Beschreibung
In Hebrew. (4) pages 153 to 261, (3). Pages 1 to 152 are in another volume (not here): book one part A. 201 x 139 mm. Dafna was born in the name of Moshe Blaustein in the city of Sudilkov in Volhynia, Russian empire (now in Ukraine). C. age 10 his family moved to the nearby town of Kurz. He studied in a Heder, yeshiva and beit midrash, and also acquired general education from private teachers and self-study. At the age of 13, under the influence of the Zionist Congress in Basel , he joined the Zionist movement and founded a Hebrew learning society with friends. He wrote to the teachers' seminary of "Ezra" in Jerusalem and asked to be accepted as a student. Before age 20 he was accepted and made his way to Eretz Israel, arriving in Yaof in 1906. He worked as a guard and founded the Hapo'el Hatza'ir party. In 1907 he began his studies at Teachers College, upon completing his studies in 1911 he taught for 8 years in Gedera and Rehovot, then chief teacher at Mikve Israel and for eight years as a teacher at a girls' school in Jaffa. In 1928 was invited to teach at the high school and Hebrew at the Teachers Seminary in Minneapolis, Minnesota. At the University of Minnesota graduated with master's degree in botany and supervisory theory. In 1930 he returned to Eretz Israel and was appointed principal of a school in Tel Aviv. With the establishment of Israel he was appointed Deputy Chief Inspector of Schools of the current state, and a year later he was appointed chief inspector. He began writing poetry in 1908 and also composed songs to texts by Haim Nachman Bialik and Yaakov Cahan. At the beginning of his work as a teacher he discovered that there were no children's songs in Hebrew and began writing them. They were published in children's and youth newspapers, and some appeared in textbooks. Dafna also published articles in various journals under the names: Avivia, Daf, Padan and others. He translated "Carrie elephant" of Mukherjee and "Pioneers of Progress" by Joseph Conrad and songs in Russian, German and English. He edited the "Nature Observatory" section of our Haaretz weekly", Zimra books, songbooks and readings for the lower grades. His most famous poem is "Why?" Better known as " Udi Khamudi" since that were the first words of the song. Shmuel Bass (25 September 1899 Pochep , Parish of Chernigov, Russia (Ukraine ) - May 31, 1949 Tel Aviv) was an educator, poet, Hebrew writer and song writer. In 1905 he immigrated to Israel from Odessa with his parents and his younger sister. He first published at age 16. In 1917 he volunteered for the Jewish Legion, and upon his discharge continued his studies at the Hebrew Teachers' College in Jerusalem. In 1922 he was teaching, first in Tiberias and later in Tel Aviv . In 1929 he went on to study at Yale University. He published children¿s stories in the early days of the state of Israel. He also wrote many songs for the children of the Yishuv. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 010934
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Bibliografische Details
Titel: BAMOLEDET sefer kria lishnat halimudim ...
Verlag: Omanut, Tel Aviv, Eretz Israel
Erscheinungsdatum: 1933
Einband: Hardcover
Illustrator: Gutman, Nahum
Zustand: Very Good
Zustand des Schutzumschlags: No Jacket