My Life as a Radical Jewish Woman: Memoirs of a Zionist Feminist in Poland

"... vital to understanding this period of East European Jewish
history. As Hyman promises, the memoir... read[s] like a novel." -- Russian
Review

In this striking autobiography Puah Rakovsky (1865-1955)
tells of her experiences as a Jewish woman in late 19th- and early 20th-century
Poland who broke with her traditional upbringing to become a professional educator,
Zionist activist, and feminist leader. Her passionate account offers unprecedented
entrée into the life experience of East European Jewry in a period of massive
social change. Published in the original Yiddish in 1954, the work appears here in
English for the first time, annotated and with a historical introduction by Paula E.
Hyman. Born into a rabbinic family in 1865 in Bialystok, then within the Russian
Empire, Rakovsky witnessed the flourishing of a variety of radical political
movements, the birth of Zionism, and the devastation of World War I. No mere
bystander, she was an activist who assumed leadership roles in the public arenas of
education and politics: she founded a pioneering Jewish girls' school in Warsaw and
a national Jewish women's organization in 1920s Poland. In her memoir Rakovsky
reflects on the position of Jewish women in her time and gives her personal and
political perspective on central events of modern Jewish history from her childhood
until her emigration to the Land of Israel in 1935.

1112390454
My Life as a Radical Jewish Woman: Memoirs of a Zionist Feminist in Poland

"... vital to understanding this period of East European Jewish
history. As Hyman promises, the memoir... read[s] like a novel." -- Russian
Review

In this striking autobiography Puah Rakovsky (1865-1955)
tells of her experiences as a Jewish woman in late 19th- and early 20th-century
Poland who broke with her traditional upbringing to become a professional educator,
Zionist activist, and feminist leader. Her passionate account offers unprecedented
entrée into the life experience of East European Jewry in a period of massive
social change. Published in the original Yiddish in 1954, the work appears here in
English for the first time, annotated and with a historical introduction by Paula E.
Hyman. Born into a rabbinic family in 1865 in Bialystok, then within the Russian
Empire, Rakovsky witnessed the flourishing of a variety of radical political
movements, the birth of Zionism, and the devastation of World War I. No mere
bystander, she was an activist who assumed leadership roles in the public arenas of
education and politics: she founded a pioneering Jewish girls' school in Warsaw and
a national Jewish women's organization in 1920s Poland. In her memoir Rakovsky
reflects on the position of Jewish women in her time and gives her personal and
political perspective on central events of modern Jewish history from her childhood
until her emigration to the Land of Israel in 1935.

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My Life as a Radical Jewish Woman: Memoirs of a Zionist Feminist in Poland

My Life as a Radical Jewish Woman: Memoirs of a Zionist Feminist in Poland

My Life as a Radical Jewish Woman: Memoirs of a Zionist Feminist in Poland

My Life as a Radical Jewish Woman: Memoirs of a Zionist Feminist in Poland

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Overview

"... vital to understanding this period of East European Jewish
history. As Hyman promises, the memoir... read[s] like a novel." -- Russian
Review

In this striking autobiography Puah Rakovsky (1865-1955)
tells of her experiences as a Jewish woman in late 19th- and early 20th-century
Poland who broke with her traditional upbringing to become a professional educator,
Zionist activist, and feminist leader. Her passionate account offers unprecedented
entrée into the life experience of East European Jewry in a period of massive
social change. Published in the original Yiddish in 1954, the work appears here in
English for the first time, annotated and with a historical introduction by Paula E.
Hyman. Born into a rabbinic family in 1865 in Bialystok, then within the Russian
Empire, Rakovsky witnessed the flourishing of a variety of radical political
movements, the birth of Zionism, and the devastation of World War I. No mere
bystander, she was an activist who assumed leadership roles in the public arenas of
education and politics: she founded a pioneering Jewish girls' school in Warsaw and
a national Jewish women's organization in 1920s Poland. In her memoir Rakovsky
reflects on the position of Jewish women in her time and gives her personal and
political perspective on central events of modern Jewish history from her childhood
until her emigration to the Land of Israel in 1935.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780253108579
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Publication date: 12/11/2001
Series: The Modern Jewish Experience
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 536 KB

About the Author

Paula E. Hyman is the Lucy Moses Professor of Modern Jewish History at
Yale University.

Barbara Harshav's translations include A
Surplus of Memory by Yitzhak Zuckerman.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents:

Foreword
A Note on
Translation
Map
Introduction

1. Bialystok -
Warsaw
2. A Kheyder for Girls
3. Daughters of Zion
4.
Winds of Revolution
5. Family Tragedies
6. Winds of
War
7. To the Land of Israel
8. Organizing Polish Jewish
Women
9. Russian Journey
10.
Aliyah

Index

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