Els Bendheim | |
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Personal | |
Born | Els (Rivka) Salomon-Prins Bendheim 7 July 1923 Amsterdam, Netherlands |
Died | 12 January 2023 Jerusalem, Israel | (aged 99)
Religion | Judaism |
Spouse | Charles Henry Bendheim (1917-1997) |
Children | 7 |
Alma mater | Barnard College |
Occupation |
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Els Salomon-Prins Bendheim (7 July 1923 – 12 January 2023, 23 Tammuz 5683 – 20 Tevet 5783) was a Dutch-born Orthodox Jewish philanthropist, theologian, author and photographer. In 2002, Bendheim was awarded the Yakir Yerushalayim (Worthy Citizen of Jerusalem) prize for her contributions to the development of Jewish institutions in Jerusalem.
Els (Rivka) Salomon-Prins was born in Amsterdam, daughter of Iwan (Yitzhak) Salomon and Sophie (Shifra) Wilhelmina Prins Salomon. Her grandfather was the Dutch merchant and Jewish scholar Eliezer Liepman Philip Prins. Her brother was the linguist Herman Prins Salomon. Her half siblings were Robert Salomon, Erna Steindecker and Theodore Salomon. Els Bendheim grew up in Amsterdam and attended the Amsterdams Lyceum.[1][page needed]
In 1939, after Hitler's rise to power, the family fled to Canada. They settled in Montreal, where Bendheim attended Westmount High School. In 1944, she graduated from Barnard College with a B.Sc. in Chemistry.[2][1][page needed]
In 1957, Bendheim graduated from the New York School of Interior Design and continued to engage in photography and design throughout her life. Although forced to give up her Dutch citizenship after becoming an American, she considered herself Dutch and visited the Netherlands often. She later exhibited her photographs of tulips and Dutch landscapes on the walls of Shaare Zedek Medical Center.[3]
Bendheim was married to Charles Henry Bendheim, with whom she had seven children.[4]
She died in Jerusalem on 12 January 2023, at the age of 99.
Bendheim published extensively in English, Hebrew and Dutch on topics of theology, rabbinic writings and European Jewish history. Inheriting a love for Jewish literature, she initiated the publication of her grandfather's correspondences, the notes he left in the margins of his books and an anthology of his work in Dutch. [5][6]
One of Bendheim's halakhic position papers led to the establishment of the Manhattan Eruv in 1962.[7] Bendheim stressed the importance of community and inclusiveness in Jewish rulings, arguing that Orthodox Jews who were wheelchair bound and young mothers with infants could not attend synagogue on the Sabbath without an eruv.[8][page needed][9]
Another project was a book of blessings entitled "Pereḳ Shirah" dedicated to President Chaim and Aura Herzog and later republished for subsequent presidents including their son, President Isaac Herzog.[10]
In 1976, Bendheim and her husband worked with Uri Lupolianski to establish Friends of Yad Sarah Association in the United States. Her dedication to this project continued over forty years. Her son, Philip Bendheim, serves on the board and coordinates the activities of the Friends of Yad Sarah Associations in the United States and Europe.[11][failed verification] Bendheim was involved in establishing and upkeeping the Shaare Zedek Medical Center, and was among the founding members of Manhattan Day School, Stern College for Women and Yeshiva University.[12] Bendheim was also a generous donor to the Jerusalem College of Technology[13] and the Jewish Institute for the Blind.[14]