Notable Residents
- Andrei Arlovski, grew up and lived in Minsk before moving to the United States to fight in the Ultimate Fighting Championship promotion
- Victoria Azarenka, World No. 1 tennis player and 2012 Australian Open winner, born in Minsk moving to Arizona at 16
- Red Auerbach, American basketball coach
- Svetlana Boginskaya, gold medal winning gymnast at the 1988 and 1992 Olympics, birthplace
- Isaac Boleslavsky, chess Grandmaster
- Masha Bruskina, World War II partisan
- Dimitry Elyashkevich, producer and camera operator, birthplace
- Avraham Even-Shoshan (1906–84), Israeli linguist and lexicographer
- Boris Gelfand, chess Grandmaster
- Moisei Ginzburg, constructivist architect
- Marina Gordon, soprano, birthplace
- Oleg Karavayev, wrestler and Olympic Champion
- Boris Khaykin, conductor
- Maryna Linchuk
- Louis Burt Mayer, American film producer. One of the founders of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
- Isaak Mazel, chess master
- Max Mirnyi, tennis player
- Yulia Raskina, Individual Rhythmic Gymnast who won the All-Around Silver at the 2000 Sydney Olympics
- Alexander Rybak, winner of the Eurovision Song Contest 2009 for Norway, born in Minsk in 1986, at that time part of the Soviet Union
- Yuri Shulman, chess grandmaster
- Vanda Skuratovich, Roman Catholic activist
- Mark Slavin, Israeli Olympic Greco-Roman wrestler and victim of the Munich massacre at the 1972 Summer Olympics
- Anna Smashnova, tennis player
- Rachel Wischnitzer, architect and art historian
- Simcha Zorin, World War II partisan
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Famous quotes containing the words notable and/or residents:
“In one notable instance, where the United States Army and a hundred years of persuasion failed, a highway has succeeded. The Seminole Indians surrendered to the Tamiami Trail. From the Everglades the remnants of this race emerged, soon after the trail was built, to set up their palm-thatched villages along the road and to hoist tribal flags as a lure to passing motorists.”
—For the State of Florida, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)
“In most nineteenth-century cities, both large and small, more than 50 percentand often up to 75 percentof the residents in any given year were no longer there ten years later. People born in the twentieth century are much more likely to live near their birthplace than were people born in the nineteenth century.”
—Stephanie Coontz (20th century)