Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Beba Idelson

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Year of aliyah
  
1926

Role
  
Politician

Name
  
Beba Idelson

1949–1965
  
Mapai

Place of death
  
Tel Aviv, Israel


Beba Idelson httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Date of birth
  
(1895-10-14)14 October 1895

Place of birth
  
Ekaterinoslav, Russian Empire

Date of death
  
5 December 1975(1975-12-05) (aged 80)

Died
  
January 5, 1975, Tel Aviv, Israel

Knessets
  
Israeli legislative election, 1949

Beba Idelson (Hebrew: בבה אידלסון‎‎, 14 November 1895 – 5 December 1975) was a Zionist activist and Israeli politician.

Contents

Beba Idelson Beba Idelson Wikipedia

Biography

Beba Idelson httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsaa

Beba Idelson (née Trakhtenbereg) was born in Ekaterinoslav in the Russian Empire (now Dnipropetrovsk, Ukraine) in 1895. When she was eight, her mother died giving birth to her thirteenth child and at the age of fourteen she lost her father, Yitzhak. Along with her grandmother and brother, she helped to support the family. In 1912 she graduated from high school, and went on to study Economics and Social Sciences at the University in Ukraine. In 1913, shaken by the Beilis trial, she became interested in Zionism and in 1915 she joined the “Youth of Zion” (later to be merged into Hashomer Hatzair). In 1917 she joined the Zionist Socialist Party and married Yisrael Idelson (later Yisrael Bar-Yehuda), a senior party member. For their Zionist activism they were banished to Siberia. That year she also gave birth to the couple's only daughter, Rebecca. In 1924, thanks to an intercession by Maxim Gorki's wife, their banishment was converted to deportation to Eretz Israel.

Between 1924 and 1926 she was active in the World Union of Socialist Zionists in Europe, and in 1926 they immigrated to the British Mandate of Palestine. Yisrael worked for the party and became secretary of the workers of Petah Tikva while Beba worked in agriculture. She later divorced Idelson and married Haim Halperin. From 1927 to 1928 she worked as a statistician for the World Zionist Organization and then joined the Ahdut HaAvoda party. In 1930 she became secretary of the “Council of Working Women” and led several women's organizations. She was a delegate to the Jewish National Council and contacted many socialist leaders, arguably including Leon Trotsky in Mexico in October 1937.

During World War II Idelson and Hadassah Samuel from the Women's International Zionist Organization were the prime movers behind the volunteering of Jewish women from the Yishuv to the British army. A total of 3,200 women served in the Auxiliary Territorial Service, and 789 in the Women's Auxiliary Air Force.

Political career

After the State of Israel was established in 1948 Idelson was a member of the Provisional State Council and headed the Flag and Emblem Committee, which chose the Emblem of Israel.

In 1949-1965, Idelson was elected to the first five Knessets for Mapai. She was a member of the Constitution, Law and Justice, House, Foreign Affairs & Defense and Labor Committees. She promoted social reforms and women's equality and opposed the religious coercion. She also supported applying the mandatory draft to the IDF to women as well as men. In 1960 she was chairwoman of the Histadrut's ninth Committee and was its member until 1965. From 1968 to 1975 she was chairwoman of the World Movement of Pioneer Women. She retired from the Council of Working Women in 1974. She died in 1975.

References

Beba Idelson Wikipedia