Before Golda: Manya Shochat
"Manya Shochat was a truly unusual woman, a figure of extreme complexity who might have come out of a nineteenth-century Russian novel. In her life's story we find a full enactment -- rare in one person -- of the main qualities, some of them contradictory, which played such a prominent role in the history of Zionism. She was incredibly tough and unbelievably charitable; sentimental and fearless; a fanatic Zionist and a fanatic socialist; a co-founder of Ha'shomer (an armed organization of settlers whose motto was: "In blood and fire Judea fell; in blood and fire she shall rise again!"), and at the same time a leading member of the left-wing anti-nationalist League for Arab-Jewish Understanding. She was fully convinced that Arab acquiescence to Zionism could be achieved through the raising of Arab standards of living; and yet on lecture tours abroad on behalf of Poale Zion and her kibbutz, she passionately admonished the wealthier Jews of America that high living standards were meaningless, only national dignity counted. Already before her arrival in the country, in January 1904, she had achieved some notoriety in Russian revolutionary circles by running arms for the anarchists and participating in clandestine plots and agitation. Once, as a twenty-year-old anarchist in Russia, she shot a Czarist spy to death, dismembered his corpse, placed the pieces in a suitcase, and sent it off by rail to a nonexistent address in Siberia." (Amos Elon in The Israelis: Founders and Sons)

"This is a deeply moving... story of a life... Mrs. Ben-Zvi, wife of Israel's second president, describes not only Manya's growth... and her incredible creativity in starting the kibbutz movement, but her love affair with Yisrael Shochat, a charmer with a roving eye, whose infidelities drove her to attempt suicide... Manya Shochat lived her extraordinary life with strength and idealism, with a pure vision of a world in which all people, especially Jews and Arabs... would one day live together in peace and brotherhood... Biography is living history. It is fitting that the story of Manya Shochat, one of the founding mothers of Israel, should be told by her friend, Rachel Yanait Ben-Zvi, herself a founding mother." -- Ruth Gruber, author of Raquela: A Woman of Israel, Haven and Rescue: The Exodus of the Ethiopian Jews

"The history of Eretz Israel during the second aliyah does not lack riveting personalities, but it would be no exaggeration to say that Manya Shochat was outstanding even among these." -- Yediot Achronot

"... an important and fascinating book... an extraordinary woman... possessing enormous inner strength. Both idealistic and pragmatic, she had a vision of Israel as a just society that respects all individuals, a vision that should serve as inspiration today." -- Judith A. Sokoloff, Editor, Na'Amat Woman

"Yanait's book is a true and well-documented testimony which broadens our knowledge through supporting documents... and through various legends which give us a new dimension... It is fascinating to become reacquainted with those early settlers who were equally adept with pistols as with plows, with fountain pens as with balalaikas... Yanait's book is a true... testimony which... gives us a new dimension." --Haaretz

"Courageous and naive, tough and sentimental, Manya Shochat is the stuff of Zionist legend." -- Lesley Hazleton, author of Israeli Women and Jerusalem, Jerusalem

"This is a book which... I recommend to Israeli feminists and to anyone who has been affected by the women's liberation movement in America..." -- Maariv

"The author does not hide the truth as to Manya's marriage... on the contrary, her brief comments on this subject add an enticingly human dimension to Manya's heroic persona." -- Al Hamishmar
1112681594
Before Golda: Manya Shochat
"Manya Shochat was a truly unusual woman, a figure of extreme complexity who might have come out of a nineteenth-century Russian novel. In her life's story we find a full enactment -- rare in one person -- of the main qualities, some of them contradictory, which played such a prominent role in the history of Zionism. She was incredibly tough and unbelievably charitable; sentimental and fearless; a fanatic Zionist and a fanatic socialist; a co-founder of Ha'shomer (an armed organization of settlers whose motto was: "In blood and fire Judea fell; in blood and fire she shall rise again!"), and at the same time a leading member of the left-wing anti-nationalist League for Arab-Jewish Understanding. She was fully convinced that Arab acquiescence to Zionism could be achieved through the raising of Arab standards of living; and yet on lecture tours abroad on behalf of Poale Zion and her kibbutz, she passionately admonished the wealthier Jews of America that high living standards were meaningless, only national dignity counted. Already before her arrival in the country, in January 1904, she had achieved some notoriety in Russian revolutionary circles by running arms for the anarchists and participating in clandestine plots and agitation. Once, as a twenty-year-old anarchist in Russia, she shot a Czarist spy to death, dismembered his corpse, placed the pieces in a suitcase, and sent it off by rail to a nonexistent address in Siberia." (Amos Elon in The Israelis: Founders and Sons)

"This is a deeply moving... story of a life... Mrs. Ben-Zvi, wife of Israel's second president, describes not only Manya's growth... and her incredible creativity in starting the kibbutz movement, but her love affair with Yisrael Shochat, a charmer with a roving eye, whose infidelities drove her to attempt suicide... Manya Shochat lived her extraordinary life with strength and idealism, with a pure vision of a world in which all people, especially Jews and Arabs... would one day live together in peace and brotherhood... Biography is living history. It is fitting that the story of Manya Shochat, one of the founding mothers of Israel, should be told by her friend, Rachel Yanait Ben-Zvi, herself a founding mother." -- Ruth Gruber, author of Raquela: A Woman of Israel, Haven and Rescue: The Exodus of the Ethiopian Jews

"The history of Eretz Israel during the second aliyah does not lack riveting personalities, but it would be no exaggeration to say that Manya Shochat was outstanding even among these." -- Yediot Achronot

"... an important and fascinating book... an extraordinary woman... possessing enormous inner strength. Both idealistic and pragmatic, she had a vision of Israel as a just society that respects all individuals, a vision that should serve as inspiration today." -- Judith A. Sokoloff, Editor, Na'Amat Woman

"Yanait's book is a true and well-documented testimony which broadens our knowledge through supporting documents... and through various legends which give us a new dimension... It is fascinating to become reacquainted with those early settlers who were equally adept with pistols as with plows, with fountain pens as with balalaikas... Yanait's book is a true... testimony which... gives us a new dimension." --Haaretz

"Courageous and naive, tough and sentimental, Manya Shochat is the stuff of Zionist legend." -- Lesley Hazleton, author of Israeli Women and Jerusalem, Jerusalem

"This is a book which... I recommend to Israeli feminists and to anyone who has been affected by the women's liberation movement in America..." -- Maariv

"The author does not hide the truth as to Manya's marriage... on the contrary, her brief comments on this subject add an enticingly human dimension to Manya's heroic persona." -- Al Hamishmar
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Before Golda: Manya Shochat

Before Golda: Manya Shochat

Before Golda: Manya Shochat

Before Golda: Manya Shochat

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Overview

"Manya Shochat was a truly unusual woman, a figure of extreme complexity who might have come out of a nineteenth-century Russian novel. In her life's story we find a full enactment -- rare in one person -- of the main qualities, some of them contradictory, which played such a prominent role in the history of Zionism. She was incredibly tough and unbelievably charitable; sentimental and fearless; a fanatic Zionist and a fanatic socialist; a co-founder of Ha'shomer (an armed organization of settlers whose motto was: "In blood and fire Judea fell; in blood and fire she shall rise again!"), and at the same time a leading member of the left-wing anti-nationalist League for Arab-Jewish Understanding. She was fully convinced that Arab acquiescence to Zionism could be achieved through the raising of Arab standards of living; and yet on lecture tours abroad on behalf of Poale Zion and her kibbutz, she passionately admonished the wealthier Jews of America that high living standards were meaningless, only national dignity counted. Already before her arrival in the country, in January 1904, she had achieved some notoriety in Russian revolutionary circles by running arms for the anarchists and participating in clandestine plots and agitation. Once, as a twenty-year-old anarchist in Russia, she shot a Czarist spy to death, dismembered his corpse, placed the pieces in a suitcase, and sent it off by rail to a nonexistent address in Siberia." (Amos Elon in The Israelis: Founders and Sons)

"This is a deeply moving... story of a life... Mrs. Ben-Zvi, wife of Israel's second president, describes not only Manya's growth... and her incredible creativity in starting the kibbutz movement, but her love affair with Yisrael Shochat, a charmer with a roving eye, whose infidelities drove her to attempt suicide... Manya Shochat lived her extraordinary life with strength and idealism, with a pure vision of a world in which all people, especially Jews and Arabs... would one day live together in peace and brotherhood... Biography is living history. It is fitting that the story of Manya Shochat, one of the founding mothers of Israel, should be told by her friend, Rachel Yanait Ben-Zvi, herself a founding mother." -- Ruth Gruber, author of Raquela: A Woman of Israel, Haven and Rescue: The Exodus of the Ethiopian Jews

"The history of Eretz Israel during the second aliyah does not lack riveting personalities, but it would be no exaggeration to say that Manya Shochat was outstanding even among these." -- Yediot Achronot

"... an important and fascinating book... an extraordinary woman... possessing enormous inner strength. Both idealistic and pragmatic, she had a vision of Israel as a just society that respects all individuals, a vision that should serve as inspiration today." -- Judith A. Sokoloff, Editor, Na'Amat Woman

"Yanait's book is a true and well-documented testimony which broadens our knowledge through supporting documents... and through various legends which give us a new dimension... It is fascinating to become reacquainted with those early settlers who were equally adept with pistols as with plows, with fountain pens as with balalaikas... Yanait's book is a true... testimony which... gives us a new dimension." --Haaretz

"Courageous and naive, tough and sentimental, Manya Shochat is the stuff of Zionist legend." -- Lesley Hazleton, author of Israeli Women and Jerusalem, Jerusalem

"This is a book which... I recommend to Israeli feminists and to anyone who has been affected by the women's liberation movement in America..." -- Maariv

"The author does not hide the truth as to Manya's marriage... on the contrary, her brief comments on this subject add an enticingly human dimension to Manya's heroic persona." -- Al Hamishmar

Product Details

BN ID: 2940156950799
Publisher: Plunkett Lake Press
Publication date: 08/22/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 240
File size: 7 MB

About the Author

Born Golda Lishansky in a Hasidic family in the shtetl of Malin, near Kiev, Ukraine, Rachel Yanait Ben-Zvi (1886-1979) represented Malin at the 7th Zionist Congress in Basel (1905). She was among the founders of the socialist Zionist party Poale Zion in Russia before emigrating in 1908 to Palestine, where she worked for Labor Zionism, was a leader among the Jewish workers of the Second Aliyah (1904-1914) and helped organize the Jewish Watchmen, Hashomer, in 1909. To prepare herself to promote agricultural settlement in Eretz Israel, she studied agricultural engineering at the University of Nancy, France (1911-1914). In 1918, she married Yitzhak Ben-Zvi, a fellow Poale Zion and Hashomer activist who became Israel’s second President (1952-1963).

In 1928, she founded “The Educational Farm” to provide agricultural education for women in Jerusalem. She remained a labor activist, was active in the Haganah and organized the clandestine immigration of Jews through Syria and Lebanon.

After 1948, Rachel Yanait Ben-Zvi was active in the absorption of immigrants from Arab countries. As Israel’s first lady, she opened the president’s residence to people from all backgrounds in Israeli society, wrote about education and defense. Her autobiography Coming Home (in Hebrew, Anu olim) was published in 1961. In 1978, she was awarded the Israel Prize for her special contribution to society and the State of Israel.
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