![]() ![]() A son, Vlad, was born in Vienna in 1926, a daughter, Tatiana, in Moscow in 1928. Their first child, a girl named Tanio who was born in Bucharest in December 1921, died of dysentery seven months later. 1936–1939), and both joined the Communists after their split from the Social Democrats in 1921. Three years later, she married the Romanian Jewish socialist Marcel Pauker (1896–c. At the same time she continued teaching in the Jewish community, was active in maintaining a hostel for impoverished Jewish children, and took part in defense units protecting Jews against the pogroms that broke out in Bucharest in 1918. In 1915, she joined the Romanian Workers’ Social Democratic Party and adhered to its pro-Bolshevik wing after the October 1917 Russian Revolution. Quickly excelling in her studies and given professional training at deferred cost, Ana (beginning in 1910 or 1911) taught first grade at a Jewish primary school and then Hebrew and Jewish studies at a community professional school. ![]() Her father, Hersh Kaufman Rabinsohn, was a ritual slaughterer (sho het) and synagogue functionary, her mother Sarah, a small-time food seller. ![]() Born Ana Rabinsohn in the Moldavian village of Codaesti on December 13, 1893, she was one of six children (two having died in infancy) of an impoverished Orthodox Jewish household in Bucharest. ![]()
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