Description: Shipping from Europe with tracking number From Paris with Big Love to Tel Aviv -114gr Silver ,65mm,by Famous Delannoy Maurice Delannoy born onMarch 11, 1885in Paris , the city where he died onApril 26, 1972, Is a sculptor and medalist French .Maurice Delannoy was born on March 11, 1885in the 9 th arrondissement of Paris 1 , and then studied at the Germain Pilon school 2 where he was a pupil of Charles Valton and Jules Edward Roiné (in) .He is a member of the Society of French Artists where he obtained an honorable mention as a sculptor in 1921, then a bronze medal in 1923 and a silver medal in 1926. He exhibited a frame of medals and bronze portraits at the Salon de 1929 3 .Maurice Delannoy designs Moroccan, Lebanese and Monegasque coins 2 . The General Illustrated Catalog of Monnaie de Paris editions lists 99 medals from his hanDelannoy was named Knight of the Legion of Honor in 1947 2 .He died on April 26, 1972 to Tarnier hospital in the 6 th district of Paris .=====================================================================Namir, Mordechai[ edit | edit code ] Mordechai NamirDate of BirthFebruary 23, 1897Place of BirthNemiroff , Russian EmpireDate of deathFebruary 22 1975 (77 years old)Place of deathIsraelCitizenship IsraelRepatriation year1924Knesset calls2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 6Position in governmentMinister of Labor ( 7 , 8 )The consignmentMaarachEducationOdessa I. I. Mechnikov National University Mordechai Namir ( Hebrew. מרדכי נמיר ; born Mordechai Nemirovsky ; 23 February 1897 the year , Nemiroff , Bratslav district , Podolsk province , Russian Empire - 22 February 1975 the year , Israel ) - Israeli politician, member of the Knesset ( 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 6 convocations), Minister of Labor in the seventh and eighthgovernments of Israel, husband of Knesset member and Minister of Environment , Labor and Welfare Ora Namir .Biography Mordechai Nemirovsky was born in the town of Nemirov , Russian Empire , now Ukraine . Received a traditional education in a cheder . He studied economics and jurisprudence at the Odessa University [1] .In 1924 he repatriated to the territory of Mandatory Palestine , worked as a simple worker. In 1925, Nemirovsky got a job at the Davar newspaper [1] .In 1935, Namir was elected to the Tel Aviv City Council , from 1936 to 1943, Namir was a member of the Tel Aviv Workers Council .Mordechai Namir actively participated in the activities of the Haganah , being from 1933 a member of the command of the organization in Tel Aviv, and in 1946 became a member of the central headquarters of the Haganah [1] .Soon after the creation of the State of Israel, Mordechai Namir was sent to the countries of Eastern Europe on a diplomatic mission, and from 1949 to 1950 he was Israel's representative in the Soviet Union .In 1951, Mordechai Namir was first elected to the Knesset of the 2nd convocation , and then he was re-elected to the Knesset of the third , fourth , fifth and sixth convocations. For several cadences, he held a post on the Foreign Affairs and Security Commission [1] .On June 19, 1956, Namir entered the Israeli government for the first time , replacing Golda Meir as Israel's Minister of Labor .From 1951 to 1955 he headed the Histadrut . From 1960 to 1969, Namir was the mayor of Tel Aviv [1] .Mordechai Namir died on February 22, 1975 in Israel.Мордехай Намир (ивр. מרדכי נמיר; урожденный Мордехай Немировский; 23 февраля 1897 года, Немиров, Брацлавский уезд, Подольская губерния, Российская империя — 22 февраля 1975 года, Израиль) — израильский политический деятель, депутат кнессета (2, 3, 4, 5, 6 созывы), министр труда в седьмом и восьмом правительствах Израиля, муж депутата кнессета и министра экологии, труда и благосостояния Оры Намир.БиографияМордехай Немировский родился в местечке Немиров, Российской империи, ныне Украина. Получил традиционное образование в хедере. Обучался экономике и юриспруденции в Одесском университете[1].В 1924 году репатриировался на территорию Подмандатной Палестины, работал простым рабочим. В 1925 году Немировский устроился работать в газету Давар[1].В 1935 году Намир был избран в Городской совет Тель-Авива, с 1936 года по 1943 год Намир был членом рабочего совета Тель-Авива.Мордехай Намир активно участвовал в деятельности Хаганы, будучи с 1933 года членом командования организации в Тель-Авиве, а в 1946 году вошел в состав центрального штаба Хаганы[1].Вскоре после создания Государства Израиль Мордехай Намир был направлен в страны Восточной Европы с дипломатической миссией, а с 1949 года по 1950 год он был представителем Израиля в Советском Союзе.В 1951 году Мордехай Намир был впервые избран в кнессет 2-го созыва, а затем он переизбирался в кнессет третьего, четвертого, пятого и шестого созыва. В течение нескольких каденций занимал пост в комиссии по иностранным делам и безопасности[1].19 июня 1956 года Намир впервые вошел в правительство Израиля, сменив Голду Меир на посту министра труда Израиля.С 1951 по 1955 год возглавлял Гистадрут. С 1960 по 1969 год Намир был мэром Тель-Авива[1].Мордехай Намир умер 22 февраля 1975 года в Израиле.his wife-Namir, Ora[ edit | edit code ] Ora NamirHebrew אורה נמירMinister of the Environment of IsraelJuly 13, 1992 - December 31, 1992Head of the governmentYitzhak RabinPredecessorYitzhak ShamirSuccessorYossi SaridMinister of Labor and Welfare of IsraelDecember 31, 1992 - May 21, 1996Head of the governmentYitzhak Rabin / Shimon PeresPredecessorYitzhak RabinSuccessorEli IshaiBirthSeptember 1, 1930 [1] Hadera,Mandatory PalestineDeathJuly 7 2019 (88 years old) Tel Aviv , IsraelBurial placemoshav HoglaBirth nameOra ToybSpouseMordechai NamirThe consignmentMapai / Avoda / Am EchadEducationHunter CollegeLevinsky College of Education [d] Media files at Wikimedia CommonsOra Namir ( Hebrew. אורה נמיר , nee. Toiba , Hebrew. טויב ; 1 September 1930 , Hadera , Mandatory Palestine - on July 7 2019 , Tel Aviv ) - Israeli politician and diplomat, the wife of Mordechai Namir . Member of the six convocations of the Knesset , Chairman of the Knesset Commissions on Education and Culture and on Labor and Welfare , Minister of Environment and Minister of Labor and Welfare of Israel, Ambassador of Israel to the People's Republic of China and Mongolia.Biography She was born in 1930 in Hadera into a family of Jewish settlers Pinchas Toiba and Miriam Trakhtenberg. In 1936 the family moved to the Kogla moshav . There, Ora graduated from the eight classes of the school, after which she continued her education at the kibbutz Givat Haim , and then at the pedagogical seminary. Levinsky and kibbutz Givat ha-Shlosha [2] .In 1948, during the Israeli War of Independence , she joined the Haganah . She graduated from the war as an officer in the Israel Defense Forces [2] . During the work of the 2nd Knesset, she held the post of secretary of the Mapai faction in the Knesset and the leadership of the ruling coalition [3] . In the early 1950s, she was sent to New York as secretary of the Israeli delegation to the UN . During her stay in New York, she gave Hebrew lessons to the then Consul General of Israel in the United States, Abraham Harman, and at the same time studied at Hunter College , where she studied antiquityand English literature. Toib was unable to complete her studies due to lack of funding and a severe injury sustained while playing sports, which forced her to return to Israel [2] .Shimon Peres , Ora Namir and President of the Republic of the Congo Casa Vubu , 1963...In 1959 Ora Toiba married Mordechai Namir - MKs from Mapai and future mayor of Tel Aviv , who was 33 years older than her [4] . This marriage lasted 15 years, the spouses did not have children [5] . Being the mayor's wife, Ora Namir took an active part in public life, in 1967 he was appointed general secretary of the Tel Aviv branch of the socialist Zionist organization " Moetset Poalot " [4] . She held this position until 1979 [2] , from 1970 to 1974, combining it with the post of a member of the executive committee of the women's Zionist organization "Naamat" [3] .In 1973, Namir was first elected to the Knesset from the center-left Maarah bloc and then re-elected to the Knesset five more times. In her first convocation of the Knesset, she again acted as secretary of the Mapai faction and the ruling coalition [2] . In the Knesset of the 9th and 10th convocations, she served as the chairman of the Commission on Education and Culture , and in the Knesset of the 11th and 12th convocations - the Commission on Labor and Welfare . Namir also chaired the Joint Youth Crime Commission (9th Knesset) and the Sports Subcommittee (10th Knesset) [3]... In 1987 she was one of the initiators of the adoption of the law on equal retirement age for men and women, the following year - the law on equal employment opportunities, and in the mid-1990s - the law on equal wages for workers of both sexes. In addition, she was among the deputies who in 1987 prepared the law on the minimum wage [2] .In 1975, the year declared by the UN as the International Year of Women , then Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin appointed Namir to chair a commission to investigate the status of women in Israel. The commission's two-volume report, drawn up after two years of work, contained numerous facts about the inequality of women in Israel and 140 recommendations to remedy this situation (including the booking of a quarter of parliamentary seats in the Knesset for women, the appointment of women to command posts in the armed forces, special benefits for single mothers and free compulsory education for children of all ages from the age of three [4] ). In 1984, Namir became one of the founders of the Lobby for Women in Israel. [2]... Taking leftist positions in the party, Namir already in 1986 called for direct negotiations with the Palestinians , including the Palestine Liberation Organization [6] .Before the 1992 elections to the 12th Knesset, Namir was one of four candidates for the Labor Party leader , along with Rabin, Shimon Peres and Israel Keysar . Despite the fact that she was the last in this race, Namir, as a result of the primaries , took the 4th place in the pre-election list of Avoda, strengthening her position as the first lady of this party [5] . After winning the election, Rabin, who became prime minister again, appointed her to the post of Minister of the Environment.... However, she did not stay in this position for long, since she was not interested in environmental issues: it is known, in particular, that she rejected demands to close down enterprises that pollute the environment, as this would mean the loss of jobs for those employed in production [4] . Namir authoritarian style of leadership made a number of employees to leave the ministry for the short time that she had led and activists conservationists have criticized it for failing to listen to the experts [7] .Thereafter, from late 1992 to May 1996, Namir headed the Ministry of Labor and Welfare of Israel [2] . During these years, her ministry has been actively working to improve working conditions, as well as social protection of the unemployed. The process of lowering the unemployment rate was started, which later fell from 12% to 6% [5] . At the same time, as minister, Namir in 1994 was marked by a scandalous statement about new immigrants from the countries of the former USSR , stating: “A third of immigrants from the former USSR are old people, a third are disabled, and almost a third are single mothers” [6] .In 1995, Namir led the Israeli delegation to a UN conference on women in China. In the mid-1990s, she was diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor, which raised fears for her life, but thanks to a quick and high-quality operation, she survived [4] . Before the 1996 elections, Namir took only 13th place in the Labor Party primaries, losing in particular to Dalia Itzik . After that, she decided to leave politics and was appointed Israel's ambassador to the PRC [6] . She was the third person and the first woman in this position, while serving as ambassador to Mongolia. [4]... Namir held these posts until 2000. Her work as a diplomat was highly appreciated both by the Chinese side and by the Minister of National Infrastructure Ariel Sharon who visited Mongolia in 1998 [2] .After finishing her work in China and Mongolia, Namir returned to Tel Aviv [2] . In 2003, she made an attempt to return to political life and ran for the Knesset from the Amir Peretz “ Am Echad ” list , but did not get into the number of candidates who passed from this party to the Knesset [6] . Namir died in July 2019 in Tel Aviv at the age of 88 and was buried in the Hogla moshav, where she spent her childhood and youth [4] .===============================================================================HistoryJune 14, 1960, first meeting between David Ben-Gurion and Charles de Gaulle at Élysée PalaceGolda Meir and French PM Guy Mollet in Tel Aviv, 1959The Dreyfus affair between 1894 and 1906 was the first and rather bitter connection between the Zionist Movement and France. The ousting of a French officer of Jewish-German descent in a modern European state motivated Theodor Herzl in organizing the First Zionist Congress and pledging for a home for the Jewish in 1897. During the fourth Zionist Congress in London in 1900, Herzl said in his speech there that "...there is no necessity for justifying the holding the Congress in London. England is one of the last remaining places on earth where there is freedom from Jewish hatred." While the British Government began to recognize the importance and validity of the Zionist movement, the French remained absent. Bonds between the Zionist Movement and France strengthened during Germany’s occupation of France in World War II due to the common German enemy.[5]1940s–1960sAfter France's liberation by Allied forces, David Ben-Gurion was confident that Charles de Gaulle would assist him in the founding of a Jewish state. On 12 January 1949 France recognized the existence of Israel and supported the decision for Israel to join the United Nations. In 1953 France started selling French weapons to Israel and became one of its closest allies and supporters.[citation needed]. France then shared with Israel a strategic interest against radical Arab nationalism, as it had to cope with nationalist sentiment in its Algerian territories. During the late 1950s France supplied Israel with the Mirage - Israel's most advanced aircraft to date and their first cutting edge combat aircraft.In October 1957 an agreement was signed between France and Israel about the construction of the nuclear power plant in Israel, which was completed in 1963. Future Israeli President Shimon Peres was the politician who brokered the deal. In Michael Karpin's 2001 documentary A Bomb in the Basement, Abel Thomas, chief of political staff for France's defense minister at the time said Francis Perrin, head of the French Atomic Energy Commission, advised then-Prime Minister Guy Mollet that Israel should be provided with a nuclear bomb. According to the documentary, France provided Israel with a nuclear reactor and staff to set it up in Israel together with enriched uranium and the means to produce plutonium in exchange for support in the Suez War.[6][7]The Suez Crisis of 1956 marked a watershed for Israeli-French relations.[8][9] Israel, France and the United Kingdom had conspired for control of the Suez Canal.[8][10] Israel initiated a surprise invasion of Egypt, followed by the United Kingdom and France. The aims were to regain Western control of the Suez Canal and to remove Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser from power,[11] as well as reopening the Straits of Tiran to Israeli shipping and stop Egyptian-sponsored fedayeen raids into Israel.[12] After the fighting had started, the United States, the Soviet Union, and the United Nations forced Britain and France to withdraw. Israel stubbornly held out a few more months until the establishment of UNEF, which ensured freedom of navigation for Israel of the Straits of Tiran.In the 1960s, with the expulsion of France from North Africa completed in 1962, the shared strategic interest against Arab nationalism dissipated, leading France to take a more conciliatory attitude toward the Arab nations and a correspondingly harsher tone toward Israel. However, work on the nuclear reactor continues with French help. France imposed an arms embargo on Israel before the beginning of the Six-Day War. After the embargo Israel had to go to a blitz because its air force could not maintain the planes for more than a couple of months without French spare parts. According to the New York Times, "this double game, however, ended when the Six-Day War in 1967 forced France to pick a side. In a shock to its Israeli allies, it chose the Arab states: despite aggressive moves by Egypt, France imposed a temporary arms embargo on the region — which mostly hurt Israel — and warned senior Israeli officials to avoid hostilities."[13]The change of sides impaired as well the French-American relationship, as France was seen as an increasingly outdated and aggressive neocolonial power. The USA started to assume its current role as ally of Israel with the Six-Day War in 1967, while France decided to take sides with the Arab world to improve its relations after the independence of Algeria.[13]French foreign minister Maurice Couve de Murville with Ben-GurionIn 1960 Ben-Gurion arrived in France for Israel's first official visit. Until the Six Day War, France was the main supplier of Israel's weapons. After the Six-Day War in June 1967, Charles de Gaulle's government imposed an arms embargo on the region, mostly affecting Israel.[1] In 1969, de Gaulle retired and Israel hoped that new president Georges Pompidou would bring about better relations, but Pompidou continued the weapons embargo.
Price: 850 USD
Location: Petach Tikva
End Time: 2024-12-27T00:20:14.000Z
Shipping Cost: 20 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted