Idioma: Hebreo
Publicado por Davar, Tel Aviv, Israel, 1952
Librería: Meir Turner, New York, NY, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 12,43
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoHardcover. Condición: Very Good. No Jacket. In Hebrew, vowelized. 198 pages. 17 x 12 cm. Chaim Shurer (July 1, 1895 Obodivka, Podolye, Russian Empire (now Ukraine) - February 13, 1968 Tel Aviv-Jaffa, Israel) was editor of the "Davar" newspaper (1954-1966) and won the Sokolov Press Prize (1960). He studied in a Heder, in the gymnasium in Chisinau and in a Yeshiva in Odessa, and at the same time was active in the Zionist movement and the "Tse'irei Zion" movement, and was one of the first members of the Ness Ziona Youth Association founded in Chisinau in 1910. He immigrated to Eretz Israel in 1913. For nine years he worked in agricultural work in Judea, in the Galilee, he worked on the agricultural farm in Lower Haniya and on the agricultural farm in the rat, after which he settled in Nahalal and was one of the first settlers there. Even before his immigration to Israel, he began to publish Russian-language articles in the newspaper Razsweit ("The Dawn"). During World War I, he was recruited for forced labor for the Ottoman army and served as a carriage escort to Beer Sheva until he fell ill and was released from service. After World War I, he returned to Chisinau, where he spent about a year with his family, working at the He - Chaluts Center and publishing his journals in the Hebrew press. In Israel, in 1920, two of his stories were published in the "Ha'adima" edition, edited by Joseph Haim Brenner, one of which was aired and presented to the public with his participation. As part of his movement activity, he was a member of the "Hapoel Hatzair" in Israel and wrote in the movement's weekly, and also participated in a short period of editing with Yosef Aharonovitch. Throughout his life in Israel, he was a member of the World Union Secretariat Poalei Zion Association, Mapai Secretariat, Workers' Council in Kfar Saba, and served on the Jewish National Fund's mission to Poland and Romania. At the party's founding conference, he was elected Secretary of Mapai, and served for three years, along with other secretaries. In 1933 he went on a mission in Galicia on behalf of the party, and during the 1930s participated in a number of Zionist congresses as well as the International Socialist Congress. Returning to Galicia, he spent two years with Eliezer Shochat, the 13-volume anthology of Hapoel Hatzair. During World War II, he volunteered for the British Army, serving in the first Israeli battery for anti-aircraft artillery. He described his experiences in the unit in "Soldier 9172". He participated in the "Davar" newspaper from its inception, but his political affiliation with the "Hapoel Hatzair" movement and his participation in the struggles of Joseph Sprintzak to maintain the movement's character within Mapai were those that delayed his joining as a member of the newspaper system until 1936. , Editor of "Talk to the Immigrant" and "Generation" editor, and became editor of the main newspaper in 1953. A year later he was invited to visit the Soviet Union, was greatly influenced by him and began writing to increase consciousness of the state of Russian Jewry, his book "Forty Days in the Soviet Union" earned him the Sokolov Award.
Idioma: Hebreo
Publicado por World Federation of Bessarabian Jews, 21 Hachashmal Street, Tel Aviv, Israel, 1963
Librería: Meir Turner, New York, NY, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 13,32
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoHardcover. Condición: Very Good. Estado de la sobrecubierta: Good. In Hebrew. ex library. 294 pages. Illustrated. 216 x 146 mm. Ephraim Moses Lilien image on front of dust jacket. Very slight water damage to margin of some pages. Chaim Shurer (July 1, 1895 Obodivka, Podolye, Russian Empire (now Ukraine) - February 13, 1968 Tel Aviv-Jaffa, Israel) was editor of the "Davar" newspaper (1954-1966) and won the Sokolov Press Prize (1960). He studied in a Heder, in the gymnasium in Chisinau and in a Yeshiva in Odessa, and at the same time was active in the Zionist movement and the "Tse'irei Zion" movement, and was one of the first members of the Ness Ziona Youth Association founded in Chisinau in 1910. He immigrated to Eretz Israel in 1913. For nine years he worked in agricultural work in Judea, in the Galilee, he worked on the agricultural farm in Lower Haniya and on the agricultural farm in the rat, after which he settled in Nahalal and was one of the first settlers there. Even before his immigration to Israel, he began to publish Russian-language articles in the newspaper Razsweit ("The Dawn"). During World War I, he was recruited for forced labor for the Ottoman army and served as a carriage escort to Beer Sheva until he fell ill and was released from service. After World War I, he returned to Chisinau, where he spent about a year with his family, working at the He - Chaluts Center and publishing his journals in the Hebrew press. In Israel, in 1920, two of his stories were published in the "Ha'adima" edition, edited by Joseph Haim Brenner, one of which was aired and presented to the public with his participation. As part of his movement activity, he was a member of the "Hapoel Hatzair" in Israel and wrote in the movement's weekly, and also participated in a short period of editing with Yosef Aharonovitch. Throughout his life in Israel, he was a member of the World Union Secretariat Poalei Zion Association, Mapai Secretariat, Workers' Council in Kfar Saba, and served on the Jewish National Fund's mission to Poland and Romania. At the party's founding conference, he was elected Secretary of Mapai, and served for three years, along with other secretaries. In 1933 he went on a mission in Galicia on behalf of the party, and during the 1930s participated in a number of Zionist congresses as well as the International Socialist Congress. Returning to Galicia, he spent two years with Eliezer Shochat, the 13-volume anthology of Hapoel Hatzair. During World War II, he volunteered for the British Army, serving in the first Israeli battery for anti-aircraft artillery. He described his experiences in the unit in "Soldier 9172". He participated in the "Davar" newspaper from its inception, but his political affiliation with the "Hapoel Hatzair" movement and his participation in the struggles of Joseph Sprintzak to maintain the movement's character within Mapai were those that delayed his joining as a member of the newspaper system until 1936. , Editor of "Talk to the Immigrant" and "Generation" editor, and became editor of the main newspaper in 1953. A year later he was invited to visit the Soviet Union, was greatly influenced by him and began writing to increase consciousness of the state of Russian Jewry, his book "Forty Days in the Soviet Union" earned him the Sokolov Award.