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Stern, Avraham (1907-1942)
Poet, Underground Fighter, and Founder of "Lehi"
Avraham Stern was born in Poland to a learned Zionist family. He moved
to Eretz Yisrael in 1925 and studied briefly at the Gymnasia in Jerusalem
before entering the Hebrew University. An outstanding student of the humanities,
Stern won a scholarship to study classical languages and literature at
the University of Florence. He returned to Eretz Yisrael in 1929 and joined
the Haganah, and not long after left his studies to devote his energies
entirely to fighting for Jewish independence.
In 1931, a group of Haganah fighters, rejecting what they deemed was
moderation and restraint in the fight for Jewish independence, broke away
from the Haganah and formed an armed resistance movement of their own,
known as the Irgun. Stern, whose views had become much more militant following
the Arab riots of 1929, became an active member of the Irgun. He took
on the underground name of "Yair," in tribute to the commander
of the zealots at Massada, Eliezer Ben Yair.
Stern, who viewed the British, more then the Arabs, as the primary enemy
of the Jews and the principal obstacle to Jewish independence, called
strongly for an armed struggle against the British. With David Raziel,
he compiled a manual on the use of the revolver, the first of its kind
in Hebrew. He also wrote the poem "Anonymous Soldiers" (1933)
which became the anthem first of the Irgun, and later, of Lehi. A collection
of Stern's underground poetry was published posthumously.
In 1937, following the Arab riots, the Irgun split, with many of its
members returning to the Haganah. Stern and others who refused to accept
Haganah leadership remained in the Irgun under the command of Jabotinsky
and continued their militant activities. Stern went to Poland to establish
Irgun training courses there and to obtain arms. Returning to Eretz Yisrael,
he was imprisoned by the British from August, 1939 to June, 1940.
Stern insisted that the struggle against the British remain independent
of any political linkage, even to Jabotinsky's Revisionist party. He also
vehemently opposed tempering the resistance in any way, and thus, in August,
1940, when the Irgun decided to suspend their attacks on the British during
World War II, Stern formed a radical splinter opposition group, known
as Lehi, an acronym for "Lohamei Herut Yisrael." He maintained
that, even in the face of the Nazi threat, it was the British who posed
the major threat to the Jews; doubting the Allies could win the war, he
even advocated an alliance with Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, believing
these ties would assist the nationalist effort in Eretz Yisrael.
Stern's extremism, coupled with several robberies committed by members
of his group, earned Lehi the resentment of many Jews in Eretz Yisrael,
as well as the British. By 1942 the British had offered a reward for Stern's
capture. On February 12, 1942, the British discovered and forced their
way into Stern's hiding place in Tel Aviv, and killed him immediately.
The building is now a museum of the Lehi movement.
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