The only woman in the room Golda Meir and her path to power

Pnina Lahav, 1945-

Book - 2022

"One of the founders of the state of Israel, Golda Meir (1898-1978) was Israel's ambassador to the USSR in 1948-49, subsequently served as Israel's Minister of Labor and Foreign Minister, and in 1969 became Israel's fourth Prime Minister. Born to poor and uneducated parents in Kiev as Golda Mabovitz and raised in Milwaukee, she settled in the British Mandate of Palestine in 1917. American Jews of an older generation cherish memories of her as an affable, grandmotherly head of state, a mesmerizing speech maker, a tough negotiator with the likes of Nixon and Kissinger, and as a sort of mother of the Jewish people. However, public memory of her is much more equivocal in Israel, partly due to misogynistic strains in Israeli ...political culture and to her perceived failures as Prime Minister during the 1973 Yom Kippur War, the conflict that arguably led to her resignation and withdrawal from politics. This biography of Golda Meir explores the evolution of her political persona from her teenage years until her death, focusing in particular on her ever-recurring role as the only woman in a room full of male political actors. Pnina Lahav reexamines the story of Golda Meir's early passion for socialist Zionism, her decision to marry early, her separation from husband Morris Meyerson, her decision to leave her children in the care of others in order to pursue her political ambitions, and her conduct first in the Israeli cabinet and then as the country's Prime Minister. Often derided and humiliated by the men with whom she had to work, Golda Meir had her own complicated issues with gender and showed clear signs of having internalized the masculine ideals of the twentieth-century Zionist leadership (as when, for example, she derided her colleague and fellow cabinet minister Abba Eban, a cultivated, highly-educated man, as "effeminate"). And like another notable twentieth-century female political leader, Margaret Thatcher, she was less than supportive of younger women who wanted to follow in her footsteps. While Golda Meir has been the subject of several biographies, Lahav's is unique in its exploration of Golda's complicated and evolving relationship to her identity as a woman, particularly one who ascended to the apex of a patriarchal power structure"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
Princeton : Princeton University Press 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Pnina Lahav, 1945- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xxv, 344 pages : illustrations (black and white) ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780691201740
  • Introduction
  • Part I. Growing Up
  • 1. In Imperial Russia
  • 2. To America
  • 3. Goldie and Morris Get Married
  • 4. Finding Her Vocation: Political Activism
  • Part II. Palestine, 1921-1948
  • 5. The USS Pocahontas
  • 6. A Sojourn in Tel Aviv
  • 7. Comrade Golda and Comrade Morris in Kibbutz Merhavia
  • 8. Love and Marriage: Not a Fairy Tale
  • 9. The Attraction of Socialist Politics
  • 10. Pioneer Women: A Platform of Her Own
  • 11. World War II: The Ground Is Burning
  • Part III. 1948-1964
  • 12. From Israel's First Emissary to the Soviet Union to Minister of Labor
  • 13. In Israel's First Cabinet: Golda Is Appointed Minister of Labor
  • 14. Golda's Conception of the Family
  • 15. Enter the "Other Woman": Shabbat, the "Sacred Queen," and the Secular Minister of Labor
  • 16. Golda's Appointment as Minister of Foreign Affairs, 1956
  • 17. Golda's First International Crisis: The Nationalization of the Suez Shipping Company
  • 18. The African Connection
  • Part IV. 1964-1978
  • 19. Ascendance: Madam Prime Minister
  • 20. Golda as an Object of Humiliation
  • 21. From Bathtub to Pedestal: An Interview with Oriana Fallaci
  • 22. Golda and Her Nemesis: Shulamit Aloni and the Question of Who Is a Jew
  • 23. Who Is a Jew? Individual Rights, Jewish Law, the Expediency of Politics, and the "Foreign Woman"
  • 24. Golda and the Revival of Feminism
  • 25. Nightmare: The Yom Kippur War
  • 26. In the Company of Men
  • 27. The End
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An in-depth portrait of a woman of contradictions. An emeritus law professor and member of the Elie Wiesel Center for Judaic Studies, Lahav takes a feminist perspective in her examination of Golda Meir (1898-1978), the former prime minister of Israel, seeking to show how "she balanced her womanhood with her political ambitions." Born in Kiev, Golda (as she preferred to be called) was the second daughter in a traditional patriarchal family; she was expected to marry and become a homemaker. The family moved to America in 1906, settling in Milwaukee, where Golda became increasingly oppressed by her parents' strictures. When she was 14, she took off for Denver, joining her older sister. There, she became attracted to the nascent Zionist party and began her career as a Zionist-socialist activist. By 1921, she had married and moved with her husband to Palestine, where her "energetic talents" were prized. The marriage, though, suffered, even after the couple had two children. Golda and her husband separated, and she relegated her child care to nannies so she could devote herself to politics. Despite misogyny both within Israel and abroad, Golda rose to prominence. Although she was not named to the nation's first cabinet in 1948, a slight that angered her, she soon gained central roles: as minister of labor and social security in 1949, minister of foreign affairs in 1956, and Israel's first female prime minister in 1969. Lahav tries to understand Golda's lack of interest in feminism, her refusal to "challenge the othering of women," and her vehement criticism of the women's liberation movement by speculating about what Golda "might have" felt and by posing salient questions. Famously called "the ablest man in the cabinet" by her mentor, David Ben-Gurion, she was deeply aware that she navigated a man's world, but as Lahav shows, she felt no responsibility to break the glass ceiling for other women. Her interest was solely in the survival of Israel. A thoughtful portrait of a complex world leader. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.