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Alice Schwarz-Gardos

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alice Schwarz-Gardos

Alice Schwarz-Gardos (31 August 1916 in Vienna - 14 August 2007 in Tel Aviv) was an Austrian-born Israeli journalist and author. She was noted for her work as an editor for German-language newspapers in Israel, and was editor-in-chief of the daily newspaper Israel-Nachrichten. She documented political and cultural events and displayed Zionism in her stance.[1]

Schwarz-Gardos was born in Vienna in 1916, the daughter of a manager at the Vienna Union-Bank who was forced in retirement after the stock exchange crash of 1929. The family relocated to Bratislava, where she attended the German Realgymnasium and began a course studying medicine. While in Bratislava she contributed her first articles for the newspaper Der Grenzbote, and won a youth prize writing for the Neue Freie Presse in 1935.[1] Her family fled from the National Socialists in Bratislava[2] and moved to Palestine in 1939 upon the outbreak of World War II. She was employed by the Royal Navy in 1942 as a secretary. From 1949 she worked as an editor for the Yedioth Hayom, a German-language daily in Israel, and as a press officer of the Jewish Agency. She married Slovak-born composer Eli Gardos in 1964, who had set up a music school in Hadera. From the 1960s she worked as a foreign correspondent for the Tagesspiegel, Die Presse and Hamburger Abendblatt and wrote 11 books in German.[1] She was appointed chief of the Israeli daily newspaper Israel-Nachrichten in 1975.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Alice Schwarz-Gardos". Jewish Women's Archive. Retrieved 26 November 2017.
  2. ^ a b "Alice Schwarz-Gardos". Der Spiegel. 20 August 2007. Retrieved 26 November 2017.
This page was last edited on 22 December 2023, at 16:02
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