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Overview
Weil made national headlines during an election in 1922 when, casting her vote, she spotted and ripped up a stack of illegally marked ballots. She campaigned against lynching, convened a biracial council in her home, and in her eighties desegregated a swimming pool by diving in headfirst. Rogoff also highlights Weil's place in the broader Jewish American experience. Whether attempting to promote the causes of southern Jewry, save her European family members from the Holocaust, or support the creation of a Jewish state, Weil fought for systemic change, all the while insisting that she had not done much beyond the ordinary duty of any citizen.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781469630809 |
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Publisher: | The University of North Carolina Press |
Publication date: | 02/22/2017 |
Sold by: | Barnes & Noble |
Format: | NOOK Book |
Pages: | 368 |
File size: | 4 MB |
About the Author
What People are Saying About This
Gertrude Weil draws deeply on historical archives as well as firsthand interviews with Weil's family, neighbors, friends, and associates, and makes an important contribution to our understanding of a wide swath of American life, southern life, Jewish history, women's history, and the history of race relations and social justice in America." Joyce Antler, author of The Journey Home: How Jewish Women Shaped Modern America
Leonard Rogoff's biography of the fascinating and complex Gertrude Weil sheds light on numerous important subjects, from the changing roles of women and the progressive tradition in the South to the history of religion in America.Mark B. Bauman, author of Harry H. Epstein and the Rabbinate as Conduit for Change and editor of Southern Jewish History
This first major biography of Gertrude Weil tells the story of an amazing southern Jewish New Woman who lived virtually all of her life in the house in which she was born but whose impact reverberated widely. In her story we see the power of localism, sisterhood across religious boundaries, and intellect, politics, and wealth used to advance and improve society. It reveals a blend of religious and familial devotion that helped to secure Weil against the prejudices of anti-Semitism and the seductions of Christian universalism.Deborah Dash Moore, author of Urban Origins of American Judaism
Goldsboro-born reformer Gertrude Weil was so modest about her accomplishments that she would just as soon have let the dust gather on her memory. But her humane and almost super-human engagement with the social, political, and moral advance of twentieth-century North Carolina's workers, women, and children (black and white, Jews and Gentiles) makes Rogoff's comprehensive, clear-eyed volume a moving and very welcome addition to the annals of Jewish history, women's history, and the progressive tradition that still shapes the Tar Heel state today. Not all her battles were won—and many still remain—but this didn't stop Gertrude Weil and it shouldn't stop us.Emily Bingham, author of Irrepressible