Marina Solodkin

Marina Solodkin
Date of birth (1952-05-31)31 May 1952
Place of birth Moscow, Soviet Union
Year of aliyah 1991
Date of death 16 March 2013(2013-03-16) (aged 60)
Place of death Riga, Latvia
Knessets 14, 15, 16, 17, 18
Faction represented in Knesset
1996–2003 Yisrael BaAliyah
2003–2005 Likud
2005–2013 Kadima

Marina Solodkin (Russian: Марина Михайловна Солодкина, Hebrew: מרינה סולודקין; 31 May 1952 – 16 March 2013) was an Israeli politician and member of the Knesset for Yisrael BaAliyah, Likud and Kadima. She immigrated to Israel from Russia in the early 1990s and joined the immigrant Yisrael BaAliyah party and entered the Knesset in 1996. She served as a lawmaker until February 2013 when she lost her seat in the elections.

Biography

Born Marina Gershman in Moscow in the Soviet Union (now Russia), Solodkin studied at Moscow State University, where she gained a PhD in economic and social science. She immigrated to Israel in 1991.[1]

Once in Israel, Solodkin joined the Russian-immigrant party, Yisrael BaAliyah led by Soviet dissident Natan Sharansky. She was elected to the Knesset in the 1996 elections on the party's list and chaired the Committee on the Status of Women. After retaining her seat in the 1999 elections, she was appointed Deputy Minister of Immigrant Absorption, a post she regained during the 16th Knesset after Yisrael BaAliyah had merged into Likud.

Shortly before the 2006 elections Solodkin resigned from the Knesset in order to join Kadima. She gained 6th place on the party's list and was re-elected. However, in protest at not being appointed a Minister despite her high position on Kadima's list, she was absent from the swearing-in ceremony of the new government. Her absence from the cabinet was unpopular with many Russian immigrants.[2]

She has called for foreign agricultural workers to be replaced with Ethiopian immigrants,[3] and demanded that Ariel Toaff be put on trial for writing about blood libel.[4] She has also said that Ehud Olmert should resign over the 2006 Lebanon War.[5]

She retained her seat in the 2009 elections after being placed tenth on the party's list. On 5 December 2012, in the days leading up to the 2013 elections, while polls showed Kadima either barely getting into the Knesset or not even passing the threshold, Solodkin announced she would not contest the elections.[6]

Outside the Knesset, Solodkin produced three books:

She also wrote articles for newspapers and magazines. Solodkin was found dead in her hotel room in Latvia on 16 March 2013, having died of a stroke. She wrote on her Facebook page the Friday before: "In a few hours' time I will take off for Latvia in order to take part in a conference I was invited to by the Latvian Committee against Fascism… Lately, Neo-Nazism is raising its ugly head in Eastern Europe, in the post-Soviet states. We must remain vigilant."[7][8]

She was survived by her husband and two children. She lived in Ashkelon.

References

External links

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