Zangwill, Israel (1864-1926), was an English novelist and dramatist known for his works on Jewish themes. He made his reputation with the novel The Children of the Ghetto (1892), a sympathetic story of immigrant Jews struggling to survive in the Whitechapel district of London. His other works on Jewish subjects included the novel Ghetto Tragedies (1893) and a collection of essays published as Dreamers of the Ghetto (1898). Zangwill won success with the dramatization of The Children of the Ghetto in 1899; with light comedies such as Merely Mary Ann (1904); and with social dramas, such as the melodrama The Melting Pot (1908) and the antiwar play The War God (1911).
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Zangwill was born in January or February 1864, in London. His father was a Russian Jewish refugee. Zangwill was educated at the Jews’ Free School and the University of London. He became a member of the Zionist movement in 1896 and soon afterward served as its leader. Zionism’s aim was to set up a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Later, however, Zangwill sought another area besides Palestine for the settlement of the Jews. He founded the Jewish Territorial Organization, a group that investigated sites for the establishment of a Jewish nation in Africa, Argentina, Australia, and Canada. Zangwill died on Aug. 1, 1926.