near Paris.[6] They also have homes in Palermo, Italy, and Tel Aviv, Israel.[6] They have a son, Benjamin, and a daughter, Laura-Sarah, both of whom are Israeli citizens and residents.[1]
Bibliography
- Une idée certaine de la France (Paris: France-Empire, 1998).
- Le Nouveau Bréviaire de la haine (Paris: Ramsay, 2001).
- Les Martyrocrates (Paris: Plon, 2004).
- Conversation sur les sujets qui fâchent avec Alexandre Adler (with Jean-Claude Gawsewitch, 2008).
- Le Blognadel (Paris: Éditions de Passy, 2009).
- Sans concessions. Conversations avec David Reinharc, avec Pascal Boniface (Paris: Éditions David Reinharc, 2010).
- Réflexions sur la question blanche (with Jean-Claude Gawsewitch, 2011).
- Le vieil homme m'indigne ! (with Jean-Claude Gawsewitch, 2012).
References
- Catherine Coroller, Passion Sion, Libération, March 2, 2010
- Matanel Foundation: Avocats sans Frontières, International
- Alain Leauthier, Arreckx: la défense demande un cessez-le-feu.Le procès de l'homme politique varois s'est achevé hier., Libération, October 19, 1996
- Ségolène de Larquier, Me Goldnadel défendra Philippot face au Qatar, Le Point, June 15, 2015
- Dominique Albertini, Gilles-William Goldnadel, avocat de Philippot contre le Qatar, Libération, June 15, 2015
- Denis Tugdual Gilles-William Goldnadel, tribun d'Israël, L'Express, April 24, 2014
- Valeurs Actuelles: Gilles-William Goldnadel
- Gilles-William Goldnadel, Gilles-William Goldnadel : antisémitisme et islamophobie ne sont pas comparables, Le Figaro, March 2, 2015
- Soazig Quéméner, Virage à droite chez les juifs de France Archived 2015-05-30 at the Wayback Machine, Le Journal du Dimanche, February 1, 1910
- Regards croisés, A Propos: France & Culture en Israel, p. 7