Blinken was born on November 11, 1925, in Yonkers, New York,[5] the son of Maurice Blinken and his wife, Ethel (Horowitz). Maurice Blinken was an early backer of Israel and founded the American Palestine Institute which helped persuade the United States to back the creation of Israel. [6][7][8] His father and mother were of Jewish descent and his father was from Kyiv, the Russian Empire, who, according to Antony Blinken, "fled pogroms in Russia".[9] His grandfather was author Meir Blinken. Blinken has two brothers, Alan[10] and Robert.[11]
Blinken met Mark Rothko in 1956 and became an art collector. He was president of the Mark Rothko Foundation from 1976 to 1989.[15][16] In 1984, the foundation distributed 1,000 art pieces to museums,[17] including to the National Gallery of Art.,[18] where Blinken was a member of the trustee council.[19]
Among his other philanthropic commitments, Blinken served as president of the Brooklyn Academy of Music from 1970 to 1976;[20] as executive committee member for the New York Public Library;[21] as board member and chairman of the Commentary Publication Committee (which at the time was a part of the American Jewish Committee);[22] and as vice-chairman of the New York Philharmonic Symphony Society.[23]
Blinken was appointed to the board of trustees for the State University of New York by GovernorHugh Carey in September 1976 and was appointed the board's chairman in 1978.[24] The board clashed with Governor Mario Cuomo as Cuomo wanted the board to cut spending. Blinken announced his resignation from the board in October 1989, which took effect with the confirmation of his successor in 1990.[25]
Blinken was married to Judith Frehm from 1958 until their divorce in 1971, and then married Vera Ermer in 1975.[5] Vera was a Holocaust survivor in Hungary during World War II; in 2009, the couple published a memoir about her escape from Communist Hungary and their time back in Hungary during his term as the U.S. Ambassador.[30]
In 2015, the Open Society Archives in Hungary was renamed the Vera and Donald Blinken Open Society Archives after receiving a major donation from the couple.[31]
^ ab"AMBASSADOR ALAN J. BLINKEN"(PDF). Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Project. Archived from the original(PDF) on November 23, 2020. Retrieved February 3, 2020.