Tag Archives: saving allied pilots in World War II
World-Historical Lives: Winston Churchill and Hannah Senesh
Today I’ve read to the end of two books, both about lives honed on the cutting edge of history. So what is “history” and what does it mean to live on its edge? Let’s stipulate that history is the tale … Continue reading →
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Tagged abandoning one’s purpose, Abbie’s family and Allied war efforts, action and motive, action and purpose, ambiguity of treason under enemy occupation, ambiguity of treason under pro-nazi regime, Arabs’ rejection of UN vote for partition, bad luck in history, Balfour Weizmann victory in World War I, beliefs changing history, beliefs in history, betrayal in history, betraying one’s story, Bible and history, books as house presents, British mandate in Palestine, brother-sister love, chance in history, Churchill and Allied victory, Churchill and the Jews by Martin Gilbert, Churchill and Weizmann in World War I, Churchill as Lord of the Admiralty, Churchill as wartime leader, Churchill in World War II, Churchill Weizmann and naval victory, Churchill’s liking for Jews, Churchill’s opinion of Jews, Churchill’s resistance to the Nazis, Crash of the Heavens by Douglas Century, cultural change, cultural ideals, cultural transformation, cutting edge of history, David M. Armstrong as friend, David M. Armstrong Australian philosopher, family member and smuggling arms to the Haganah, family members in Jewish Brigade, family members in World War II Jewish Brigade, forgetting one’s purpose, freedom in history, God freedom and chance, Hannah Senesh, Hannah Senesh and British rescue mission, Hannah Senesh and farewell letter, Hannah Senesh and Hungarian antisemitism, Hannah Senesh as heroine in Israel, Hannah Senesh as poet and writer, Hannah Senesh as prisoner, Hannah Senesh in Palestine, Hannah Senesh’s mission, heroes, heroes and heroines, heroines, history’s cutting edge, history’s unpredictability, honor in history, honoring one’s purpose, honoring one’s story, Josef Avidar and bullet factory, last days of Hannah Senesh, life-changing beliefs, life-changing events, luck in history, macro-history, meaning of life, national hero, national heroine, personal history, personal history and macro-history, persons and their stories, prisoner of war, Providence and freedom in history, providence and history, purpose in history, saving allied pilots in World War II, saving Jews in World War II, smuggling arms to the Haganah, story-line of history, summary justice in wartime, the Balfour Declaration, The Jewish Brigade Group, UN 1948 vote for Palestine partition, wartime hero, wartime heroine, why men fight, Winston Churchill, world history, world-historical people
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