Sasha Abramsky (born 4 April 1972)[1] is a British-born freelance journalist and author who now lives in the United States. His work has appeared in The Nation, The Atlantic Monthly, New York, The Village Voice, and Rolling Stone.[2] He is a senior fellow at the American liberal think tank Demos,[3] and a lecturer in the University of California, Davis's University Writing Program.[2]
Abramsky was born in England to a Jewish family[4] and was raised in London, in what Debbie Arrington described as "an accomplished and bookish family".[5] He is the son of Jack Abramsky, a mathematician,[6] and the grandson of Chimen Abramsky, a professor of Jewish studies at University College London, who was himself the son of Yehezkel Abramsky, a prominent Orthodox rabbi.[7] He received a B.A. from Balliol College, Oxford in politics, philosophy and economics in 1993. He then traveled to the United States, where he earned a master's degree from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.[1][3] In 2000, he received a Crime and Communities Media Fellowship from the Open Society Foundations.
In 2000, Abramsky received the James Aronson Award for his Atlantic Monthly article "When They Get Out".[8] In 2016, his memoir The House of Twenty Thousand Books, which describes the lives of his grandparents Chimen and Miriam Abramsky, received an honorable mention for that year's Sophie Brody Medal.[9][10]
As of 2015, he lives in Sacramento, California with his wife Julie Sze, an American studies professor at University of California, Davis,[6] daughter, and son.[11]
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