Authors: Elinor Burkett
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Political, #Women, #History, #Middle East, #Israel & Palestine
128, 132, 138–40, 142
Ikrit, civil disobedience in, 249–50 Imperial Labour Conference (London,
1930), 66
Industrial Removal Office, 24 Ingathering, great, 163–64
In-Law (Egyptian intelligence source), 315, 319
International Ladies Garment Workers Union, 166
Iranian Jews, 169, 253
Iranian oil, 344
Iraq, 132, 147, 289, 303, 379
Iraqi Jews, 163, 169, 173, 253, 372
Irgun Zvi Leumi (Etzel), 108–9, 116,
118–20, 128
Ironside
(TV show), 239 Israel
25th anniversary of, 309 50th anniversary of, 7
changes in, by 1969 and Golda’s first days as prime minister, 234–37, 241–42
established and named, 144–49 Foreign Ministry, 152, 183, 185,
196–97, 216
intelligence, 284, 305, 315 international reputation of, 10–11 as Jewish state and problem of Arab
populaton, 294
military intelligence, 315
Israel (
continued
)
Ministry of Defense, 210–11, 213–14, 296, 313
Ministry of Finance, 174 Ministry of Labor, 178 Law of Return and, 169 Soviet Union and official
recognition of, 150–51
Treasury Department, 177
Israel Bonds, 168, 173, 241, 303,
374–75
Israel Broadcasting Authority (IBA), 244
Israel Defense Force (IDF), 149, 151,
181–82, 185–86, 222–23, 236,
250, 271, 304, 312–13, 317,
321–22, 328, 331, 333, 335, 363
Army Medical Corps, 202 Israeli Air Force, 223, 265, 317
Northern Command, 313–14
Southern Command, 325 Israeli Cabinet
cease-fire of 1973 and, 334–36 Golda as prime minister and,
237–38
occupied territories after Six-Day War and, 229–30
Israeli-Egyptian direct negotiations (Kilometer 101), 346–47, 357,
366
Israeli prisoners of war, 340, 342–47,
349, 355–56, 360
Israeli settlers, in occupied territories, 295, 299
Istanbul, consul murdered in, 284 Italy, 101
Ivory Coast, 202
Jackson, Henry “Scoop,” 276, 311–12
Jaffa, 78, 139
Japanese Red Army, 284
Jarring, Gunnar, 266–67, 272, 311
Javits, Jacob, 276, 345
Jenin, 296 Jerusalem
Arab quarters of, 144
Arab riots and attacks and, 46, 65 East, 172, 229, 293
Eshkol buried in, 232
Golda and Morris move to, 56–58 Golda leaves Morris in, 58–63, 83
internationalization plan, 125–26,
131, 144
Jewish development in, 299
Old City, 144, 148–49, 151, 223–24,
289
partition and, 132–33, 139, 144,
147–48
Peel Commission and, 87 Six-Day war gains in, 229 West, 172
Jerusalem, Grand Mufti of.
See
Husseini, Haj Amin al-
Jerusalem Post
, 175, 310–11, 368
Jewish Agency, 77, 91, 102, 106, 111,
114–15, 129–31, 134, 140,
145
Golda as leader of, 116–20 Political Department, 143
Jewish Brigade, 103, 290 Jewish Brigade Group, 111
Jewish homeland issue, 19–20, 87–88,
122–23
fight for, during WW II, 95–104
Jewish immigration, 49, 94, 98 British quotas on, at end of WW II,
105–15
British quotas on, and rise of Nazi Germany and, 86–94, 102
fought by Arabs, 76
Law of Return and, 169–70 Jewish labor issue, 57, 76, 78–79,
81–82, 235, 295
Jewish National Fund, 32, 49, 70 Jewish refugees
Arab countries and, 290
Cyprus detention camps and, 130 founding of Israel and housing and employment for, 163–68
partition and, 148
smuggled out of Europe, 89–91, 94,
96–97, 101, 108
Jewish Resistance Movement, 108, 115–16, 120–22
Jewish self-defense concept, 99–100 Jewish terrorists, 108–10, 129–30
Jezreel Valley, 48–49, 87
Johnson, Lyndon Baines, 6, 220 Joint Distribution Committee, 138 Jordan (Transjordan), 190, 231, 236,
257, 274, 355, 379
armistice with, 164
civil war of 1970 and de facto peace with, 301–7
Jerusalem and, 294
Six-Day War and, 222, 224, 284
West Bank and, 288, 296–97,
300–301
Jordan River, 295, 301, 323
Jordan Valley, 351
Josephtal, Senta, 233
Judean Desert, 295
Judean Hills, 132
Kaddar, Lou, 1, 4, 152–55, 238–39,
310–11, 324
Kaplan, Eliezer, 122, 134, 164, 174
Kastel, 132
Katznelson, Berl, 52–55, 63, 93
Katznelson, Rivka, 67
Kaukji, Fawzi El, 132, 138, 140
Kaunda, Kenneth, 203
Keating, Kenneth, 320
Kennedy, Edward “Ted,” 276, 345
Kennedy, John F., 6, 199 Kennedy, Robert F., 359 Kenya, 201
Kenyatta, Jomo, 203
KGB (Soviet Committee on State Security), 317
Khader, Abdul, 132
Khartoum summit, 263, 268
Kibbutz Degania, 52–53
kibbutz movement, 70–71, 76, 93, 158,
225, 235
Kibbutz Merhavia, 48–55, 58, 326
Kibbutz Revivim, 121, 147, 217, 227,
244, 309, 318
Kibbutz Yagur, 115
Kibya massacre, 182
Kiev, 18, 25
King David Hotel bombing, 119 Kinneret, 151
Kirkbride, Sir Alex, 127 Kiryat Shmona, 172
Kishinev pogrom, 13–16, 20–21,
85
Kishon, Ephraim, 244
Kissinger, Henry, 5, 8, 10, 260, 262,
265, 269, 303–4, 311–12, 320,
325–35, 339–49, 351, 354–61,
365–69, 373
Kneller, Rolf, 175, 249
Knesset, 164–67, 169, 173, 176–79, 193,
195–96, 208, 210, 213–14,
216–17, 230, 261, 274–75, 285,
298–99, 306–7, 350, 356,
361–62, 372
Foreign Affairs Committee, 275 Kniazer, Zusia, 314
Koestler, Arthur, 40
Kolleck, Teddy, 294, 372
Kol Yisrael (radio station), 110, 115, 145 Korngold, Chaim (nephew), 47 Korngold, Judy (niece), 30, 45, 47 Korngold, Shamai (brother-in-law), 20,
26–27, 29–30, 32, 47, 48, 82
Korngold, Sheyna Mabovitch (sister) early life of, with Golda, 17–21,
23–30, 32–33
death of, 305
move to Palestine and, 39, 42–43
in Palestine and Israel, 45–47, 55,
57, 67, 82, 84, 130, 145, 176, 217
Kosygin, Alexei, 332
Kreisky, Bruno, 314–15
Kristallnacht
, 85
Kropotkin, Peter, 30, 31
Kuneitra, 367–68
Kupat Holim (medical system), 77, 79,
97
Kurdish Jews, 169
Labor Party.
See
Mapai
labor strife of 1969–73, 241–43
Labor Zionism, 20–21, 31–32, 35, 37,
69–70, 76–77, 79, 95, 208–9,
214, 372
Lagos
Sunday Express
, 205 Lambert, Anne Marie, 183 Land of Israel, 298 Langer, Hanoch, 245–46
Langer, Miriam, 245–46 La Spezia refugees, 113–14
Latrun (British detention camp), 116–18, 120–21, 149
Lavi, Naftali, 249
Lavon, Pinhas, 210–14 Law of Return, 169
League of Nations, 76, 91, 93
Lebanon, 126, 132, 182, 236, 250, 283,
285
Leggett, Sir Frederick, 113
Lehi (Stern Gang), 108–9, 116, 119, 120
Lenin, Vladimir, 30, 151
Levanon, Chaim, 179
Levanon, Mordechai, 309
Levin, Marlin, 291–92
Liberia, 200, 202
Libya, 204, 286
Libyan Jews, 163, 169
Life
, 3
Likud party, 350–51, 354, 356, 364–65
Lindsay, John, 2, 5
“Lion’s Roar, The” (Levin), 292 Lior, Israel, 257
Lithuania, 14, 19
Lodge, Henry Cabot, 192 London bombings, 284
Los Angeles Time
, 3 Lumumba, Patrice, 202
Luns, Joseph, 278
Ma’alot hostages, 368
Ma’ariv
(newspaper), 327, 358–59
Ma’avak
(struggle of
yishuv
vs. British and Arabs), 94–95, 119
Mabovitch, Bluma (mother), 16–18, 20–21, 23–29, 33–34, 39, 67, 83,
145, 236
Mabovitch, Clara “Tzipka” (sister), 17–18, 34, 63, 72–73, 175–76,
238, 269
Mabovitch, Moshe Yitzhak “Morris” (father), 16–18, 21, 23, 25,
27–28, 32, 34–35, 145, 175
Maimon, Ada, 54, 58
Malchin, Sarah, 51
Mali, 202, 204
Mandela, Nelson, 8
Manson, Charles, 10
Mapai (Eretz Yisrael Workers’ Party, Labor Party)
Central Committee of, 87, 292, 311,
352–53, 363
creation of, and early years in Palestine, 54, 65–66, 77, 89,
108–9, 117, 119
debate over occupied territories in, 298–300
defeat of, in 1977, 372
Eliav as secretary–general of, 291–92 Executive Committee, 97
first Israeli cabinet and, 141, 143
Golda heads, 217–18, 224–27 Golda holds together coalition with
splinter parties, 379, 381–82
labor strife of 1969–73 and, 243 power struggle in 1960s, and Ben-
Gurion’s resignation, 208–17
power struggle in, after Six-Day War and Golda’s designation as prime minister, 229–34
power struggle in, after Yom Kippur War and Golda’s resignation, 351–56, 361–66
religious Jews and, 178–79, 244–45 Six-Day War and reunification of,
221–22, 224–27
Mapam (Israeli Marxist Zionist party), 149, 217, 224, 226, 293
Marchi, John, 5
Marcus, Joel, 361
Maronite Christians, 182 marriage and divorce laws, 178,
244–45
Marshall, George, 143
Marxism, 33
Masada, 103, 276, 324, 380
Mashav (international cooperation program), 201
Mau-Mau, 201 Maupassant, Guy de, 34 Maurer, Gheorghe, 277–78
McGrory, Mary, 373
Meany, George, 264, 330, 345
Medzini, Meron, 193
Medzini, Regina Hamburger, 27, 33,
41, 45, 57, 69, 73, 193
Meet the Press
(TV show), 2, 3, 261 Meir, Golda Mabovitch (Meyerson)
Abdullah negotiations, and, 125–28, 141–43
African attempt at Arab-Israeli peace initiative and, 276–77
as ambassador to Soviet Union, 148–61
Meir, Golda Mabovitch (
continued
) as American Jewish Congress
convention delegate, 40–41 as American Young Sisters’ Society
president, 26–27
Anglo-American Commission testimony of, 111–15
Arab employment and, 173 Arab-Israeli peace talks and,
258–82
arrest of
yishuv
leaders and assumption of leadership by, 116–22
assassination attempt on, 284 autobiography and biographies of,
6–7, 374–75
awards and honors, 184
Bill for Compulsory Service for Women and, 178–79
Black Panther protests and, 250–55 celebrity of, 6–7
challenges from media and public as prime minister and, 248–50
changes name from Meyerson to Hebraicize, 183
childhood and education of, in Milwaukee, 5, 21, 23–29, 34–35
childhood of, in Russia, 16–21 Cyprus detention centers and, 130 death of, and assessment of political
leadership of, 376–85
death of Eshkol and power struggle following Six-Day War and, 230–31
death of husband Morris and ex- lover Remez and isolation of, 175–76
debate over occupied territories and, 287–307
declaration of independence and, 144–46
defense of Jerusalem in 1947 and, 133, 139
as delegate and leader in newly formed Mapai, 65–66
early pregnancy of, and abortion, 42
Egyptian peace negotiations of 1974 and, 356–60
Egyptian rapprochement of 1977 and, 371–72, 375–79
as emissary to Haifa Arabs before partition, 140
estrangement from daughter-in-law and granddaughter and, 175
Evian-les-Bains conference and, 90–94
fights for Jewish state and Jewish immigration, post–WW II, 106–11, 114–15, 122–23
fights for Jewish state and smuggles Jews from Europe, during WW II, 89–91, 94–104
first learns of Labor Zionism from sister Sheyna, in Russia, 18–21
as foreign minister
African nations and, 199–206 appointed, 182–87
power struggle vs. Ben-Gurion and, leads to his resignation, 207–17
power struggles with Peres, Ben-
Gurion, and Eban and, 196–99 resignation of, 212–13
fund-raising in U.S. by, 69–73, 78,
134–38, 147–49, 168–70,
173–74
health problems of, 141, 149–50,
174–75, 214, 310, 365
Histadrut involvement in fight for Jewish state and, 63–65, 76–79,
82
housing and public works programs and, 164–68
Hussein and, 301–7, 379 Jerusalem home of, as foreign
minister, 205–6 Jerusalem home of, while in
cabinet, 171–72
Jewish immigration issue and, 169–71
labor legislation and, 177
as labor minister in first cabinet of Israel, 161–76
as Labor Zionist organizer in Palestine, 79–82
leaves Morris and becomes secretary of Moetzet HaPoalot, 58–59
marriage of, to Morris ends in official separation, 82
meets and marries Morris Meyerson, and desire to move to Palestine, 32–41
as Merhavia representative and becomes active in Labor Zionism in Palestine, 52–55
moves to Palestine with Morris and joins kibbutz, 45–52
Munich Olympic attacks and, 283–87
Nazi Germany and Jewish immigration issue and, 85–86, 89–90
Orthodox Jews and, 178–79, 243–46 Palestinian nationhood issue and,
287–93, 379–80
as Palestinian Zionist emissary in
U.S. and Britain, 64–66 parents move to Palestine to join,
57–58
partition and establishment of Jewish state and, 131–34, 140–41, 144–46
Peel Commission and, 87–88 personality and loneliness of, 6–8,
82–84, 205–6, 383–84
Poale Zion and, 35–37, 41–43 political struggles in Palestine and,
on return from U.S., 75–77 as prime minister
Black Panther protest and, 250–55
challenges from media and public and, 248–50