download:posterGo to Tool Kit > Frames of MindMasters SeriesProudly JewishWall of FameSelect by:ArtistAuthorQuoteArtistAuthorQuoteMaster tabPoster Commentary"In the life of the spirit, there is no ending that is not a beginning."Henrietta SzoldPoster design:Ruah EdelsteinCommentary by Shulamit Reinharz On the eve of the American Civil War, Baltimore was a bustling gateway to America, second in importance only to Ellis Island. The masses of immigrants fascinated a local Jewish young woman named Henrietta Szold, who saw first-hand how people needed help in order to begin their new lives in America. In response, Szold set up evening classes for Russian-Jewish immigrants to learn English. Seeing needs and taking action became Szold’s trademark – she was motivated by challenge, no matter how large. As Szold would later write: “Dream great dreams, and take practical steps to make them a reality.” Szold served on the publications committee of the Jewish Publication Society – the only woman on their staff and editor of major works of Jewish scholarship. In 1909 Szold traveled to Palestine and was shocked to discover the country’s appalling health conditions. With her American friends she formed a women’s study group called Hadassah (the Hebrew name of Queen Esther) to learn about their Jewish heritage and to improve the lives of Jews in the Yishuv (pre-state Jewish Palestine). Hadassah was extraordinarily successful at recruiting both members and funds, and under Szold’s direction and inspiration founded Hadassah Hospital, a nursing school, a college, a youth organization (Young Judaea), and more. When Szold lived in Palestine in her 70s, as the Nazis were rising to power in Germany, she created the Youth Aliyah program, which brought thousands of endangered Jewish children from Europe to Palestine. In each chapter of her life Szold forged new beginnings – sometimes in the face of heartbreak and criticism – as she made enormous contributions to American Jewish women and the lives of Jews and Arabs in Israel. Shulamit Reinharz is a professor of sociology at Brandeis University, where she founded the Women’s Studies Research Center and the Hadassah-Brandeis Institute. She is the author of American Jewish Women and the Zionist Enterprise, Observing the Observer, and other books. Conversation Guide TALK IT OVER What about Szold’s story most inspires you? In your own life experience, what endings turned into beginnings? How do you connect the poster to Szold’s life and contributions? Credits Wall of Fame©2020, Ruah Edelstein, Quote: Henrietta Szold, Harold Grinspoon Foundation, West Springfield, MA AuthorHenrietta Szold1860-1945Baltimore, New York, JerusalemOrganizer and educatorAbout Born 1860 in Baltimore, Maryland – Died 1945 in Jerusalem Founder of the women’s Zionist organization Hadassah, one of the world’s largest Jewish organizations American Zionist leader, educator, and humanitarian Moved to Palestine in 1920 – Activist for Jewish-Arab co-existence “On the last day of our trip to Palestine in 1909, an incident occurred that I would remember for the rest of my life. Mother and I had visited the Girls’ School in Jaffa. On our way we passed a group of children playing in the sand, children who seemed to have a sort of dark wreath about their eyes. When they came closer, we saw these were wreaths of flies, attracted by early stages of trachoma. Inside the school we saw that none of the children had trachoma. ‘How is this?’ my mother asked. The principal said a physician visited the school once a week and a nurse came daily. My mother told me: ‘That is what your group [the study group I had founded called Hadassah] ought to do – practical work in Palestine.’” Summoned to Jerusalem: The Life of Henrietta Szold, Joan Dash, 1979 ArtistRuah EdelsteinValencia CAAnimatorCinematographerAbout Ruah Edelstein is an animation artist, cinematographer, and co-founder of Lumen Animae. She was born in Lithuania, moved to Western Europe to pursue a career in acting, and later studied animation at California Institute of the Arts, where she now teaches film production. Her film Died 100 Times brought Edelstein international recognition. "White is already an absolute. Why would I add anything to it? I wouldn’t, of course. An empty canvas is perfect. I am already happy with this. It includes nothing and at the same time everything. What happens is that very carefully something is being revealed. I begin to see into that space, help it come to life, giving it a physical shape. This is the process behind the work. Going into that zone is the happiness I know in life, a miracle I cannot explain. One day it can leave, or can reveal itself even more. The only thing I know for sure – it directs me more than I direct it." Quote"In the life of the spirit, there is no ending that is not a beginning."Henrietta SzoldContext In the life of the spirit there is no ending that is not a beginning. The activities of Hadassah have been and shall be of the spirit. The thought was that the Hadassah practical work was born of the Zionist recognition that the Jewish soul stands in need of healing which wells up for it from the soil that produced the prophets. The Hadassah women in America, while seeking spiritual healing in their Zionist faith, bestowed healing upon the land of their ideal and the people it harbors. Source What It Means to Be a Jew, Charles E. Shulman, 1961 Select by Artist Seymour Chwast Ofra Amit Chloe Cushman Ruah Edelstein Janice Fried Asaf Hanuka Noa Kelner Art Paul Arnold Schwartzman James Steinberg Yarom Vardimon Ellen Weinstein Select by Author David Ben-Gurion Betty Friedan Ruth Bader Ginsburg Theodor Herzl Nechama Leibowitz Jonas Salk Isaac Bashevis Singer Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik Steven Spielberg Henrietta Szold Chaim Weizmann Elie Wiesel Select by Quote "If you will it, it is no dream." "You shouldn't dream your film. You should make it." "Independence is never given to a people. It has to be earned and defended." "The opposite of love is not hate. It's indifference." "Intuition will tell the thinking mind where to look next." "On the wall of my chambers it says: ‘Justice, justice will you pursue.’ (Deuteronomy 16:20) " "In Israel, in order to be a realist you must believe in miracles." "Judaism brought to light a person’s obligation to create oneself. " "In the life of the spirit, there is no ending that is not a beginning." "Great teachers enable students to find their own questions in the text." "We have to believe in free will. We have no choice." "Who knows what women can be when they are finally free to become themselves?" Select by Artist Seymour Chwast Ofra Amit Chloe Cushman Ruah Edelstein Janice Fried Asaf Hanuka Noa Kelner Art Paul Arnold Schwartzman James Steinberg Yarom Vardimon Ellen Weinstein Select by Author David Ben-Gurion Betty Friedan Ruth Bader Ginsburg Theodor Herzl Nechama Leibowitz Jonas Salk Isaac Bashevis Singer Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik Steven Spielberg Henrietta Szold Chaim Weizmann Elie Wiesel Select by Quote "Great teachers enable students to find their own questions in the text." "We have to believe in free will. We have no choice." "In Israel, in order to be a realist you must believe in miracles." "Intuition will tell the thinking mind where to look next." "Who knows what women can be when they are finally free to become themselves?" "If you will it, it is no dream." "Judaism brought to light a person’s obligation to create oneself. " "Independence is never given to a people. It has to be earned and defended." "In the life of the spirit, there is no ending that is not a beginning." "The opposite of love is not hate. It's indifference." "You shouldn't dream your film. You should make it." "On the wall of my chambers it says: ‘Justice, justice will you pursue.’ (Deuteronomy 16:20) " Visual for gallery: