After the latter camp's liberation by the
British army, she was among the ailing women inmates evacuated by the Swedish
Red Cross for convalescence in Sweden. In 1946 she found her way to
Mandatory Palestine. She qualified as a registered nurse, and studied literature and history at
Tel Aviv University. She also served as a
cultural attaché in Israeli diplomatic posts located in
Budapest and
Stockholm. Miriam Akavia was one of the three students who were stopped from attending public schools as a result of German Invasion; however, she was transferred to the Jewish Gymnazjum. Miriam Akavia began publishing novels and memoirs in 1975. As a president of the
Platform for Jewish-Polish Dialogue, she organized meetings with teenagers of both countries. She aimed to defuse stereotypes which separate
Poles and
Jews. == Writing ==