Skip to main content
Henrietta Szold: Hadassah and the Zionist Dream (Jewish Lives)

Henrietta Szold: Hadassah and the Zionist Dream (Jewish Lives)

Current price: $26.00
Publication Date: March 5th, 2024
Publisher:
Yale University Press
ISBN:
9780300247787
Pages:
256
Usually Ships in 1 to 5 Days

Description

Award-winning author Francine Klagsbrun reveals the complex life and work of Henrietta Szold, founder of Hadassah and a Zionist trailblazer
 
“Klagsbrun’s biography arrives at a moment when Zionism is once again a flashpoint for protest and provocation worldwide. It’s a timely reminder of Szold’s vision for a land that Jews and Arabs alike could call home.”—Diane Cole, Wall Street Journal
 
Henrietta Szold (1860–1945) is renowned as the founder of Hadassah, the Women’s Zionist Organization of America, which quickly became one of the most successful of all Zionist groups. In her work with Hadassah, Szold used a combined ethical and pragmatic approach aimed at improving the lives of both Jews and Arabs. She later moved to Mandate Palestine to help shape education, health, and social services there. The pinnacle of her career came in her seventies, when she took on the task of directing the Youth Aliyah program, which rescued thousands of young people from the Nazis and resettled them in Palestine.
 
Using Szold’s copious letters, diaries, and essays, along with other archival documents, Francine Klagsbrun traces Szold’s life and legacy with an eye to uncovering the person behind the Zionist icon. She reveals Szold as a complex human being who had to cope with controversy and criticism, a workaholic with an outsized sense of duty, and an idealist who fought for her beliefs even as she questioned her own abilities. With deep insight, Klagsbrun introduces readers to this extraordinary woman, whose impact on women’s lives as well as on education and health systems still resonates.

About the Author

Francine Klagsbrun is the author of numerous books, including the award-winning Lioness: Golda Meir and the Nation of Israel. She has been a columnist for Jewish Week and Moment, is a contributing editor to Lilith, and is on the editorial board of Hadassah Magazine. Her writings have appeared in the New York Times, the Boston Globe, Newsweek, Ms. magazine, and other national publications.

Praise for Henrietta Szold: Hadassah and the Zionist Dream (Jewish Lives)

“Francine Klagsbrun’s biography arrives at a moment when Zionism is once again a flashpoint for protest and provocation worldwide. It’s a timely reminder of Szold’s vision for a land that Jews and Arabs alike could call home.”—Diane Cole, Wall Street Journal

“Klagsbrun is the ideal biographer for Szold. Deeply learned in Jewish life and culture, she recounts both the heartbreak and the triumphs of a great Jewish leader. . . . It’s a compelling and inspiring story.”—Bob Goldfarb, Jewish Book Council

“Deftly shows how one woman’s life was entwined with the creation of two countries, a multicultural United States born in the ashes of the Civil War, and Israel, which rose from the horrors of World War II.”—Adrienne Ross Scanlan, New York Journal of Books

“Francine Klagsbrun’s resplendently transfiguring biography of Hadassah founder Henrietta Szold will illumine and excite and wake and shake you to a new understanding of a remarkable woman of valor.”—Cynthia Ozick, author of Critics, Monsters, Fanatics, and Other Literary Essays

“Compelling and engrossing, Klagsbrun’s portrait is particularly impressive in integrating the personal elements of Szold’s life with her professional and public activities and immense and enduring achievements, thereby creating a holistic picture of this extraordinary woman.”—Rabbi David Ellenson, author of Jewish Meaning in a World of Choice: Studies in Tradition and Modernity

“Francine Klagsbrun is not only a vital scholar of Jewish history, she is also a sympathetic and eloquent writer who brings Henrietta Szold and her accomplishments to vivid life on the page in this deeply impressive and moving book.”—Hilma Wolitzer, author of Today a Woman Went Mad in the Supermarket