Miriam Hadar Weingarten

Miriam Hadar Weingarten is a United States-based Israeli beauty pageant winner, journalist and lawyer.

Miriam Hadar Weingarten
Hadar in Jerusalem as Miss Israel
Born
Miriam Hadar

Other namesMira Weingarten
TitleMiss Israel 1958
Spouse(s)Jack Weingarten (2 children)
Akiva Nof (1 daughter)
Children3 (including Lea Fastow)
RelativesAndrew Fastow (son in law)

Life

Hadar-Weingarten was born in Jerusalem, Mandatory Palestine (now Israel). She did her military service in the Israeli Air Force while studying law at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. In 1958, she won the title of Beauty Queen of Jerusalem and Beauty Queen of Israel.[1]

She represented Israel in the Miss Universe pageant, where she placed among the finalists and won the trophy for the Best Speech. After this experience, she embarked on a three-year government-sponsored lecture tour throughout the US and Canada.

Upon returning to Israel, Hadar-Weingarten was a writer and editor for 17 years on the staff of the newspapers Ha'aretz and Ma'ariv, where she reported on the government and Knesset.

Her first husband was Jack Weingarten, a Texan, of the Weingarten's supermarket chain; she had two children with him. In parallel with her family life she began to study cinema at Tel Aviv University. After her divorce she married Knesset Member Akiva Nof and later gave birth to a daughter, Ayelet. She began to teach at Tel Aviv University and later emigrated to New York.

During the 1973 Yom Kippur War, Hadar Weingarten was the first woman to cross the Suez Canal into Egypt with the Israeli Armed Forces. To get to the front lines - ordinarily forbidden to women - she disguised herself as a man, wearing a helmet, boots and male uniform. She recorded the bitter fighting and bloody horrors throughout the war.

Other

Hadar Weingarten moved to New York City, where she had a career in real estate. She received the Real Estate Board of New York Residential Deal Award.

Her daughter, Lea, married Andrew Fastow, convicted in the Enron scandal.

References

Sources

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