| Bella
Abzug
Bella Savitzky Abzug was born in the Bronx on July 24,
1920 to Esther Tanklefsky and Emanuel Savitzky, immigrants
from Russia, just one month before women in the United States
were given the right to vote. She became a passionate crusader
for women’s rights, world peace, environmental integrity,
and social justice. Her idealism and activism grew out of
her childhood experiences and her Jewish upbringing.
As a young child, Bella was a tomboy, fierce competitor,
and a natural leader. She played marbles, checkers, traded
baseball cards, climbed trees, and was a streetwise New
Yorker. Her maternal grandfather routinely took her to synagogue
at an early age, and she became an outstanding student in
the Talmud Torah school and delighted the congregants with
her beautiful voice. She joined a left-wing labor Zionist
group, Hashomer Hatzir (the young guard), her first activist
group. Young Bella gave impassioned speeches at subway stops,
and was a very effective fundraiser for the proposed Jewish
homeland. Bella became inseparable from her socialist Zionist
friends, who kept her out all night going to theater, concerts
or meetings at the young age of 11.

Both of Bella’s parents supported her activism and
rebellion. Her mother, Esther, appreciated her talents and
encouraged every interest; she remarked that “Battling
Bella was born bellowing!” Her father adored and encouraged
his two daughters and also was a social activist; his butcher
shop bore his personal mark of protest during and after
World War I, named “The Live and Let Live Meat Market.”
Needless to say, with a name like that, her father did not
do very well in business! His real love was music. Every
Shabbat, the entire family, including grandparents, gathered
to sing and play instruments, led by Bella’s father.
Bella became an accomplished violinist and singer. A spirited
tomboy with music in her heart and politics in her soul,
Bella was energetic, talented, and studious, and a very
popular child in her community.
As a thirteen year old, Bella emerged as an outspoken teenager,
willing to break the rules. Her father died, and Bella was
prohibited from saying kaddish for him in the synagogue.
But Bella went anyway, davening at her synagogue every morning
before school for a year. The congregants gave her disapproving
glances, but no one ever stopped her. “Be bold, be
brazen, be true to your heart,” Bella later advised
others: “people may not like it, but no one will every
stop you.” Bella speculated that her first feminist
sparks were ignited while sitting behind the mechitzan at
the orthodox synagogue.

In high school and at Hunter College, Bella continued to
be an outstanding student, student leader, and political
activist, an ardent champion of civil rights and civil liberties.
With her brilliant college record and leadership awards,
Bella applied to Harvard Law School, but was turned down,
because they would not accept women students until 1952.
In those days, there was no women’s movement, so Bella
turned to her mother for advice. “Why do you want
to go to Harvard anyway?” she asked. “It’s
far away and you can’t afford the carfare.”
Bella won a scholarship to Columbia, only five cents by
subway from her home, where she became editor of the Columbia
Law Review and acquired an enthusiasm for playing poker.
In law school, Bella met and married Martin Abzug, a stockbroker
and novelist, son of a wealthy manufacturer. Like her parents,
Martin encouraged Bella in all her interests and ambitions,
even typing her briefs for her in law school, and remained
her steadfast supporter. “I think he even voted for
me,” quipped Bella. They have two daughters, a social
worker and an attorney and political consultant.

For the next 23 years, Bella practiced labor and civil
rights law, and was one of the few attorneys defending individuals
accused of subversive “Communist” activity during
the witch-hunts of the McCarthy era. She found that she
was overlooked when she entered an office to represent union
locals, so she decided to wear large hats, which became
her trademark. In 1950, she gained notoriety for her courage
in defending Willie McGee, a black Mississippi man falsely
accused of raping a white woman with whom had had a long-term
consensual relationship. On one of her trips to Mississippi,
no hotel in town would give her a room; she had to spend
the night in a locked women’s bathroom stall in the
Jackson Mississippi bus station to avoid the Ku Klux Klan.
Despite her best efforts, McGee was executed in 1951.
In 1962, Bella and her friends from Hunter College founded
Women Strike for Peace, an organization that lobbied for
a nuclear test ban treaty and protested the war in Viet
Nam. During the Johnson administration, Bella helped write
the legislation that became the Civil Rights Act of 1964
and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
Bella maintained that her passion for social activism came
from her Jewish background. “Judaism,” Bella
asserted, “has had a very profound effect on me. Jews
believe that you can’t have justice for yourself unless
other people have justice as well. That has motivated much
of what I have done.”

By 1970, Bella Azbug had become a leading reform Democrat
and was elected to Congress representing the Greenwich Village
area of New York City. She was one of twelve women in the
House of Representatives and the first Jewish woman to serve
in Congress. Bella immediately captured the nation’s
attention with her brash and flamboyant manner and her famous
large hats. Re-elected for three terms, she coauthored an
amazing number of important bills, including the Freedom
of Information Act, which exposed many secret government
activities to public scrutiny for the first time. She organized
the National Women’s Political Caucus, wrote the first
law banning financial discrimination against women, introduced
pioneering bills on comprehensive child care, Social Security
for homemakers, family planning, and abortion rights. In
1975, Bella was the first to introduce an amendment to the
Civil Rights Act to include gay and lesbian rights. She
also was the first member of Congress to call for Nixon’s
impeachment. Bella served from 1971 to 1977 and was acknowledged
by U.S. News & World Report as the “third most
influential” House member, and by a 1977 Gallup poll
as one of the twenty most influential women of the world.

Bella Azbug’s political career ended
with her defeat in a race for Senator in 1976. She became
a leader in the international women’s movement, working
to empower women in developing countries, and became involved
in the UN Decade for Women conferences. She also led the
fight against the 1975 UN resolution that “Zionism
Is Racism,” which finally was repealed in 1985. With
her friends, she created WEDO, the Women’s Environment
& Development Organization, an international advocacy
network that seeks to increase the power of women worldwide
in policymaking institutions, such as the United Nations,
to achieve worldwide economic and social justice, and a
more peaceful and healthy planet.
Although ill from breast cancer and heart disease, Bella
was an inspiration to women leaders from all over the world
at the UN conference on women in Beijing in 1995. Before
she died, in 1998, Bella predicted that in the twenty-first
century “women will change the nature of power, rather
than power changing the nature of women.”
At her funeral, Geraldine Ferraro said: “She didn’t
knock politely on the door. She didn’t even push it
open or batter it down. She took off the hinges forever.”
“Our society is more just and compassionate,”
said President Bill Clinton, “because Bella Azbug
lived and worked among us.”

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