Among the immigrants to Palestine during the Third Aliyah were people who later-on founded the State of Israel, including
David Ben-Gurion and
Golda Meir, and also several prominent activists and intellectuals. Many of them would later become pioneers in Israeli culture. •
Baruch Agadati (1895–1976), dancer and choreographer •
Rachel Bluwstein (1890–1931), known as "Rachel the Poetess"; returned to Palestine on board the
Ruslan •
Joseph Constant (1892–1969), sculptor, painter and novelist, arrived on board the Ruslan with his wife •
Menachem Elkind (1897–1938), Zionist activist and one of the founders of
Gdud HaAvoda •
Yitzhak Frenkel (1899–1981), painter and sculptor, member of the
Ecole de Paris •
Uri Zvi Greenberg (1896–1981), poet, journalist and activist, who wrote in Yiddish and Hebrew, immigrated in 1923. •
Joseph Klausner (1874–1958), historian from Lithuania, later-on professor of
Hebrew literature •
Yitzhak Lamdan (1899–1954), Hebrew–language poet, translator and editor •
Yehuda Magidovitch (1886–1981), architect from
Uman •
Arieh Navon (1909–1996), painter, illustrator and cartoonist •
Henya Pekelman (1903–1940), Zionist pioneer, woman manual laborer, women's equality activist partisan and rape victim; the autobiography she wrote provides a rare documentation of daily life in Eretz Yisrael of those times. •
Zeev Rechter (1899–1960), architect from
Kovalivka, Odesa Oblast •
Yitzhak Sadeh (1890–1952), one of the founders of
Gdud HaAvoda, later-on commander of the
Palmach •
Menachem Ussishkin (1863–1941), Zionist leader Many of them arrived in Palestine in December 1919 on board the Ruslan. ==References==