Charlotte Jacobson, 97, Communal Leader
Charlotte Jacobson, 97, who as Hadassah national president reclaimed the Jerusalem land where the organization’s flagship hospital now sits, died on May 14 in Florida.
Jacobson was Hadassah president from 1964 to 1968, including during the Six Day War.
For 60 years, she served in many leadership positions in American and world Zionist organizations. In 1998, Jacobson received Hadassah’s coveted Henrietta Szold Award, becoming the first Hadassah leader so honored.
“The Jewish people, Israel and Hadassah have lost a monumental figure, a role model that virtually every Zionist activist has tried to emulate for more than half a century,” said Nancy Falchuk, the current president of Hadassah, the Women’s Zionist Organization of America.
Following the 1967 Six Day War, Jacobson was able to reclaim two key pieces of ground in Jerusalem that Hadassah had lost during Israel’s War of Independence.
As chair of the Building and Development for the Hadassah Medical Organization, Jacobson supervised the rebuilding of the hospital and the building of the Moshe Sharett Institute of Oncology.
For over a decade, she chaired the American section of the World Zionist Organization. In 1981 she became the first woman elected to the presidency of the Jewish National Fund.
Jacobson traveled the world in defense of Jewish rights, meeting with refuseniks in the Soviet Union, and advocating for freedom of worship and emigration in front of the leaders of Syria and Egypt. She also defended Israel and the Jewish people in the halls and overseas conferences of the United Nations.
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