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Moshe Dayan (1915-1981)
Israel
military commander and statesman, was born in Deganyah Alef, a
kevuzah, and raised in moshav Nahalal. As a young man he was a
guard in the village fields, later joining the Haganah. Dayan was
arrested in 1939, together with 42 of his friends, for participating
in an illegal Haganah commanders' course, and was sentenced to ten
years' imprisonment. Released in 1941, he joined a British army unit
and lost an eye in a battle with Vichy (French) forces in Syria.
During the War of Independence (1948), Dayan commanded the defense
of Jewish settlements in the Jordan Valley. In August 1948 he
was appointed commander of the Jerusalem front, and after the
war he participated in the cease-fire talks between Israel and
Jordan. From Dec. 1953 until Jan. 1958 he was commander-in-chief
of the Israel army. He successfully commanded the Israel forces
throughout the Sinai Campaign of 1956. Dayan ended his army service
in 1958 and in the fall of 1959 was elected to the Knesset as
a member of the Mapai party, and became minister of agriculture.
In October 1964, after a disagreement with Prime Minister Levi
Eshkol, he resigned his post in the government. A year later he
was elected to the sixth Knesset as a member of the new political
party Rafi. During the crisis proceeding the Six-Day War in June
1967, Dayan was appointed minister of defense. After successfully
conducting the war, Dayan administered the territories occupied
by the Israel army. He conducted a policy of liberal military
government, opening the borders to trade and travel between the
occupied territories and Arab countries.
After the Yom Kippur War in October 1973, Dayan became a controversial
figure in Israel. He suffered heavy criticism for not being prepared
for the Arab attack and after the war left the Ministry of Defense.
Although elected to the Ninth Knesset (1977) as a Labor party
member, he served as foreign minister in the Begin government
until 1980. For the 1981 elections he formed a new party, Telem,
and represented it in the Tenth Knesset. Many Israelis regarded
Dayan as their country's greatest military and political leader.
He was buried in Nahalal.
Biography, with internal links to contextual
background
http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/biography/Dayan.html
Biography emphasizing Dayan's archeological activities, bibliography
- extensive
http://www.arts.ualberta.ca/JHS/Articles/article_27.htm
Memorial stamp
http://www-personal.umich.edu/~szwetch/Stamps.of.Israel/69.html
Short biography, bibliography
http://www.historycentral.com/Bio/people/dayan.html
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by C.D.I. Systems 1992 (LTD) and Keter.
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