Michael Harsegor
Michael Harsegor | |
---|---|
Prof. Michael Harsegor | |
Born |
Bucharest, Romania | 15 March 1924
Died |
10 February 2011 86) Kfar Saba, Israel | (aged
Residence | Israel |
Nationality | Israeli |
Alma mater | Tel Aviv University |
Occupation | Historian |
Michael Harsegor (15 March 1924 – 10 February 2011) was an Israeli historian and a professor of history at the Tel Aviv University. Harsegor's expertise was in the history of Europe in the late Middle Ages.[1]
Biography
Harsegor was born Michael Goldberg in Bucharest into a Jewish family who were refugees from the October Revolution in Russia who settled in Romania. Early on, Harsegor's parents had the desire to give him a Western education and therefore his family moved to France. The economic crisis of 1929 damaged his father's business and therefore in 1933 his family returned to Romania. Harsegor's family intended to immigrate to the Land of Israel but this proved impossible during World War II. His entire family perished in the Holocaust. Because he was a member of the Socialist–Zionist youth movement Hashomer Hatzair the Romanian fascist authorities sentenced him to 20 years of imprisonment with hard labor. Harsegor ended up working in the printing press of the prison. In 1944 he was released from prison, and continued to be active in the Hashomer Hatzair youth movement.
In 1946, after being active in gathering Jewish teenagers in Romania and facilitating their immigration to Palestine, he himself immigrated to Palestine. The British authorities in Palestine limited the Jewish immigration quota at that time and all the passengers on the ship taking him to Palestine were seized imprisoned in camps in Cyprus. They were released in early 1949 after the establishment of the State of Israel. In Cyprus Harsegor changed his name from Goldberg to Harsegor.[2]
Harsegor was a member of Kibbutz Zikim and was the person who gave the kibbutz its name. Harsegor was a member of the Israeli Communist Party Maki and worked as a reporter for the Moscow Hebrew newspaper Kol HaAm. At that time he met his wife Tamar, and his daughter Niva was born.
Harsegor began his academic studies at the Tel Aviv University. He excelled in his Bachelor's degree and therefore the Tel Aviv University sent him to France to continue his studies. Harsegor studied in France for six years. For his academic achievement Harsegor was awarded the degree of Docteur d'État, a degree which is usually not awarded to foreigners. Between 1962 and 1966 Harsegor taught history in the Municipal High School Ironi D in Tel Aviv.
In 1974, Harsegor was in Lisbon during the Carnation Revolution, and as a result, the history of Portugal became one of his major topics of interest.
For more than twenty years, Harsegor hosted the regularly weekly seven o'clock evening program "Sha'a Historit" (History Hour) on the Galatz radio station, along with the Israeli radio broadcaster Alex Ansky.
Harsegor died on 10 February 2011 at the age of 86 in the city of Kfar Saba due to kidney disease.
References
- ↑ Hartman, Ben (9 February 2011). "TAU professor Michael Harsegor passes away aged 87". Jerusalem Post.
- ↑ Velmer, Tomer (10 February 2011). "Historian Michael Harsegor dies at 87". Ynet.news.com. Retrieved 28 March 2011.