Authors: Elinor Burkett
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Political, #Women, #History, #Middle East, #Israel & Palestine
Zionist Congress: Marie Syrkin,
Way of Valor: A Biography of Golda Myer- son
(New York: Sharon Books, 1955), pp. 100–102.
“This time, we asked nothing”: Menachem Meir,
My Mother Golda Meir: A Son’s Evocation of Life with Golda Meir
(New York: Arbor House, 1983), p. 55.
95 “The Jews should act as though”: Syrkin,
Woman of Valor
, p. 102.
95 “If war breaks out”: Golda to Menachem and Sarah, August 21, 1939, Ge- neva, reprinted in Menachem Meir,
My Mother Golda Meir,
pp. 55–56.
95 It was an impossible dilemma: Syrkin,
Way of Valor,
p. 103.
“It was a very nice slogan”: Meir,
My Life,
p. 165.
the steamer
Atrato
: Ehud Avriel,
Open the Gates!: A Personal Story of “Ille- gal” Immigration to Israel
(New York: Atheneum, 1975).
“There is no Zionism save”: Mapai Executive Committee Meeting, No- vember 1943, quoted in Syrkin,
Way of Valor,
p. 114.
“They fight like lions”: Golda Meir,
My Life,
p. 184.
“Our way in this country”: “This Is Our Strength,”
D’var HaPoelet,
May 5, 1939.
“You are a nice, peaceful, law-abiding lady”: Syrkin,
Way of Valor,
pp. 106–13.
101 “Zionism and pessimism are not compatible”: Ibid., p. 159.
“What can we do, first”: Quoted in Martin,
Golda,
p. 239.
“It’s bad enough that the rest of the world”: Menachem Meir,
Golda Meir My Mother,
p. 63.
102 a Histadrut emissary reported: Ibid.
“I could see in his worried”: Golda Meir,
My Life.
“How can we, in Tel Aviv”: Va’ad Ha’Poel meeting, April 10, 1943, quoted in Syrkin,
Woman of Valor,
pp. 114–16.
“I have sometimes wondered how”: Golda Meir,
My Life,
p. 166.
chapter seven
“At this solemn hour”:
Palestine Post,
May 10, 1945.
“Civilization has been appalled”: Excerpts of Bevin’s speech were printed by the
New York Times,
February 26, 1947.
“Jewish life is precious”: Meron Medzini,
Ha-Yehudiyah ha-geah: Goldah Meir ve-hazon Yisrael
(Tel Aviv: Edanim, 1990), chapter 7.
“The American people”: Released November 13, 1945. Dated August 31, 1945, President Harry S. Truman, Public Papers of the Presidents, Harry
S. Truman, 1945.
109 “liquidating the possibility”: Minutes of meeting of the political committee of Mapai, March 27, 1944.
109 “We have no alternative but to follow a new path”: Medzini,
Ha-Yehudiyah,
chapter 7.
111 “What’s wrong with workers from the Histadrut?” Ibid.
spoke on behalf of the Histadrut:
The Pioneer Woman,
April 1946.
114 “cigarettes were permitted”: Marie Syrkin,
Way of Valor: A Biography of Golda Myerson
(New York: Sharon Books, 1955), pp. 152–54.
“If Shertok [Sharett] is guilty”: Quoted in ibid., p. 160.
“Maybe I wasn’t important enough”: Quoted by Abraham Rabinovich in
Newsday,
December 7, 1978.
117 “Kudos to a smart and energetic woman”:
The Pioneer Woman,
March 1947.
“A lovely lady, a good speaker”: Quoted in Ralph G. Martin,
Golda: Golda Meir, the Romantic Years
(New York: Scribner, 1988), p. 270.
setting up a
Judenrat
: Author interview with Chaim Hefer, December 14, 2004.
118 Shertok tried to calm: For examples of Sharett’s frustration, see Ya’akov Sharett, ed.,
Imprisoned with Paper and Pencil: The Letters of Moshe and Zipporah Sharett
[Hebrew] (Tel Aviv: Moshe Sharett Institute, 2000).
“What we want is complete independence”: Quoted in Martin,
Golda,
p. 270.
I never lived through a pogrom: Minutes of Jewish Agency Executive Com- mittee, Paris, August 2, 1946.
119 “We have hated death”: Speech at funeral at Kibbutz Givat Hayim, quoted in Syrkin,
Way of Valor,
p. 137.
“If we don’t do something active”: Meir interview with Rinna Samuel, Au- gust 4, 1973.
Unless Bevin agreed to release: Medzini,
Ha-Yehudiyah,
chapter 7.
“Golda is inflexible”: Sharett,
Imprisoned with Paper and Pencil.
“For miles around, there was nothing”: Quoted in Martin,
Golda,
p. 261.
121 “You and Ben-Gurion are destroying”: Meir interview with Rinna Samuel, August 4, 1973.
121 “Look, you are afraid and I am afraid”: Ibid.
121 “She had this gift of propaganda”: Quoted in Martin,
Golda,
p. 278.
One afternoon, she fainted: Syrkin,
Way of Valor,
p. 136.
traveled to Basle: Ibid., pp. 165–68.
“what is our starting point?”: Medzini,
Ha-Yehudiyah,
chapter 7.
“Why are we NOW pressing”: Statement given in Yiddish, reprinted in English in Marie Syrkin, ed.,
A Land of Our Own
:
An Oral Autobiogra- phy by Golda Meir
(New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1973), pp. 58–65.
chapter eight
125 They made an odd pair: The most thorough account of Golda’s meetings and the context in which they occurred is Avi Shlaim,
Collusion Across the Jordan: King Abdullah, the Zionist Movement, and the Partition of Pales- tine
(New York: Columbia University Press, 1988). See also Alec Seath Kirkbride,
From the Wings: Amman Memoirs 1947
–
1951
(London: Frank Cass, 1976). The
yishuv
view of the meetings was recorded most thor- oughly by Zeev Sharef in his
Three Days
(London: W. H. Allen, 1962).
125 United Nations Special Committee on Palestine: For information on UNSCOP, see, Jorge Garcia-Granados,
The Birth of Israel: The Drama as I Saw It
(New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1948).
125 “We don’t anticipate spilled blood”: Meron Medzini,
Ha-Yehudayah ha- geah: Goldah Meir v
.
a-hazon Yi´sra’el: Biyografyah polit
.
it
(Tel Aviv: Edanim, 1990), chapter 7.
129 “The struggle against terrorism cannot be divorced”:
New York Times,
Feb- ruary 11, 1947.
129 “We will not become a nation of informers”:
New York Times,
February 23, 1947.
129 “Even if it means armed struggle”: Menachem Meir,
My Mother Golda Meir: A Son’s Evocation of Life with Golda Meir
(New York: Arbor House, 1983), p. 90.
“Terrorism is assisting Palestine’s British”:
New York Times,
March 30, 1947.
“the right measure of independence”: Marie Syrkin,
Way of Valor: A Biogra- phy of Golda Myerson
(New York: Sharon Books, 1955), p. 162.
British detention centers in Cyprus: Ibid., pp. 171–76.
“We can hardly imagine a Jewish state”:
New York Times,
September 2, 1947.
“The Messiah hasn’t come”: Quoted in Ralph G. Martin,
Golda: Golda Meir, the Romantic Years
(New York: Scribner, 1988), p. 288.
“For two thousand years”: Ibid, p. 295.
“We will strangle”: Larry Collins and Dominique Lapierre,
O Jerusalem
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1972), p. 88.
“But how will I live if I’m blinded?”: Ibid., p. 299.
133 On December 27: Syrkin,
Way of Valor,
p. 189.
the police station in Jewish Hedera: Ibid., p. 190.
“What you can do here, I cannot do”: Peggy Mann,
Golda: The Life of Is- rael’s Prime Minister
(New York: Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1971), p. 142.
134 “When she came here she stayed”: Jeff Hodes interview with Henry Mon- tor, October 14, 1975, Rome, Oral History Division Institute for Con- temporary Jewry (OHD), 34(128), p. 54.
Arriving on a Friday afternoon: The best information on Golda’s fund-rais- ing trip was gleaned from interviews available at the OHD with Mathilda Brailove, Lou Boyar, Henry Montor, Joe Mazer, William Mazer, Gott- lieb Hammer, Sam Feingold, Lee Horne, Ralph Wechsler, Leon Ger- ber, Sidney Lewine, Julius Livingston, Jeanne Daman, and Harry Beale.
Montor decided that Golda’s only chance: 128(34), OHD, 54–56.
135 “The nations of the world”: Her speech in Chicago was published as
A Re- port from Palestine
by the Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds, General Assembly, Chicago, January 1948.
137 “Money is not any of your business”: United Jewish Appeal interview with Golda Meir, January 19, 1971.
137 “marrying a Negro”: Beale interview, OHD, p. 25.
“I was sure that they couldn’t care less”: Ibid. and Syrkin,
Way of Valor,
p. 210.
“we can’t save the Jewish people”: Montor interview, OHD, pp. 58–59.
138 “meet in Madison Square Garden”: Jeff Hodes interview with Meir, quoted in Martin,
Golda
, p. 321.
138 “Someday, when history will be written”: Golda Meir,
My Life
(New York: Putnam, 1975), p. 214.
140 to persuade them to remain: Mann,
Golda,
pp. 148–49.
144 “We need to go all the way”: Medzini,
Ha-Yehudiyah,
chapter 8.
144 “Golda is too inflexible”: Minutes of the meeting of Minhelet HaAm, May 12, 1948, ISA.
“I learned about the Declaration”:
Jewish Newsweekly of Northern Califor- nia,
June 5, 1998.
chapter nine
“need much larger sums”: Menachem Meir,
My Mother Golda Meir
(New York: Arbor House, 1983), p. 121.
“We cannot go on without your help”: Golda Meir,
My Life
(New York: Putnam, 1975), p. 235.
twisting her right leg: Menachem Meir,
Golda Meir My Mother,
p. 123; and
New York Times,
July 2, 1948.
Sharett barraged Golda: Marie Syrkin,
Way of Valor: A Biography of Golda Myerson
(New York: Sharon Books, 1955), pp. 234–35.
“APPOINTMENT OF SARAH”: Peggy Mann,
Golda: The Life of Israel’s Prime Minister
(New York: Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1971)
,
p. 160.
schizophrenic world: For background on the Soviet position on partition, see Arnold Krammer, “Soviet Motives in the Partition of Palestine, 1947–48,”
Journal of Palestine Studies
2, no. 2 (winter 1973): 102–99.
“The Jews in the civilized world”: “Critical Remarks on the National Ques- tion,” written by Lenin in October–December 1913 and published the same year in the Bolshevik legal journal
Prosveshcheniye,
nos. 10, 11, and 12.
The Soviet Foreign Ministry had ordered: Gennadii Kostyrchenko, “Golda at the Metropol Hotel,”
Russian Studies in History
43, no. 4 (fall 2004), pp. 77–84.
“What were they thinking, sending an old”: Lov Kaddar, interview, (56)88, OHD.
Male diplomats, she was told: Ibid.
“From the moment they arrived in Moscow:” Uri Bialin, “Top Hat, Tuxedo and Cannons: Israeli Foreign Policy from 1948 to 1956 as a Field of Study,”
Israel Studies
7, no. 1 (2002): 1–80.
“Golda had nothing to do”: Kaddar, interview, (56)88, OHD.
Mordechai Namir . . . yanked the chain: Ibid.
“I would happily sacrifice my knowledge”: Mordechai Namir,
Israeli Mis- sion to Moscow
[Hebrew] (Tel Aviv: Am Oved, 1971) pp. 333–34.
156 A Jewish officer in the Red Army: Ibid., p. 336.
156 “[It is] as though the problem of Jewish immigration”: Namir,
Israeli Mis- sion to Moscow,
p. 60.
156 petitioned for exit permits: Ibid., p. 411.
One night a middle-aged Jew: Menachem Meir,
Golda Meir My Mother,
p. 132.
she urged him: Syrkin,
Way of Valor,
pp. 252–53.
157 she threw Friday: Kaddar, interview, (56)88, OHD.
submitted the first issue: Ibid.
Polina Zhemchuzhina: Namir,
Israeli Mission to Moscow,
pp. 83–84.
A savvy politician: Syrkin,
Way of Valor,
pp. 249–50.
159 “Let there be no mistake about it”:
Pravda,
September 21, 1948.
159 Rosh Hashanah: Kaddar, interview, (56)88, OHD.
161 “The words shook the sun”: Syrkin,
Way of Valor,
p. 252.
chapter ten
snapped Eliezer Kaplan: Dvora Hacohen,
Immigrants in Turmoil: Mass Im- migration to Israel and Its Repercussions in the 1950s and After
(Syra- cuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press, 2003).
“A Jewish state that aims at a high”: Address to workers’ delegation, Tel Aviv, July 25, 1950, in Henry Christman, ed.,
This Is Our Strength: Selected Papers of Golda Meir
(New York: Macmillan, 1952), pp. 50–51.
Golda faced her biggest hurdle: The debate over her plan was detailed in
Palestine Post,
August 9, 1949.
“We need cheap housing quickly”: Marie Syrkin,
Way of Valor: A Biography of Golda Myerson
(New York: Sharon Books, 1955), p. 264.
166 “I went to our Parliament two weeks ago”: Robert Slater,
Golda, the Uncrowned Queen of Israel
(Middle Village, N.Y.: Jonathan David, 1981), p. 98.