For Jerusalem: A Life

· Plunkett Lake Press
Ebook
322
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

“The affectionate and enthusiastic memoirs of the Israeli politician, and, since 1965, mayor of Jerusalem.“ — The New York Times Selection of the Best Books of 1978


“Mayor Teddy Kollek’s relation to Jerusalem is not merely that of an elected official to his community; not only that of a Jew the city of his fathers. The connection is intensely symbiotic. Jerusalem without Teddy is as inconceivable as Israel itself would be without Jerusalem. The high‐energy brightness with which he sparkles is the result of this symbiosis... His auburn hair works, heavy and winglike, as he hurries about the city. You see him everywhere. His record is one of construction, reconciliation, improvement. He deals justly, he is enlightened and he does good left and right. Such is the image. Such is, to an extent to be more exactly defined, also the fact. His autobiography, written with the assistance of his capable son, Amos, is called, For Jerusalem: A Life. The title tells it all; life and Jerusalem are for Teddy inseparable.“ — Saul Bellow, The New York Times

About the author

Named after Theodor Herzl, the father of Zionism, Teddy Kollek (1911-2007) was born in Nagyvázsony, a Hungarian village where his father was stationed as an officer in the Austro-Hungarian army during World War I. He was raised in Vienna and while in high school, joined the Zionist youth movement “Blau Weiss” where he met Tamar, six years his junior, whom he would marry in 1937. In 1935 Kollek immigrated to Palestine, then under British Mandate and, with a group of other Austrian Jews, he moved to the East Bank of the Sea of Galilee in 1937. He worked as a fisherman and as mukhtar (or head) of Kibbutz Ein Gev, which they had founded. In the early 1940s, Kollek started working for David Ben-Gurion, head of the Jewish Agency. During World War II Kollek was an intelligence agent who kept close contact with Britain’s MI5. In 1947-48 he headed the Haganah Mission that acquired arms for Israel’s War of Independence.


In 1949 Teddy, Tamar and their son Amos, born in 1947, moved to Washington, where Teddy’s main job was to establish contact between Israel’s Mossad and the CIA. In 1952 they returned to Israel and Kollek became Ben-Gurion’s Director of the Prime Minister’s office, a position he held until 1964 when Ben-Gurion retired. In 1960 his daughter Osnat was born. In 1965 Kollek successfully ran for Mayor of Jerusalem, a position he held for 28 years until 1993, having been re-elected five times.


After June 1967, when Israel conquered East Jerusalem, Kollek worked on uniting the city. As a successful fund-raiser, second only to Shimon Peres in Israel, he initiated the Israel Museum, the Jerusalem Theater, the Biblical Zoo, the Jerusalem Foundation and the soccer stadium that was named after him. Kollek brought distinguished artists, painters, movie actors, writers, directors and singers to Israel, including Frank Sinatra, Liz Taylor, Saul Bellow, Isaac Stern, Zubin Mehta and Alfred Hitchcock. Famous and loved all over the world, Kollek refused to become a politician, saying “From Jerusalem there is no promotion.” He died in Jerusalem at age 95.

Born in Jerusalem in 1947, Amos Kollek attended school in Jerusalem and served in the Israel Defense Forces during the Six Day War (1967) and the Yom Kippur War (1973) in Ariel Sharon’s force that crossed the Suez Canal to Ismailia.


While studying at the Hebrew University for his BA in Psychology and Philosophy he wrote his first novel, Don’t Ask Me if I Love, which was published in the US and won the M. Evans Award for Fiction. He wrote four more novels and two non-fiction books, including For Jerusalem, A Life in which he collaborated with his father, Teddy Kollek, on his autobiography.


In 1968 Kollek turned to filmmaking. He wrote and directed all his films and he also produced and acted in some of them. His full length features include “Goodbye, NY”, “Forever Lulu”, “Double Edge”, “Sue”, “Fiona”, “Fast Food, Fast Women” nominated for the 2000 Palme D’Or in Cannes, “Happy End” and “Restless”. His documentaries include “From Vienna to Jerusalem”, Teddy Kollek’s life story, “Embittered Glory” about the 9/11 events and the autobiographical “Chronicling a Crisis”.

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