Chanie Rosenberg (20 April 1922 – June 2021) was a South African-born artist, former teacher and socialist. She was the sister of Michael Kidron, the partner of Tony Cliff, and a founder member of the Socialist Workers Party in Britain.[[1] Short biography]
Life
Chanie Rosenberg was born to a Jewish Zionist family originally from Lithuania in South Africa, a relative was the poet
Isaac Rosenberg. She studied Hebrew at Cape Town University.
In 1944, she moved to Palestine to live on a kibbutz where she became an anti-Zionist and a revolutionary socialist and met Yigael Gluckstein (better known as
Tony Cliff). After the war, she moved to Britain where she was a member of the Revolutionary Communist Party from 1944 to 1949; afterwards joining the group which eventually became the Socialist Workers Party.
She was active in many anti-racist and anti-fascist mobilisations. She worked as a teacher who was active in the National Union of Teachers in Hackney.
[[2] Interview with Chanie Rosenberg] She was also an artist whose sculpture has been exhibited in the Royal Academy of Arts.
[[3] Review of Fighting Fit]
Selected writings
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Education and Society: A rank-and-file pamphlet (1968)
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Education and Revolution: a great experiment in socialist education (1972)
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Class Size and the Relationship Between Official and Unofficial Action in the NUT (1977)
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Women and Perestroika (1989)
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Education under capitalism and socialism (1991)
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1919: Britain on the Brink of Revolution (1995)
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Education: Why our children deserve better than New Labour (with Kevin Ovenden) (1999)
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Fighting Fit: A Memoir (includes an illustrated pamphlet on Malevich and Revolution) (2013)
Further reading
External links