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Henrietta Szold (1860-1945)
Had
Henrietta Szold been born in 1960 instead of 1860, she probably would
have become a rabbi. One of eight daughters of a Baltimore rabbi, Szold
was a passionate and accomplished student of Judaism. She even won
permission to study Jewish texts at the then male-only Jewish
Theological Seminary, on condition that she never agitate to be granted
rabbinic ordination. Later, she translated Heinrich Graetz's monumental
multivolume History of the Jews from German into English.
Szold was, in certain respects, a forerunner of Jewish women's
liberation. When her mother died in 1916, a close male friend, Haym
Peretz, volunteered to say the Mourner's Kaddish for the dead woman.
Szold graciously refused the offer. "I believe" she wrote him, "that the
elimination of women from such duties was never intended by our law and
custom. Women were freed from positive duties when they could not
perform them [because of family responsibilities] but not when they
could. It was never intended that, if they could perform them, their
performance of them should not be considered as valuable and valid as
when one of the male sex performed them."
Szold's outstanding contribution to Jewish life was the creation of the
largest Jewish organization in American history, Hadassah Women.
Although Zionist, Hadassah particularly involved itself in meeting the
health needs of both Jews and Arabs in Palestine. Today, the foremost
hospital in Israel and the entire Middle East is the Hadassah Hospital
in Jerusalem. Szold insisted that the most up-to-date medical treatment
be extended to the Arabs of Palestine as well as to the Jews, and
Hadassah played a major role in lowering Arab infant mortality. The
Hadassah spirit of volunteerism and nondiscrimination was unfortunately
rejected by the Arab leadership, which may have feared that its example
would lessen hatred between Jews and Arabs. In early 1948, just before
the State of Israel was declared, Arab troops ambushed and murdered
seventy seven Jewish doctors and nurses from Hadassah Hospital.
During the 1930s, Szold involved Hadassah in a program to rescue Jewish
youth from Germany, and later from all of Europe. It is estimated that
the program she created, "Youth Aliyah," saved some 22,000 Jewish
children from Hitler's concentration camps.
The personal tragedy of Szold's life was that she never married; this
woman, whose life was devoted to saving the lives of children, never had
children of her own. While in her forties, she did fall passionately in
love with the great Talmud scholar Louis Ginzberg. He was fifteen years
her junior, and returned her feelings only platonically. Shortly after
their relationship ended, she wrote: "Today it is four weeks since my
only real happiness was killed." Many years later, she confided to a
friend: "I would exchange everything for one child of my own."
To this day Henrietta Szold is regarded as one of the genuine heroic
figures of American-Jewish history, a scholarly woman, a passionately
committed Jew and a person who saved many thousands of lives. The
organization she founded, Hadassah, has as of 1990 about 350,000
members, and is the largest Jewish organization in the United States |