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Following Her Inner Compass

Born in 1938 in Djerba the legendary island of Kohanim with ochre sunsets and indigo nights Shulamit Cohen was the blessing to her parents after over a decade of childlessness. Her father was the community’s chazzan shochet and melamed. Yet the tumult of the 20th century had invaded even the timelessness of Shulamit’s hometown. Ignorance of Yiddishkeit led to apathy; eventually some of Shulamit’s childhood friends stood on the brink of conversion to Christianity. Invoking her personal heroines — Rus mother of kingship and Esther stalwart in her silent courage — Shulamit used her charisma and idealism to influence her childhood friends and return them to their heritage. Thankful for their daughter’s strength and yet dissatisfied with her lack of education her father dreamed of Bais Yaakov. He had read in periodicals he received from Eretz Yisrael about the network of schools established by Sarah Schenirer and he told his daughter: “One day you are going to have to go to a place like this so Yiddishkeit will be instilled in you.” In a clear demonstration of Hashgachah pratis Shulamit’s father was sent by the community to Eretz Yisrael to further his expertise as a melamed. On the long voyage he met the Zeligmans of Gateshead. He told them of his 13-year-old daughter and his dreams for her — and they told him of Gateshead Seminary. A correspondence between Shulamit’s father andMr.Kohn principal of the seminary followed and three years later in 1954 Shulamit sailed to England.

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