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Golda Meir
1898 - 1978

The Zionist Labour leader Golda Meir served as Israel's foreign
minister from 1956 to 1966. In 1969 she became Israel's fourth
prime minister.
Golda
Meir was born the daughter of Moshe and Bluma Mabovitch in Kiev,
Ukraine, on May 3, 1898. She emigrated in 1906 with her family
to Milwaukee, Wis. After she attended grammar and high school,
she went to the Teachers' Training College in Milwaukee in 1917.
In the same year she married Morris Myerson (later she modified
her name to Meir). For several years she taught in the local
schools and was active in the Labor Zionist party. In 1921 she
left for Palestine and joined Kibbutz Merchavia, where after
some training she was put in charge of the chicken farm. Because
of illness in her family, she moved to Tel Aviv and started to
work as treasurer of the Histadruth's Office of Public Works.
From 1928 Golda Meir was the secretary of the Working Women's
Council in Palestine, and as such, she was its representative on
the executive of the Histadruth. She also represented the
council at a number of international labor congresses and was a
delegate to its sister organization, the Pioneer Women, in the
United States. After 1929 she was elected a delegate to most
congresses of the World Zionist Organization. This was the
beginning of her Zionist political activity. She was a member of
the executive of the Jewish National Council in Palestine and
served on the board of directors of a number of the Histadruth
mutual aid programs, as well as a number of its industrial
affiliates. In 1940 she was appointed head of the political
department of the Histadruth. As such, she fought against the
British White Paper of 1939 and organized illegal Jewish
immigration to Palestine.
When the Palestine Administration interned the leaders of the
Jewish Agency on June 29, 1946, Golda Meir was appointed acting
head of the Jewish Agency's political department to replace the
detained Moshe Shertok-Sharett. She continued in this position
until the proclamation of the independence of Israel on May 14,
1948, since, after his release by the British, Shertok-Sharett
spent most of his time in the United States. Early in 1948 she
visited the United States to organize an emergency fund campaign
for Palestine, with very successful results. On May 14 she was,
as a member of Israel's Provisional Council of State, among the
signers of its declaration of independence.
Golda Meir started her political career in Israel as its
minister plenipotentiary to Moscow. During her 6 months' tenure
Russian Jewry expressed its pro-Israeli leanings in every
possible way and especially during the Jewish high holidays, in
spite of the restrictions of 40 years of Russian communism. With
her election to the first Israeli Parliament, she returned to
Israel and was appointed minister of labor and social insurance.
While in this office, she worked to solve the most important
internal problems of Israel: housing and employment for the new
mass immigration. Still known by her married name, she
engineered what became known as the "Myerson Plan," which
allowed for the construction of more than 30,000 units of
one-room housing. She also oversaw the construction of some
200,000 low-income apartments to house Israel's newly immigrated
families.
In 1956, Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion proclaimed Meir "the
best man" in his cabinet and named her to replace
Shertok-Sharett as foreign minister, among the most important
government jobs in the nation. It was now, under Ben-Gurion's
prodding to have all Israelis bear Hebrew names, that she
reluctantly altered her name while keeping it as close as
possible to Myerson. In 10 years in this office she established
political and economic relations with the majority of the
African states. Golda Meir, tired and ill, stepped down as
minister of foreign affairs in 1966, but soon after, under
pressure of her political party, she agreed to take over the
leadership of Israel's Labor party. She succeeded in the next 2
years in reuniting the three main Labor elements: Mapai, Achdut
Ha'Avodah, and Rafi. The merger took place on Jan. 2, 1968, and
in August she retired from political activity. After the death
of Levi Eshkol, to avoid a confrontation between the main rival
candidates, Moshe Dayan and Yigal Allon, Golda Meir again came
out of retirement to assume the post of Israel's prime minister
on March 17, 1969.
Though elderly and in faltering health, Meir proved her
abilities to the country during her initial nine-month term such
that her Labor Party won the 1969 elections. Meir thus gained
her own four-year term as prime minister. This period was marked
by Meir's efforts to gain United States aid in the form of
military and economy assistance. The assurances she won from
President Richard Nixon on this helped her and Dayan persuade
the Israeli cabinet to agree to a United States proposition for
a cease-fire and the opening of peace talks with the United Arab
Republic. She sided with Dayan's more radical position that the
occupied territories captured during the 1967 war be settled by
Israelis, yet she retained the support of moderates who favored
trading land for peace. However, in 1973 and 1974, Israel's
unpreparedness for the Yom Kippur War brought demands for new
leadership. After the 1973 elections, Meir was still able to
form a new government, but divisions only increased and on April
10, 1974, she resigned as prime minister.
Even in retirement, Meir remained an important political
presence in Israel. She also achieved folk-hero status as one of
the first women to head a nation in the modern era. Her
autobiography My Life helped cement her place in the public's
imagination as the doting grandmother who had risen to greatness
in her nation's hour of need. Meir died in Jerusalem on Dec. 8,
1978.
~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~
Golda Meir served as Israel's foreign minister from 1956 to 1966
and became its fourth prime minister in 1969. By the end of her
life, she had become a hero as one of the first women to head a
nation in the modern era. Meir was a leading figure in the
movement called Zionism, the movement to create a Jewish state
in Palestine, the area the Jews regarded as their historical
home. The Zionist movement helped lead to the founding of
Israel.
Childhood and early interests
Golda Meir was born the daughter of Moshe and Bluma Mabovitch in
Kiev, Ukraine, on May 3, 1898. She moved with her family to
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in 1906. The Mabovitch family had fled
their home in part to escape pogroms (mob attacks) that had been
carried out against Jews in Russia at the time. Meir later
recalled that her childhood terror of anti-Semitic (anti-Jewish)
violence strongly influenced her later commitment to establish
Israel as a safe, secure Jewish state.
After attending high school, Meir went to the Teachers' Training
College in Milwaukee in 1917. She had attained her
school-teacher's training over the objections of her parents,
who had felt that girls should be married, not pursue a
profession. Meir did both, marrying Morris Myerson in 1917
(later she modified her name to Meir). In 1921 they left for
Palestine. This Middle Eastern region, which included the
territory of modern-day Israel and the West Bank, was at that
time under the administration of Great Britain and largely
populated by Arabs.
After arriving in Palestine, the Myersons joined a kibbutz (a
communal settlement) where after some training they were put in
charge of the chicken farm. However, Golda's husband became ill,
and the couple decided to move to Tel Aviv. The couple
eventually moved to Jerusalem where their two children were
born. In Jerusalem, Golda found work as treasurer of the Office
of Public Works of the Histadruth, a labor organization that
included kibbutz workers and that became the most important
economic organization in the Israeli state.
Birth of Israel
From 1928 Golda Meir was the secretary of the Working Women's
Council in Palestine and served as its representative on the
leadership of the Histadruth. She also represented the council
at a number of international labor meetings and was a delegate
to its sister organization, the Pioneer Women, in the United
States. After 1929 she was elected a delegate to most meetings
of the World Zionist Organization. This was the real beginning
of her Zionist political activity. In 1940 she was appointed
head of the political department of the Histadruth. As such, she
fought against the British White Paper of 1939, which limited
Jewish immigration to Palestine. Meir organized illegal Jewish
immigration to Palestine at this time, when Jews faced danger in
Europe because of World War II (1939–45) and persecution by the
German Nazi regime.
When the Palestine Administration (the main British governing
body) imprisoned the leaders of the Jewish Agency, a Zionist
organization, in June 1946, Meir was appointed acting head of
the Jewish Agency's political department. Originally picked to
replace the arrested Moshe Shertok-Sharett (1894–1965) in this
position, she continued in this role until the proclamation of
the independence of Israel on May 14, 1948. Early in 1948 she
visited the United States to organize an emergency fund campaign
for Palestine, with very successful results. On May 14 she was,
as a member of Israel's Provisional Council of State, among the
signers of its Declaration of Independence.
Israeli leader
Meir started her political career in Israel as its
representative to the Soviet Union. With her election to the
first Israeli Parliament (governing body), she returned to
Israel and was appointed minister of labor and social insurance.
While in this office, she worked to solve the most important
internal problems of Israel: housing and employment for the new
mass Jewish immigration. Still known by her married name, she
engineered what became known as the "Myerson Plan," which
allowed for the construction of more than thirty thousand units
of one-room housing. She also oversaw the construction of some
two hundred thousand low-income apartments to house Israel's
newly immigrated families.
In 1956, Israeli prime minister David Ben-Gurion (1886–1976)
called Meir "the best man" in his cabinet and named her to
replace Shertok-Sharett as foreign minister, among the most
important government jobs in the nation. It was now, as a result
of Ben-Gurion's desire to have all Israelis bear Hebrew names,
that she reluctantly altered her name to Meir, while keeping it
as close as possible to Myerson.
In 1966, tired and ill, Meir resigned as minister of foreign
affairs. However, soon after, under pressure from her political
party, she agreed to take over the leadership of Israel's Labor
Party. Over the next two years, she succeeded in reuniting three
main labor groups that had split, the Mapai, the Achdut
Ha'Avodah, and the Rafi, into one political party. The merger
took place on January 2, 1968, and in August she retired from
political activity. However, after the death of Prime Minister
Levi Eshkol (1895–1969), when it looked as if conflict might
arise within the Labor Party in the effort to find his
replacement, Meir again came out of retirement to assume the
post of Israel's prime minister on March 17, 1969.
Prime minister
Though elderly and in poor health, Meir proved her abilities to
the country during her initial nine-month term. As a result, her
Labor Party won the 1969 elections. Meir thus gained her own
four-year term as prime minister. This period was marked by
Meir's efforts to gain U.S. aid in the form of military and
economic assistance. The assurances she won from U.S. president
Richard Nixon (1913–1994) helped her open peace talks with the
United Arab Republic in 1967, during which one of the several
conflicts between Israel and its Arab neighbors (known as the
Arab-Israeli Wars) had occurred.
Meir sided with radicals in her government who felt that the
territories captured during the 1967 war should be settled by
Israelis, yet she also retained the support of moderates who
favored giving up land claims in exchange for peace. However, in
1973 and 1974, Israel's unpreparedness for another of the
Arab-Israeli Wars, known as the Yom Kippur War, brought demands
for new leadership. After the 1973 elections, Meir was still
able to form a new government, but divisions only increased and
on April 10, 1974, she resigned as prime minister.
Even in retirement, Meir remained an important political
presence in Israel. Her autobiography, My Life, helped assure
her place in the public's imagination as the kindly grandmother
who had risen to greatness in her nation's hour of need. Meir
died in Jerusalem on December 8, 1978.
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This web page was last updated on:
13 December, 2008
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