My life as a radical Jewish woman : memoirs of a Zionist feminist in Poland /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Raḳoṿsḳa, Puʻah, 1865-1955.
Uniform title:Zikhroyneâs fun a Yidisher reòvolutsyonerin. English
Imprint:Bloomington ; Indianapolis : Indiana University Press, 2002.
Description:1 online resource (xi, 204 pages) : illustrations, map.
Language:English
Series:Modern Jewish Experience
Modern Jewish experience (Bloomington, Ind.)
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11115454
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Hyman, Paula, 1946-2011.
ISBN:0253108578
9780253108579
025334042X
9780253340429
0253215641
9780253215642
0253341817
9780253341815
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Print version record.
Summary:In this striking autobiography, Puah Rakovksy (1865-1955) tells of her experiences as a Jewish woman in later 19th- and early 20th-century Poland who broke with her traditional upbringing to become a professional educator, Zionist activist, and feminist leader. Her passionate account offers unprecedented entree into the life experience of East European Jewry in a period of massive social change.
Other form:Print version: Raḳoṿsḳa, Puʻah, 1865-1955. Zikhroyneâs fun a Yidisher reòvolutsyonerin. English. My life as a radical Jewish woman. Bloomington ; Indianapolis : Indiana University Press, 2002 025334042X
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Originally published in Yiddish in 1954, Rakovsky's straightforward, frequently absorbing memoir recounts one ardent idealist's experiences in Eastern Europe. Noted Jewish feminist historian Hyman (Gender and Assimilation in Modern Jewish History), of Yale, gives another life to this account of an unusual woman. Born into a rabbinical family, Rakovsky (1865-1955) early on cast aside religious practice but never lost a passionate sense of Jewish identity. While most Jewish women were illiterate, Rakovsky received both a Jewish and secular education. As a witness to several bloody pogroms, Rakovsky began to champion Zionism and would not allow her voice to be silenced by the males who dominated the Zionist and progressive movements of her day. In her zeal to give a voice and economic assistance to the poor Jewish women she encountered daily, she founded and devoted herself to the Jewish Women's Association in Poland, an organization with feminist, socialist and Zionist leanings. Having lost a beloved daughter and two grandchildren to illness, along with a sister to suicide, Rakovsky credits her work with getting her through difficult times. "If you are devoted, first to the interest and life of your own people, and at the same time to the problems of mankind in general, you feel different even about your own personal suffering," she writes. As Hyman notes in her introduction, Rakovsky did indeed live a revolutionary life, and she recounts it with the same passion with which she lived it. 2 b&w photos. (Nov.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review