Teddy Kollek

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Teddy Kollek
Teddy Kollek during a Christmas eve cocktail party.jpg
Native name טדי קולק
Born Kollek Tivadar
May 27, 1911
Nagyvázsony, Hungary
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Known for Mayor of Jerusalem
Spouse(s) Tamar
Children 2
Awards

Theodor "Teddy" Kollek (Hebrew: טדי קולק‎; May 27, 1911 – January 2, 2007) was an Israeli politician who served as the mayor of Jerusalem from 1965 to 1993, and founder of the Jerusalem Foundation. Kollek was re-elected five times, in 1969, 1973, 1978, 1983 and 1989. After reluctantly running for a seventh term in 1993 at the age of 82, he lost to Likud candidate and future Prime Minister of Israel Ehud Olmert.

During his tenure, Jerusalem developed into a modern city, especially after its reunification in 1967.[1] He was once called "the greatest builder of Jerusalem since Herod."[2]

Biography

Theodore (Teddy) Kollek was born in Nagyvázsony, 120 km from Budapest, Hungary as Kollek Tivadar. His parents named him after Theodor Herzl. Growing up in Vienna, Kollek came to share his father Alfréd’s Zionist convictions.

Teddy Kollek (second from the right), with the Ein Gev Pioneers (1934-39)

In 1935, three years before the Nazis seized power in Austria, the Kollek family immigrated to Israel, then under British mandate. In 1937, he was one of the founders of Kibbutz Ein Gev, on the shore of Lake Kinneret.[1] That same year he married Tamar Schwarz. They had two children, a son, the film director Amos Kollek (born in 1947), and a daughter, Osnat.[3]

In the 1940s, on behalf of the Jewish Agency (Sochnut) and as part of the "The Hunting Season" or "Saison" Teddy Kollek was the Jewish Agency's contact person with the British Mandate MI5, providing information against right-wing Jewish underground groups Irgun and Lehi (known as "Stern Gang"). He succeeded Reuven Zaslani and preceded Zeev Sherf in this function, and was carrying out the Jewish Agency's policy of assisting the British in fighting these groups.[4] In 1942 Kolleck was appointed the Jewish Agency's deputy head of intelligence. Between January 1945 and May 1946 he was the Agency's chief external liaison officer in Jerusalem and was in contact with MI5's main representative as well as members of British Military Intelligence. On 10 August 1945 he revealed to MI5 the location of a secret Irgun training camp near Binyamina. Twenty-seven Irgun members were arrested in the raid that followed.[5]

During World War II, Kollek tried to represent Jewish interests in Europe on behalf of the Jewish Agency. In 1947–48, he represented the Haganah in Washington, where he assisted in acquiring ammunition for Israel’s then-fledgling army.[6] Kollek became a close ally of David Ben-Gurion, serving in the latter’s governments from 1952 as the director general of the prime minister’s office.[7]

Mayor of Jerusalem

In 1965 Teddy Kollek succeeded Mordechai Ish-Shalom as Mayor of Jerusalem. On his motivations for seeking the mayor’s office in Jerusalem, Kollek once recalled:[8]

I got into this by accident[...] I was bored. When the city was united, I saw this as an historic occasion. To take care of it and show better care than anyone else ever has is a full life purpose. I think Jerusalem is the one essential element in Jewish history. A body can live without an arm or a leg, not without the heart. This is the heart and soul of it.

During his tenure Jerusalem developed into a modern city, especially after its reunification in 1967[1] He was often called “the greatest builder of Jerusalem since Herod.”[2]

Kollek was re-elected five times, in 1969, 1973, 1978, 1983, and 1989, serving 28 years as mayor of Jerusalem.[9] In a reluctant seventh bid for mayor in 1993, Kollek, aged 82, lost to Likud candidate Ehud Olmert.

Relationship with the Arab community

In the Six-Day War of 1967, East Jerusalem, which had been under Jordanian control since 1948, was taken over by Israel. As mayor of a newly united Jerusalem, Kollek’s approach toward the Arab inhabitants was governed by pragmatism. Within hours of the transfer of authority, he arranged for the provision of milk for Arab children. Some Israelis considered him pro-Arab.[8] Kollek advocated religious tolerance and made numerous efforts to reach out to the Arab community during his tenure. Muslims continued to have access to al-Aqsa Mosque and Temple Mount for worship. While he was adamant that Jerusalem never be divided again and remain under Israeli sovereignty, he believed in concessions to reach a final settlement.[10]

Kollek’s views on the annexation of East Jerusalem softened after leaving office.[11]

Civic and cultural projects

File:Teddy Jerusalem Zoo.jpg
Teddy the elephant at the Jerusalem Biblical Zoo, named in honor of Kollek.

Kollek dedicated himself to many cultural projects during his lengthy term in office, most notably the development and expansion of the Israel Museum. From 1965–1996, he was president of the museum, and officially designated its founder in 2000. When the museum celebrated its 25th anniversary in 1990, Kollek was named "Avi Ha-muze'on" ("father of the museum").[12]

Kollek was also instrumental in the establishment of the Jerusalem Theater, and served as the founder and head of the Jerusalem Foundation. Through a leadership which spanned decades, Kollek raised millions of dollars from private donors for civic development projects and cultural programs. Kollek once remarked that Israel needed a strong army, but it also needed expressions of culture and civilization.[8]

Kollek was considered the "number-one friend"[13] of the Jerusalem Biblical Zoo, which occupied a 15-acre (61,000 m2) site[14] in Romema from 1950–1991. Though the zoo attracted many visitors to its exhibits of animals, reptiles and birds mentioned in the Bible and was successful in breeding and protecting endangered species,[15] it was considered small and inferior to zoos in Tel Aviv and Haifa.[16] Kollek promoted the idea of moving the zoo to a larger location and upgrading it to a state-of-the-art institution. Around 1990, under the auspices of the Jerusalem Foundation, the Tisch family of New York agreed to underwrite the expensive undertaking. The zoo re-opened as The Tisch Family Zoological Garden in Jerusalem on a 62-acre (250,000 m2) expanse near the neighborhood of Malha in 1993.[16] Kollek helped the zoo raise money to build the elephant enclosure and to bring in female elephants from Thailand at $50,000 apiece.[17] The zoo named its male elephant Teddy and one of its female elephants Tamar in honor of the mayor and his wife.[13] For Kollek's 90th birthday in 2001, the zoo feted him and the Jerusalem Foundation unveiled a new sculpture garden dedicated in his honor.[13]

Retirement

File:Teddy Kollek Obit.jpg
Flyers in Jerusalem mourning Teddy Kollek, January 4, 2007

Kollek continued to be active in retirement, maintaining a five-day work week into his nineties, even as he became increasingly infirm.[18] He and his wife lived in their walk-up Rehavia apartment until the mid-1990s, when they moved to Hod Yerushalayim, a retirement home in the Kiryat HaYovel neighborhood.[19] Kollek died on January 2, 2007.[20] He is buried on Mount Herzl, Jerusalem.

Awards and commemoration

File:Teddy stadium, Jerusalem.JPG
Jerusalem's Teddy Stadium is named for Kollek

In 1988, he received the Four Freedom Award for the Freedom of Worship[22]

Teddy Stadium in Malha, Jerusalem, is named for him. Teddy Fountain in Jerusalem is named for him.

Quotes

  • "Jerusalem's people of differing faiths, cultures and aspirations must find peaceful ways to live together other than by drawing a line in the sand".[23]

See also

References

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  3. Kollek: A man with 'Viennese optimism'
  4. • Wagner, Steven. 2008. “Britain and the Jewish Underground, 1944–46: Intelligence, Policy and Resistance” MA Thesis. University of Calgary. Published online at University of Calgary Library. http://dspace1.acs.ucalgary.ca/handle/1880/48196
  5. Andrew, Christopher (2009) The Defence of the Realm. The Authorized History of MI5. Allen Lane. ISBN 978-0-7139-9885-6. Pages 355,356.
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  10. Teddy Kollek and his life-long dedication
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  12. The Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Magazine, Winter-Spring 2007, p.3
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  19. Kollek Teddy
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  22. http://www.rooseveltinstitute.org/four-freedoms-awards
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Further reading

  • Ruth Bachi-Kolodny 2008, "Teddy Kollek. The Man, His Life and His Jerusalem", Gefen Publishing House. ISBN 978-965-229-417-3

External links