1929 -
Israeli politician; civil rights, social affairs, and peace activist.
Born in Tel Aviv, Shulamit Aloni served in the 1948 Arab - Israel War, attended a teachers training seminar, and later studied law at the Hebrew University. In the 1950s and early 1960s, she earned a reputation as an advocate for social justice, civil and human rights, consumer protection, and above all the separation of religion from politics. She had a popular weekly radio program and a weekly column in which she propounded her antiestablishment views. In 1966, she established and headed the Israel Consumers' Council.
Elected to the Knesset in 1965, she served on various committees but was dropped from the Labor ticket in 1969 at the demand of Golda Meir. In 1973, she established the Civic Rights Movement (Ratz) and was elected to the Knesset, where she served until 1999. In 1974, she served briefly in the Yitzhak Rabin's first cabinet but resigned when the National Religious Party joined his cabinet. She was a prolific legislator, proposing scores of laws and serving mainly on the Knesset's Law and Constitution Committee. Rabin appointed her minister of education in 1992, after her party merged with Shinui to form Meretz. Pressure from the ultra-Orthodox Shas party forced her to give up some of her responsibilities. A well-known peace activist, she has advocated close ties with Israeli Arabs and the neighboring Palestinians and fought vehemently for the rights of the secular population and against what she considered undue religious coercion in Israel. She is the author of four books in Hebrew. Their titles, translated into English, are The Citizen and His State, The Arrangement, Children's Rights in Israel, and Women as Human Beings. In 2000 she was awarded the Israel Prize for lifetime achievements.
— MERON MEDZINI




