Meir Vilner
Meir Vilner | |
---|---|
Date of birth | 23 October 1918 |
Place of birth | Vilnius, Lithuania |
Year of aliyah | 1938 |
Date of death | 5 June 2003 84) | (aged
Knessets | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 |
Party represented in Knesset | |
1949–1959 | Maki |
1961 | Maki |
1965–1977 | Rakah |
1977–1990 | Hadash |
Meir Vilner (Hebrew: מאיר וילנר, born Ber Kovner; 23 October 1918 – 5 June 2003) was an Israeli communist politician and Jewish leader of the Communist Party of Israel (Maki), which consisted primarily of Israeli Arabs. He was the youngest and longest surviving signatory of the Israeli Declaration of Independence in 1948.
Born in Vilnius, German-occupied Lithuania, Vilner's political life began as the leader of the socialist-Zionist group Hashomer Hatzair (Young Guard). However, he soon grew disenchanted by what he viewed as a tendency in Zionist groups to dream of a Jewish homeland in Palestine, rather than change their current situation - thus he started working for the banned Polish Communist Party - now under the pseudonym Meir Vilner - until 1938, when he left Poland to go to the British Mandate of Palestine. Most of his family perished in the Holocaust.
Vilner then studied history at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
In what would soon become Israel, Vilner was disenchanted with the politics, claiming that the hatred directed at Jews in Vilna was now directed at the Arabs. He joined the Palestine Communist Party, which accepted Arab and Jewish membership, but supported partition. Vilner criticized both the British and Israeli government, but justified signing the Israeli Declaration of Independence on the grounds that this would eliminate another British colony.
In 1949, he was elected to the Knesset as a member of Maki. He resigned from the Knesset in December 1959, six weeks after the 1959 elections, but was re-elected in 1961. However, he resigned again two months after the 1961 elections.
In 1965 Vilner and several other Maki members broke away from the party to form Rakah following disagreements about the Soviet Union's increasingly anti-Israeli stance (Vilner was on the USSR's side), and was elected to the Knesset on the new party's list in the 1965 elections.
Shortly after the Six-Day War in 1967 (which Rakah had opposed), a member of the right-wing party Gahal stabbed Vilner. He recovered.
Rakah became part of Hadash before the 1977 elections, and Vilner remained an MK until 1990 when he resigned as part of a seat rotation agreement, making him the third longest serving after Tawfik Toubi and Shimon Peres.
He was married to Esther Vilenska, another Israeli communist politician but divorced later, after having two sons together. His cousin Abba Kovner was a well-known Israeli poet.[1]
References
- Joffe, Lawrence (2003-06-21). "Meir Vilner". The Guardian. Retrieved 2007-11-08.
- ↑ Wheeler, Tom (1997-07-19). "The other Israel: an interview with Meir Vilner". People's Weekly World. Retrieved 2007-11-08.
External links
- Meir Vilner on the Knesset website