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Reik, Havivah (1914-1944)
Haganah Fighter
Havivah Reik was born in a small village in Slovakia. She moved to Eretz
Yisrael in 1939 and joined Kibbutz Ma’anit of HaShomer HaTza’ir. In 1942
she joined the Palmach, and one year later volunteered for the parachute
unit, run by the British Army in conjunction with the Jewish Agency. The
objective of this unit was to infiltrate enemy territory in order to help
the Allied efforts in Europe and establish contact with partisan resistance
fighters in an attempt to aid beleaguered Jewish communities. Over 250
volunteers trained for the unit; Reik was one of thirty-three who actually
were parachuted into Europe.
Reik, one of four Haganah paratroopers to reach Slovakia, was parachuted
on September 21, 1944. Because of her familiarity with the area, she was
dropped close to her native village, which was the center of Slovak resistance.
Reik's immediate goal was to establish contact with the "Working
Group," a secret Jewish rescue operation, but she arrived after the
group had been deported. For several weeks she worked in Slovak villages
to assist the Jewish resistance, and with the arrival of the Nazis to
the area at the end of October, she escaped to the mountains with other
Jewish fighters. Within one week she was captured by the Nazis, and was
executed on November 20, 1944.
In addition to Havivah Reik, eleven paratroopers were caught, and six
of them executed. Kibbutz Lahavot Havivah was named for Reik.
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