Misplaced Pages

Nathan Mileikowsky

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Zionist political activist (1879–1935)
Nathan Mileikowsky
Born(1879-08-15)15 August 1879
Kreva, Vilna Governorate, Russian Empire
Died4 February 1935(1935-02-04) (aged 55)
Jerusalem, Mandatory Palestine
CitizenshipRussian, later British subject
SpouseSarah Lurie
Children9, including Benzion and Elisha
RelativesYonatan, Benjamin, Iddo and Nathan Netanyahu (grandsons)
Yair Netanyahu (great-grandson)

Nathan Mileikowsky (Hebrew: נתן מיליקובסקי; 15 August 1879 – 4 February 1935) was a Russian-born Zionist political activist, rabbi, and writer. Mileikowsky's son was the scholar and academic Benzion Netanyahu, and his grandson is current Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Biography

Mileikowsky was born in 1879 in Kreva, Russian Empire (today located in Belarus), which at that time was part of the Pale of Settlement (region of Imperial Russia in which permanent residency by Jews was allowed) the son of Zvi Mileikowsky and Liba Gitel Halevi. Mileikowsky's father made a living from leasing an agricultural estate in a nearby village. At the age of 10, Mileikowsky was sent to the Volozhin yeshiva, where he spent eight years and was ordained.

Already while Mileikowsky attended yeshiva he began to make speeches and lectures and was in contact with the Zionist activist Yehuda Zvi Yabzrov who encouraged him to engage in this field. At the age of 20, Mileikowsky began promoting Zionism in the Siberia region, following a request to do so by the Zionist leader Yechiel Chlenov. In the following years Mileikowsky continued to engage in Zionist promotion and in addition gave speeches against the "Bund" movement and against other socialist Jewish anti-Zionist movements. During the Sixth Zionist Congress Mileikowsky was among the opponents of the Uganda Programme, despite belonging to the Theodor Herzl camp.

In 1908, Mileikowsky moved to Poland and became the director of the Hebrew Gymnasium of Mordechai Yaakov Krinsky in Warsaw, while continuing to promote Zionism in Poland. He went through hundreds of towns and was considered one of the most popular Zionist speakers. In 1912, Mileikowsky moved to Łódź, and served as a Maggid in the Zionist synagogue "Beth Jacob". He used to deliver his sermons in Hebrew, an uncommon practice at that time. In 1913, the Hebrew newspaper Ha-Tsefirah reported about a major event held in Lodz organized by the members of the Mizrachi movement. The report mentioned also the "excellent speech" made by Rabbi Mileikowsky, which was carried partly in Hebrew and partly in Yiddish. According to his son, Benzion Netanyahu, the Mileikowsky family was one of the few families in the world who spoke Hebrew at that time. In 1914, Mileikowsky was appointed rabbi of the city Rivne, but following World War I he remained with his family in Lodz.

In 1920, Mileikowsky immigrated to Mandatory Palestine with his wife and nine children, and became the director of the school "Vilkomitz" in Rosh Pina. During this period he published various articles in the Hebrew press promoting the Jewish settlement of the Galilee region. On some of the articles, he published he signed under the name "Netanyahu", a surname his sons adopted.

In 1924, he moved with his family to Jerusalem, and during that same year he traveled to England on behalf of Menachem Ussishkin in order to raise funds for the Jewish National Fund and Keren Hayesod. Following the success of these campaigns he was sent to the United States on behalf of the Jewish National Fund. Mileikowsky's numerous speeches made a strong impression on the American Jewish community. In 1926, the newspaper "Dos Yiddishe Folk" reported that the American Zionist Rabbi Mileikowsky lectured in 700 lectures through nine months. Once a year, Mileikowsky used to visit Palestine. In 1928, Mileikowsky published several of his speeches in the book Nation and State (Hebrew: עם ומדינה).

On the eve of the 1929 Palestine riots, Mileikowsky returned to Palestine, purchased land in Herzliya in which he built up a farm, and in addition he was active in the Hitahdut HaIkarim settlement movement for private farmers.

After the assassination of Haim Arlosoroff in 1933, Rabbi Mileikowsky, who was affiliated with the Revisionist movement, took part in the establishment of a public committee, headed by Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook, which protected those accused of Arlosoroff's assassination—namely, Zvi Rosenblatt and Abraham Stavsky. Rabbi Mileikowsky argued that the evidence indicated that they did not commit the assassination and that their execution could lead to a civil war, which would harm the Zionist enterprise.

Rabbi Mileikowsky died in Jerusalem on February 4, 1935, and was buried in the Mount of Olives Cemetery. Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook referred to Mileikowsky in his eulogy as a "divine speaker".

The square most adjacent to Israel's national cemetery in Mount Herzl is named after Nathan Mileikowsky.

Family

Nathan and his wife Sarah Mileikowsky (née Lurie) had nine children, including: Benzion Netanyahu (the father of Iddo, Yonatan and Benjamin Netanyahu) and Elisha Netanyahu (the husband of Shoshana Netanyahu and the father of Nathan Netanyahu).

Nathan Mileikowsky
(Writer and Zionist activist)
Benzion Netanyahu
(Professor of History and Zionist activist)
Elisha Netanyahu
(Professor of Mathematics)
Shoshana Shenburg
(Justice at the Supreme Court of Israel)
Yonatan Netanyahu
(Commander of Sayeret Matkal)
Benjamin Netanyahu
(Prime Minister of Israel)
Iddo Netanyahu
(radiologist, author and playwright)
Nathan Netanyahu
(Professor of Computer Science)

References

  1. ^ Tidhar, David (1947). "Rabbi Nathan Mileikowsky-Netanyahu" הרב נתן מיליקובסקי-נתניהו. Encyclopedia of the Founders and Builders of Israel (in Hebrew). Vol. 1. Estate of David Tidhar and Touro College Libraries. p. 186.
  2. חלון כתבה
  3. Harel Cohen (November 13, 1987). רבנים נגד הסתה [Rabbis against incitement] (in Hebrew). Arutz Sheva.
  4. Vered Levy-Barzilai (July 19, 2006). אבן מאסו הבונים [Stone rejected by builders]. Haaretz (in Hebrew). Retrieved September 2, 2014.
  5. חלון כתבה
  6. עם ומדינה: נתן מיליקובסקי נתניהו [Nation and State: Nathan Mileikowsky-Netanyahu] (in Hebrew). Simiana. Retrieved September 2, 2014.
  7. Reuven Stein (30 April 2012). נפטר פרופ’ בן-ציון נתניהו, אביו של ראש הממשלה [Died Prof. Ben-Zion Netanyahu, the prime minister's father] (in Hebrew). JDN. Retrieved September 2, 2014.
  8. בין פרופ' נתניהו לד"ר אחימאיר [Between Professor Netanyahu and Dr. Achimeir] (in Hebrew). Beit Aba. 8 March 2010. Retrieved September 2, 2014.
Categories: