'Chaim Azriel Weizmann' (
Hebrew: חיים עזריאל ויצמן)
November 27,
1874 –
November 9,
1952) was a
chemist, Zionist leader, President of the
World Zionist Organization and the first President of the
State of Israel. He was elected on
February 1,
1949, and served until 1952. Weizmann founded the
Weizmann Institute of Science in
Rehovot,
Israel.
Early life and career
Weizmann was born in the small village of
Motol (Motyli, now Motal') near
Pinsk (
Russian Empire, now in
Belarus). He graduated the
University of Fribourg in
Switzerland in 1899 with a degree in chemistry. He lectured in chemistry at the
University of Geneva (1901-3) and later taught at the
University of Manchester.
He became a British subject in 1910, and in
World War I he was (1916-19) director of the British
Admiralty laboratories. He became famous while as a lecturer at Manchester he discovered how to use
bacterial fermentation to produce large quantities of desired substances and is nowadays considered to be the father of
industrial fermentation. He used the bacterium
Clostridium acetobutylicum (the ''Weizmann organism'') to produce
acetone. Acetone was used in the manufacture of
cordite explosive propellants critical to the Allied war effort (see
Royal Navy Cordite Factory, Holton Heath). Weizmann transferred the rights to the manufacture of acetone to
Commercial Solvents Corporation in exchange for royalties.
Zionist political leader
In 1917, he worked with
Lord Balfour to obtain the milestone
Balfour Declaration, stating that the British government "views with favour the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people". A founder of so-called synthetic
Zionism, Weizmann supported grass-roots colonization efforts as well as higher-level diplomatic activity. Siding with neither
Labour Zionism on the left nor
Revisionist Zionism on the right, Weizmann was generally associated with the centrist
General Zionists.
On
January 3,
1919, he and the future King
Faisal I of Iraq signed the
Faisal Weizmann Agreement establishing relations between
Arabs and
Jews in the
Middle East. After 1920, he assumed leadership in the world Zionist movement, serving twice (1920-31, 1935-46) as president of the World Zionist Organization. In 1921, Weizmann went along with
Albert Einstein for a fund-raiser to establish the
Hebrew University in
Jerusalem.
Concurrently, Weizmann devoted himself to the establishment of a scientific institute for basic research in the vicinity of his sprawling estate, in the town of
Rehovot. Weizmann saw great promise in science as a means to bring peace and prosperity to the area. As stated in his own words :
"I trust and feel sure in my heart that science will bring to this land both peace and a renewal of its youth, creating here the springs of a new spiritual and material life. [...] I speak of both science for its own sake and science as a means to an end." [1]
His efforts led in 1934 to the creation of the Daniel Sieff Research Institute, that was financially supported by an endowment by the Baron
Israel Sieff in memory of his late son. Weizmann actively conducted research in the laboratories of this institute, primarily in the field of
organic chemistry. In 1949 the Sieff Institute was renamed the
Weizmann Institute of Science in his honor. Weizmann's success as a scientist and the success of the Institute he founded make him an iconic figure in the heritage of the Israeli scientific community today.
In 1936 he addressed the
Peel Commission, set up by
Stanley Baldwin, whose job it was to consider the working of the
British Mandate of Palestine. He remained convinced that the Commission offered new hope to the
Zionist movement.
During
World War II, he was an honorary adviser to the British
Ministry of Supply and did research on
synthetic rubber and
high-octane gasoline. (Formerly Allied-controlled sources of rubber were largely inaccessible owing to Japanese occupation during World War II, giving rise to heightened interest in such innovations). Tragedy struck when his younger son Michael, serving as a pilot in the British
Royal Air Force, was killed when his plane was shot down over the
Bay of Biscay.
He met with
United States President
Harry Truman and worked to obtain the support of the United States for the establishment of the
State of Israel. Weizmann became the first
President of Israel in 1949. His nephew
Ezer Weizman also became president of Israel. He is buried beside his wife, Vera, on the Weizmann estate.
See also
★
Maria Weizman
Further reading
★
Trial and Error: The Autobiography of Chaim Weizmann, Chaim Weizmann, , , Jewish Publication Society of America, 1949,
Works cited
★ Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs. ''
Zionist Leaders- Chaim Weizmann''.
11 October 1999, accessed
13 June 2007.
External links
★
Biography at the Jewish Agency site
★
Biographical notes at the Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs
★
Weizmann Institute of Science website
★
The Chaim Weizmann Laboratory on Chaim Weizmann's laboratory at the Weizmann Institute (includes info and links on Weizmann's scientific work)
Succession