http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/25/world/middleeast/shulamit-aloni-outspoken-israeli-lawmaker-dies-at-86.html
Shulamit Aloni, Outspoken Israeli Lawmaker, Dies at 86
JODI RUDOREN
JAN 24, 2014
Shulamit
 Aloni, a longtime left-wing Israeli minister and Parliament member who 
was an early champion of civil liberties, challenger of religious 
hegemony and outspoken opponent of Israel’s occupation of the Palestinian territories, died Friday at her home in Kfar Shmaryahu, a Tel Aviv suburb. She was 86.
One of her sons, Nimrod, said she had not been seriously ill, “just very old.” 
Mrs.
 Aloni, an elected lawmaker for 28 years, was the author of six books, 
including one of Israel’s earliest texts on civics. She was awarded the 
prestigious Israel Prize in 2000 “for her struggle to right injustices 
and for raising the standard of equality.”
In
 2008, at age 80, she published  “Israel: Democracy or Ethnocracy?” a 
harsh assessment of her homeland. She wrote on the cover, “The state is 
returning to the ghetto, to Orthodox Judaism, and the rule of the 
fundamentalist rabbinate is becoming more profound.” 
Reuven
 Rivlin, a Parliament member from the conservative Likud Party, 
described Mrs. Aloni on Friday as “the last politician in her generation
 who said what she thought.” But her outspokenness also made for 
problems.
 
            
            
            
    
In
 1992, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin rebuked her for questioning the 
biblical version of Creation and speaking in the same breath of the 
Hebrew matriarch Rachel and the prostitute Rahav. The next year, after 
Mrs. Aloni’s challenging of religious political leaders provoked a 
coalition crisis, Rabin demoted her from education minister to minister 
of communications and science and technology. 
After
 Baruch Goldstein massacred 29 Muslims at the Tomb of the Patriarchs in 
1994, she was among the first to call for the expulsion of hundreds of 
Jewish settlers from the West Bank city of Hebron. She also said that 
high school trips to Holocaust sites were turning Israeli youths into 
xenophobes, and she incited outrage by holding official meetings abroad 
in nonkosher restaurants.
Former
 political allies and opponents alike lauded her on Friday as a 
boundary-breaking pioneer for peace, “a moral compass,” “a special 
breed,” “an inspiration for all women” and a “pillar of fire.”
“It
 was impossible not to admire such a combative woman who fought for what
 she believed in and was prepared to pay the price,” said Geula Cohen, 
who founded a right-wing faction and frequently faced off with her in 
Parliament. 
Yossi
 Sarid, who in 1996 successfully challenged Mrs. Aloni for leadership of
 the far-left Meretz Party, called her “a phenomenon” who feared 
“absolutely nothing.”
“How
 did we first become acquainted with civil rights? How did we first 
discover the occupation?” Mr. Sarid, now a political analyst, asked 
rhetorically Friday morning on Israel Radio. “She wanted to change the 
national and social agenda, and she did so, on her own, by virtue of her
 own capabilities, and attained great and unparalleled achievements.”
Although
 some sources say she was 85, her son Nimrod said she was 86 and was 
born in December 1927. Born Shulamit Adler in Tel Aviv to Polish 
immigrant parents, she fought in Israel’s War of Independence in 1948. 
She
 started her political career with the Labor-Alignment faction, then 
helped create the Citizens’ Rights Movement and, later, Meretz. She was 
married for 36 years to Reuven Aloni, who died in 1988. She is survived 
by their three sons, eight grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
Her
 death was a reminder of the decline of the left among Jews in Israel. 
Labor’s last prime minister was Ehud Barak in 2001, and Labor and Meretz
 combined hold 21 of Parliament’s 120 seats today. When Mrs. Aloni left 
elected office, they had 56. 
“The pillar of fire has been extinguished,” the advocacy group Peace Now lamented in a statement. 
 
 
 
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