Esther Gottesman Explained

Esther G. Gottesman
Birth Name:Esther Garfunkel
Birth Date:1898
Death Date:October 1, 1997 (aged 98)
Nationality:American
Spouse:Benjamin Gottesman
Relatives:Samuel Gottesman (brother-in-law)
Children:2, including David Gottesman

Esther G. Gottesman (née Garfunkel; 1898–October 1, 1997) was an American philanthropist and Zionist.

Early life and education

Gottesman was the daughter of Aaron and Sarah Garfunkel. Her father was a founder of the Federation of Jewish Philanthropies. She graduated from New York University in 1921, the year she married banker and investment manager Benjamin Gottesman; he died in 1979.

Career

Gottesman was a delegate to the first post-WWII World Zionist Congress, held in Basel, Switzerland, in 1946. She was a member of World Zionist Organization Action Committee in the early years of Israeli statehood.

She was active in the Board of Jewish Education (New York). She was a member of the board of the Hadassah Women's Zionist Organization of America from 1946 until her death.[1]

Gottesman is credited with developing Hadassah's house newsletter into Hadassah Magazine.[1]

Gottesman persuaded her brother-in-law Samuel Gottesman to purchase the Dead Sea Scrolls and give them to Israel; the family built the Shrine of the Book at the Israel Museum to hold the scrolls.[2] [1]

Personal life

The Gottesman's had two sons, David S. Gottesman and Milton M. Gottesman.[2]

Gottesman and her husband were donors to Yeshiva University, where the Mendel Gottesman Library is named after her father-in-law.[2]

Notes and References

  1. News: Greenberg . Eric . Esther Gottesman: For 50 years a variety of hats for Hadassah . . 8 April 1983.
  2. News: Nemy . Enid . Esther G. Gottesman, 98, Zionist With Role in Scrolls Acquisition . 11 June 2019 . New York Times . 2 October 1997.