Nina Katzir
Nina Katzir | |
---|---|
First Lady of Israel | |
In role 24 May 1973 – 29 May 1978 | |
President | Ephraim Katzir |
Preceded by | Rachel Katznelson-Shazar |
Succeeded by | Ofira Navon |
Personal details | |
Born | Mogilev, Poland | 4 October 1914
Died | 12 March 1986 Rehovot, Israel | (aged 71)
Spouse(s) | [1] |
Children | 3 |
Alma mater | Beit Hakerem seminary |
Occupation | English teacher |
Nina Katzir (Hebrew: נינה קציר; née Gottlieb; October 4, 1914 – March 12, 1986) was the wife of the President of the State of Israel Ephraim Katzir, and an English teacher at Tichon meuhad high school in Rehovot.
Biography[]
Born in Mogilev to the Gottlieb family. At the age of 16, she made Aliya to Mandatory Palestine alone and settled on the Rehovot, at her grandfather's house. After graduating from the Beit Hakerem seminary in Jerusalem, she worked as a teacher. She taught Hebrew in Ulpan for new immigrants and taught English in schools. As an English language teacher, she became famous for the modern teaching methods she developed.
She had a column in the Jerusalem Post devoted to foreign language teaching problems. In 1973 she wrote the tourist information book "Hebrew with a smile" which was published by the Ministry of Tourism.
As the wife of the President, she initiated meetings between children's writers and children. On her own initiative, International Children's Week was celebrated in Israel, as part of its activities, wife of diplomats talk about Israel to children in their country of origin.
After the Yom Kippur War, she created a minor scandal, when she initiated the distribution of thousands of "Playboy" booklets to the soldiers at the front due to a request from soldiers. [2][3]
The Katzir couple had three children: one son, Meir Kaczelski, who serves as a professor of mathematics at the Technion, and two daughters who died at a young age: daughter Nurit died in a gas inhalation accident and daughter Irit who committed suicide.
She acted as part of the "Nurit Foundation" in memory of her daughter, and organized activities for the teenagers. In 1978, the Nurit Katzir Municipal Theater Center in Jerusalem was established in her memory. Other institutions were inaugurated in her daughter name, including the MDA Youth Club and the Nursing School at Assaf Harofeh Hospital.
References[]
- Spouses of presidents of Israel
- Teachers of English as a second or foreign language
- Polish Ashkenazi Jews
- The Jerusalem Post people
- People from Mogilev
- 1914 births
- 1986 deaths