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The Autobiography of Eleanor Roosevelt Book review: An admirable portrayal of a leading liberal voice

This illuminating autobiography, stretching down the decades of the 20th century and republished for the first time in 60 years, recalls what a remarkable woman she was

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Former American First Lady and diplomat Eleanor Roosevelt (1884 - 1962) smiles while boarding a plane, wearing a fur coat, early 1950s. (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

The Autobiography of Eleanor Roosevelt
Bloomsbury, £16.99

Eleanor Roosevelt (1884-1962) was a leading liberal voice in post-war America. She had been a committed advocate of women’s suffrage, an architect of the welfare state, a diplomat, a journalist and a social activist committed to the ideals of the newly established United Nations as head of the preparatory committee and framer of the UN Declaration of Human Rights.

This illuminating autobiography, stretching down the decades of the 20th century and republished for the first time in 60 years, recalls what a remarkable woman she was — and in particular how she stubbornly opposed antisemitism and became an enthusiastic supporter of the state of Israel.

Her early years were defined by her highly privileged background, both elitist and WASP, and one which looked down on Jews with disdain.

She married Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR) to become the First Lady during her husband’s 12 years in the White House. She was, however, propelled into espousing a plethora of causes as a means of distraction from her husband’s dalliance with various women.

She became increasingly aware of the persecution of Jews in Europe during the 1930s and was the subject of a vilification campaign in the Nazi press.

Restricted from speaking out publicly because of the US’s official policy of a studied neutrality, she told her husband that a member of his administration, Breckinridge Long, was “a fascist” because he blocked the immigration of Jews fleeing Hitler.

Eleanor Roosevelt became acquainted with European royalty including King George VI during the war years. Churchill, however, told her: “You don’t really approve of me, do you, Mrs Roosevelt?”

She did not. Churchill’s drink, cigars and strange hours wore down an ailing FDR — and it took him days to recover after each visit.

It is the third part of this autobiography, following the President’s death and entitled On My Own, which records her presence on the world stage.

She interviewed the Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev and the German Jewish scientist Lise Meitner, and met figures such as Maxim Litvinov, Jan Masaryk, David Ben-Gurion and Emperor Hirohito — from whom she elicited an admission that Japan should never have gone to war— during the 1950s.

She was deeply affected by the plight of Jewish survivors of the Shoah in displaced persons’ camps. She records a visit to Zilcheim, a Jewish camp outside Frankfurt, during which a bedraggled old woman suddenly approached her:

“I had no idea who she was and we could not speak each other’s language, but she knelt in the muddy road and threw her arms around my knees. ‘Israel’, she murmured, over and over. ‘Israel, Israel.’”

In 1952, she visited Syria, which she found “bitterly nationalistic”, and Palestinian refugee camps whose inhabitants had been left in limbo.

Their skills had been left to go to waste and their future was empty. Crossing into Israel via the Mandelbaum Gate was a breath of fresh air and she was deeply impressed by the determination and passion of the pioneers.

She subsequently used all her influence to persuade both Truman and Eisenhower to deliver military aid to Israel.

The life and times of Eleanor Roosevelt, a committed feminist, deserve to be reclaimed by today’s generation. This important book demonstrates the full majesty of a life characterised by not blowing in the wind.

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