Anda Amir-Pinkerfeld

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Anda Amir-Pinkerfeld

Hebrew: אנדה עמיר-פינקרפלד
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Rzeszow, Rzeszów County, Podkarpackie Voivodeship, Poland
Death: March 27, 1981 (78)
Tel Aviv, Israel
Place of Burial: Holon, Israel
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Yoel Pinkerfeld and Chedva Frieda Pinkerfeld
Wife of Arieh Amir
Mother of Amos Amir and Zippor Carmi
Sister of Yaakov Pinkerfeld; Lucia Helena Reich and Tzipora Feige Tova Pinkerfeld

Occupation: Israeli poet and author. She is best remembered in Israel as a children's writer.
Managed by: Yigal Burstein
Last Updated:

About Anda Amir-Pinkerfeld

Anda Pinkerfeld Amir (Hebrew: אנדה פינקרפלד-עמיר‎; June 26, 1902 - March 27, 1981) was an Israeli poet and author. She is best remembered in Israel as a children's writer.

Biography

Anda Pinkerfeld was born in Rzeszow, Poland in 1902. Her father worked as an architect for the Austro-Hungarian government. Her family was secular, and did not provide a Jewish education. After the Lwów pogrom (1918), she became involved with the Hashomer Hatzair movement and switched schools to the Jewish gymnasia in Lvov. In 1920 she left for Mandate Palestine with a Hashomer Hatzair group, but later returned to Lvov, for her BA. During this time, she married Arieh Krampner-Amir, an agriculturalist. In 1924, the couple returned to Palestine. After living in Kibbutz Bet Alfa and Tel Aviv, they eventually settled in Kiryat Anavim and had a daughter, Zippor and a son, Amos. In the aftermath of World War II, Pinkerfeld-Amir was sent to work in the Displaced Persons camps in Germany by the Jewish Agency. Pinkerfeld-Amir kept a diary of her experiences in Europe. She later worked in the archives of the Ministry of Defense, keeping records of soldiers who fell in the 1948 War of Independence.

Pinkerfeld-Amir died March 27, 1981.

Work

In her youth, Pinkerfeld-Amir wrote and published poetry in Polish. After immigrating to Palestine, she was influenced by Uri Zvi Greenberg and began writing in Hebrew. Her earliest work in Hebrew was published in 1928 under the pen name Bat-Hedva, meaning daughter of Hedva, her mother's Hebrew name. She wrote many portrayals of biblical characters, but after her experiences in the camps in Germany, her work took on a more nationalistic tone. She was among the first writers to deal with the holocaust, when most writers avoided the subject.

Her most remembered work was written for children; in rhyme and lyrics, and more serious writing helping children deal with loss.

Awards and honors

  • In 1936, she received the Mossad Bialik prize for her book of Children's poems.[5]
  • In 1971, she was awarded the Haim Greenberg Prize for her poetry.
  • In 1978, she received the Israel prize, for children's literature.

About אנדה עמיר-פינקרפלד (עברית)

אַנְדָה עמיר-פּינְקֶרְפֶלְד (26 ביוני 1902, ריישא, גליציה – 27 במרץ 1981, כ"א באדר ב' תשמ"א, תל אביב) הייתה משוררת וסופרת ילדים ישראלית. בין שירי הילדים המפורסמים שלה: כושי כלב קט, האנקור, תרנגול אני והקיפוד.

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Anda Amir-Pinkerfeld's Timeline

1902
June 26, 1902
Rzeszow, Rzeszów County, Podkarpackie Voivodeship, Poland
1935
1935
1981
March 27, 1981
Age 78
Tel Aviv, Israel
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Hadarom cemetery, Holon, Israel