Image of Hannah Trager

Timeline

Lifetime: 1870 - 1943 Passed: ≈ 81 years ago

Title

English Writer, Activist

Country/Nationality

United Kingdom
Wikipedia

Hannah Trager

Hannah Barnett-Trager was an English writer and activist. She resided and worked primarily in Israel.

 
Trager was born in London, but emigrated with her parents to Jerusalem in December 1871 when she was one year old. Her father, Zerah Barnett, was Lithuanian and had run a successful factory for fur products in London, gaining British citizenship in October 1871. In Palestine he went bankrupt, and the family returned to London, moving back to Jerusalem in 1874. After several more moves between London and Jerusalem her father became one of the founders of Petah Tikva, and the family lived there for parts of the 1870s and 1880s. In 1891 the family moved to Jaffa where her father lived for the rest of his life.

In 1887 the family spent some time in London, where Hannah remained when the others returned. She married businessman Israel Gottman in 1888 and had two daughters; Gottman died young after business problems and bankruptcy. She supported herself and her daughters by working as a midwife, and married Joseph Trager, a chemist who was later incapacitated through tuberculosis. In 1911 her daughter Rose died aged 18 or 19, and her daughter Sarah committed suicide in 1924 aged 34 or 35. Trager was initially charged with Sarah's murder, but received an apology from the court after two months.

In 1926 Trager returned to Palestine and rejoined her father, her brothers and their families. She lived in Tel Aviv and later in Bene Berak, and died in September 1943. She was buried in Nahalat Yitzhak Cemetery. A street in Petah Tikva carries her name.

Books by Hannah Trager

Pictures of Jewish Home-Life Fifty Years Ago Cover image

Pictures of Jewish Home-Life Fifty Years Ago

Non-Fiction Religion
Social Science Customs Anthropology

Hannah Trager published Pictures of Jewish Home-Life Fifty Years Ago in 1926, so the book is a portrait of day to day life for a Jewish family in Jerusalem around 1876. In each chapter, Mr. Jacobs reads a letter from his cousins living in Jerusalem m...