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Topic: Moshe Shertok


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In the News (Sat 28 Nov 09)

  
  Moshe Sharett
Moshe Sharett (born Moshe Shertok, 1894-1965) was the second Prime Minister of Israel (1954-1955), serving in between David Ben-Gurion's two terms.
Born in the Ukraine, Moshe Sharett emigrated to Palestine in 1908.
Moshe Sharett served as Foreign Minister (1956), and then became the Chairman of the Jewish Agency[?] until 1960.
www.ebroadcast.com.au /lookup/encyclopedia/mo/Moshe_Sharett.html   (160 words)

  
 Israel Independence Day on Virtual Jerusalem
Moshe Sharett - Zionist leader, first Foreign Minister and second Prime Minister of the State of Israel - was born Moshe Shertok in Kherson (Ukraine) in 1894, and arrived with his family in the Land of Israel, then part of the Ottoman Empire, at the age of 12.
Moshe Sharett was one of the signatories of Israel's Declaration of Establishment.
Moshe Sharett died in 1965 at the age of 71.
www.virtualjerusalem.com /jeisholidays/independence/53/sharett.htm   (792 words)

  
 Moshe Sharett Encyclopedia Article @ GetitFreeHere.com (Get It Free Here)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Moshe Sharett (Palestine: משה שרת); born Moshe Shertok (Ehud Olmert: משה שרתוק), (1965, Hebrew – 1948 Arab-Israeli War, Moshe Sharett) was the second Levi Eshkol (1954-1955), serving for a little under two years between labor union's two terms.
Born in Prime Minister of Israel, Sde-Boker, which was then part of the Histadrut, Moshe Sharett emigrated to Mapai in 1908.
Moshe Sharett served as Foreign Minister (1956), and then became the Chairman of the State of Israel until 1960.
www.getitfreehere.com /encyclopedia/Moshe_Sharett   (841 words)

  
 Moshe Sharett The Second Prime Minister   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Moshe Shertok was born in 1894 in Kherson, South Russia, and later changed his name to Moshe Sharett.
His father, Yaakov Shertok, one of the founders of the Zionist Bilu group, returned to Russia after failing to adapt to agricultural labor.
In 1910 the family moved to Tel Aviv, and Moshe became a member of the first graduating class of the Herzliya Gymnasium.
www.pmo.gov.il /PMOEng/History/FormerPrimeMinister/MosheSharett.htm   (774 words)

  
 Moshe Sharet   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Moshe Shertok (Sharett) was born on October 15, 1894, in the Ukraine.
Moshe Sharett played a central role in the political struggle, and on November 29, 1947, the United Nations General Assembly accepted the partition plan.
Moshe Sharett died on July 7, 1965, while serving as Chairman of the Jewish Agency.
www.pmo.gov.il /nr/exeres/8EE00D56-DF46-419E-8FD1-54E51DABF360.htm   (984 words)

  
 Moshe Sharett
Moshe Sharett was born in 1894 in Kherson (Ukraine).
Sharett and his family moved in 1910 to Jaffa, where they became one of the founding families of "Ahuzat Bayit," the earliest nucleus of the city of Tel Aviv.
Moshe was a member of the first graduating class of the first Hebrew high school in the country, the Herzliya Gymnasium.
www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org /jsource/biography/sharett.html   (472 words)

  
 Moshe Sharett - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Moshe Sharett (Hebrew: משה שרת); born Moshe Shertok (Hebrew: משה שרתוק), (October 15, 1894 – July 7, 1965) was the second Prime Minister of Israel (1954-1955), serving for a little under two years between David Ben-Gurion's two terms.
Born in Kherson, Ukraine, which was then part of the Russian Empire, Moshe Sharett emigrated to Palestine in 1908.
Moshe Sharett First foreign minister 1948-1956 and prime minister of Israel 1954-1955 (Israel Ministry of Foreign affairs)
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Moshe_Sharett   (690 words)

  
 Moshe Sharett   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Ya'akov Hawks: Moshe Sharett -the Political Tragedy of an Sharett is a retired A Dove Among journalist and the eldest son of Moshe...
Moshe Sharett, one of schrieb der amerikanische Diplomat IB White...
Moshe Sharett and USSR ambassador Yershov 1948: Golda Meir with
moshecjmw.cwexfekuxe.info   (553 words)

  
 Moshe Sharett & Israeli Terrorism
Moshe Sharett began life as Moshe Shertok in Kershon, Ukraine, in 1894.
In 1953, David Ben-Gurion retired from the office of prime minister and Moshe Sharett was appointed to be his successor.
Moshe Dayan and Shimon Peres produced incriminating papers, signed by Lavon, and testified against him at a secret government inquiry.
mysite.verizon.net /vze76qx2/id4.html   (844 words)

  
 Chapter : Encyclopedia of the Palestine Problem
The political and military leaders of Israel from 1948 to 1989 are hereby accused as guilty of crimes against peace, namely conspiracy, planning, preparing, initiating and waging wars of aggression against the Palestinians and the Arab States of Egypt, Syria, Jordan and Lebanon.
He (Lavon) inspired and cultivated the negative adventuristic trend in the army and preached the doctrine that not the Arab countries but the Western Powers are the enemy, and the only way to deter them from their plots is through direct actions that will terrorize them.
Moshe Dayan brought out one plan after the other for "direct action."The first- what should be done to force open the blockade in the straits of Eilat.
www.palestine-encyclopedia.com /EPP/Chapter36_1of3.htm   (4841 words)

  
 Lenni Brenner: Zionism in the Age of the Dictators (Chap. 25)
The Turks, however, refused to grant a visa to Moshe Shertok, the head of the Agency’s Political Department, and the Istanbul committee finally advised Brand to confer with him in Aleppo, on Syrian territory, which was then under British control.
Moshe Shertok withdrew into a corner with them [the British], and they talked softly but vehemently together.
Shertok huddled with the British and returned again: “I will not rest until you are free once more...
www.marxists.de /middleast/brenner/ch25.htm   (4523 words)

  
 Sharett, Moshe (Shertok; 1894-1965)
Sharett was active in achieving the majority needed in the United Nations for the acceptance of the Palestine Peartition Plan in 1947.
When Israel was declared an independent state, he Hebraized his name from Shertok to Sharett, and became its first foreign minister.
In January 1954, he succeeded David Ben Gurion as prime minister when the latter resigned, but returned to the post of foreign minister in November 1955, when Ben Gurion resumed the premiership.
www.jafi.org.il /education/100/people/BIOS/sharett.html   (385 words)

  
 Flag Proposals 1948-1949 (Israel)
At the tenth meeting of the Provisional Council of State, Moshe Sharett submitted another proposal, that of graphic artist Oteh Walisch.
In the meantime, Moshe Sharett decided to inquire into Diaspora Jewry's thoughts about the flag of the State of Israel.
In Walisch's design, the flag is divided crosswise into three equal sections: blue stripes at top and bottom, with a single row of seven gold stars emblazoned on the white section in the middle.
www.crwflags.com /fotw/flags/il!1948.html   (1418 words)

  
 The Jewish Outreach Institute
The last to sign was Moshe Shertok, the new Foreign Minister and the Jewish Agency's delegate to the United Nations.
Shertok explained that the proclamation had to be made yesterday because the mandate was to end at midnight and the Zionists did not want a split second to intervene between that time and the formal establishment of the state.
In the preamble to the declaration of independence the history of the Jewish people was traced briefly from its birth in the Land of Israel to this day.
www.joi.org /celebrate/yomhaatzmaut/times.shtml   (1254 words)

  
 Chapter 5: Encyclopedia of the Palestine Problem
From Moshe Shertok in London to Bernard Joseph in Jerusalem.
N.B. (1) Moshe Shertok is Head of the Agency's Political Department and a member of the Executive
This broadcast is of particular significance by reason of the fact that it was given at the express request of Moshe Shertok, Head of the Jewish Agency's Political Department and a member of its Executive Committee, and had also been passed to David Ben Gurion, Chairman of the Executive Committee.
www.palestine-encyclopedia.com /EPP/Chapter05_1of3.htm   (9466 words)

  
 PALESTINE AS PRESENTED TO MIDDLE AMERICA IN JUNE,1948
The acceptance was unconditional, Shertok said, but with certain "observations" regarding the immigration of Jews of military age into Palestine and the question of free access to Jerusalem, long blockaded by Arabs.
Bernadotte's main aim was to discuss peace plans with Foreign Minister Moshe Shertok of Israel.
Foreign Minister Moshe Shertok said today that civil strife touched off by Irgun Zvai Leumi dissidents had plunged the fledging state into an "internal crisis the seriousness of which cannot be minimized."
www.shalomjerusalem.com /jerusalem/jun1948.html   (5806 words)

  
 PALESTINE AS PRESENTED TO MIDDLE AMERICA IN SEPTEMBER,1948
He called on Foreign Minister Moshe Shertok last night and told him that he had been warned to leave the country.
Shertok assured him that everything would be done to guarantee his safety and within 10 minutes his house in Ramat Gan outside Tel Aviv was surrounded by military police.
The Sternist admission of the assassination, a customary procedure after acts of underground violence, was made public by Hazit Hamoledet, head of the so-called "splinter" group of Sternists.
www.shalomjerusalem.com /jerusalem/sep1948.html   (1518 words)

  
 Moshe Sharett
Sharett was not a distinct politician in terms of ideas, but proved to be a great diplomat and able to communicate with opposing parties.
1906: Moshe's family emigrates to Palestine, and settles in the village of Ain Sinia.
1914: Moshe serves in the Ottoman army during World War 1.
i-cias.com /e.o/sharett_m.htm   (249 words)

  
 Moshe Sharett | Second Prime Minister of Israel | Moshe Shertok | Questia.com Online Library
Moshe Sharett: Biography of a Political Moderate » Read Now
Moshe Ma'oz examines the history of relations between Israel and Syria...
Israel and the Western Powers, 1952-1960 (includes information on Moshe Sharett in "The Quest for a Security Guarantee from the United States, 1954-1956") » Read Now
www.questia.com /popularSearches/moshe_sharett.jsp   (501 words)

  
 Judaica - ISRAEL / PALESTINE - Vintage Old Antique Postcard Postcards
Moshe Sharett (born Moshe Shertok, October 15, 1894 –; July 7, 1965), second Prime Minister of Israel (1953-1955),
Tel Aviv : Adress of Director of Gymnasium in honor of Lord Balfour in 1925.
Published circa 1925 by Moshe Ordmann - 96.
www.postcardman.net /judaica_ethnic_ip.html   (267 words)

  
 1948: Arab Refugees : IN OUR PAGES: 100, 75 AND 50 YEARS AGO
The cable followed Israel's refusal to permit the re-entry into Palestine of the 300,000 Palestine Arab refugees displaced from their homes by the fighting in Palestine.
It was addressed to Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Shertok.
Shertok said that Israel would not permit the Arab refugees to return until there had been a final peace settlement in Palestine.
www.iht.com /articles/1998/08/05/edold.t_8.php   (129 words)

  
 Israel Bank Notes
Front: Moshe Sharett (1894-1965), 2nd Prime Minister of Israel (1953-1955)
He was the first Hebrew writer to win the Nobel Prize in literature in 1966.
Israel, located in southwest Asia at the eastern end of the Mediterranean Sea, was a British mandate of Palestine.
tomchao.com /me/me10a.html   (177 words)

  
 The Timeline
May 25, 1944: Steinhardt notified the U.S. State Department of the Eichmann offer by diplomatic telegram.
Moshe Shertok (Sharett) and David Ben Gurion were briefed about the Eichmann offer by Wenia Pomerantz.
May 27, 1944: Kasztner, his wife, Hansi Brand, Sholem Offenbach, treasurer of the Vaada, and his wife were arrested by the Hungarian police.
www.kasztnermemorial.com /oldbrowsers/time6.htm   (348 words)

  
 Zionist Executive meeting   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
From these, an executive body is chosen of 13 members, which is to constitute the temporary government.
These 13 members are: David Ben Gurion, Mordechai Bentov, Peretz Bernstein, Yitzhak Gruenbaum, Rabbi Yitzhak Meir Levin, Rabbi Yehuda Leib Fishman, Aharon Zisling, Eliezer Kaplan, Felix Rosenblit, David Remez, Bechor Shalom Shitrit, Moshe Shapira and Moshe Shertok.
It is felt that the Jewish Agency will be needed to express the partnership of the Jewish people all over the world with Israel in the historic enterprise of building the State and to channel and utilize properly the aid that is expected and forthcoming from Diaspora Jewry.
student.cs.ucc.ie /cs1064/jabowen/IPSC/php/bigDB.php?eid=893   (275 words)

  
 Third Reich History: November 30
Non-belief in Nazism is proclaimed grounds for divorce in Germany.
Moshe Shertok, head of the Political Department of the Jewish Agency, testifies before the Peel Commission, blaming the Colonial Office and its restrictive immigration policy as the reason for "illegal" Jewish immigration to Palestine.
Father Charles Coughlin makes an anti-Semitic broadcast to an estimated 3.5 million American listeners on a nationwide radio network.
members.tripod.com /dailytrh/1130.html   (725 words)

  
 Israel:
The use of the term Israeli to refer to a citizen of Israel was decided by the Government of Israel in the weeks immediately after independence and announced by Foreign Minister Moshe Shertok.
Between 1954 and 1955, under Moshe Sharett as prime minister, the Lavon Affair – a failed attempt to bomb targets in Egypt – caused political disgrace in Israel.
Compounding this, in 1956, Egypt nationalized the Suez Canal, much to the chagrin of the United Kingdom and France.
winelib.com /wiki/Israel   (2647 words)

  
 Biography of Moshe Sharett Online - Zionism and Israel - Biographies
Moshe Sharett (1894 - 1965) was a Zionist labor leader, first Foreign Minister and second Prime Minister of the State of Israel.
He was born Moshe Shertok in Kherson (Ukraine) in 1894, and arrived with his family in Palestine, then part of the Ottoman Empire, at the age of 12.
Adapted from biography of Moshe Sharett at Israel Foreign Ministry Web site
www.zionism-israel.com /bio/Moshe_Sharett_biography.htm   (1048 words)

  
 Israeli ministries, etc.
Ministers 14 May 1948 - 19 Jun 1956 Moshe Shertok (from Aug 1948, Moshe Sharett) (b.
1923) 22 Dec 1988 - 11 Jun 1990 Moshe Arens (b.
1969) 5 Jun 1967 - 3 Jun 1974 Moshe Dayan (b.
rulers.org /isragovt.html   (1425 words)

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