Hannah Senesh


Hannah Senesh

Hannah Senesh (1921 - 1944) was a young poetess born to an assimilated Jewish family in Hungary. Exposed to anti-Semitism, she decided to immigrate to Palestine and to settle in a kibbutz. She describes her second visit to Caesarea as follows:

The riding of the waves

February 4, 1942

It is my second visit to Caesarea and I am even more impressed than the first time… When you are on the seashore, you recall the past, you think of the future. The horizon seems to open before you and you feel more determined than ever to accomplish something great and beautiful. For various reasons, the atmosphere in the kibbutz is now more intimate and more harmonious.
In the morning, I roam through the ancient ruins; in the afternoon, I walk in the fields, or to be more precise, on the land designated to become our fields. When I see with what fury the foamy waves rush against the shore and how they become silent and peaceful upon crashing against the sand, I think that our enthusiasm and anger is not much different. As they roll, they are powerful and vigorous and when they touch the shore, they break, they calm down and they begin to play like small children on the golden sand.

H. Senesh

The waves also inspire Hannah's first poems in Hebrew:

H. Senesh

Soon after, Hannah is recruited by the British Intelligence Services. During the winter of 1943-44, she and her companions parachuted into Yugoslavia in order to make contact with the partisans. For their part, the leaders of the Palestinian community - the yishuv - call upon them to come to the aid of the Jews threatened by the Nazis. They will accomplish both tasks, joining the partisans, conveying information to the Allies and urging their fellow Jews to secure Palestine. According to her comrade, Yoel Palgui, Hannah proves to be the most enterprising and determined of all. She is ardent about the Jewish question and about Israel.

On May 13th, 1944, Hannah and her comrades cross the Hungarian border in small groups. The Hungarian police arrest some of them including Hannah. She is incarcerated in the same prison as Yoel to whom she recounts the circumstances of her arrest and interrogations. The following are excerpts of Yoel's testimony:

The last meeting

She suffered the most terrible forms of torture without yielding. A missing tooth was testimony of their cruelty. They had whipped the palms of her hands and the soles of her feet. They had tied her up, forcing her to remain immobile for hours. They had beaten her so violently that her body was completely covered with ecchymoses. Her torturers wanted to know the radio code. They had discovered the transmitter that she had hidden before being captured and they wanted the correspondence code in order to send false messages and direct the Allies' bombers to their anti-aircraft guns. Aware of the importance of the code, Hannah refused to reveal it. (...)

The worst was yet to come for Hannah in the prison in Budapest. She certainly did not long to find herself again in the city of her birth. They threw her into a cell where, to her great sorrow, she met her mother. At a loss of words, she embraced her tightly and could only murmur these words: " Mother, forgive me, but I could not renounce my obligations. "

The Germans knew what they were doing. They threatened to torture her mother and to execute her before Hannah's very eyes if she refused to reveal the code. But she did not yield. Only those who knew how much she loved her mother could begin to imagine her suffering. For my part, I was shaken by her account and could not hide my bewilderment. How could she remain so calm and so steadfast? Where did she find the courage to sacrifice her mother, whom she so loved, rather than reveal a secret, upon which, it is true, the lives of many depended? Who knows? Perhaps her determination indirectly contributed to saving her mother? Had she yielded, the Germans would surly have executed her, sending her mother to the gas chambers in Auschwitz.

In as much, the Germans did not admit defeat. They cast Hannah and her mother in the same prison, wagering that their joint imprisonment, hunger and fear of death would break them. Some friends - some prisoners who had known the family before the war or had heard about them - did what they could to help them. For example, they managed to arrange that they be placed in adjacent cells so that they could see each other. Once or twice a week, the prisoners were allowed to take a walk in twos in the miniscule courtyard of the prison under the surveillance of the guards who dealt severely with the slightest conversation. In this way, I could hear the steps of the two prisoners from my cell and I would immediately go to the window to see Hannah. The two walked side by side, clutching hands. In general, hours of interminable waiting, long days and long nights preceded their meetings, and when they would meet, Mrs. Senesh probably could not refrain from asking the question that preoccupied her:
Why?
Her daughter was content to grasp her hand tightly. Perhaps she also whispered:
If I had to do it again, I would and you would understand.
Hannah felt that her mother had misgivings about her activities. Perhaps she also tried to comfort her: You will be proud of me when you hear about what I did ...

Y. Palgui

Hannah appears before a military court on October 28, 1944. She accuses the Hungarian authorities of collaborating with the Nazis. Her mother is released, the Red Army is advancing and she appears to be quite confident. Furthermore, her judges had chosen to flee the country. It is then that she is transferred to the prison where Yoel is imprisoned. On November 7th, a shot is fired. Her companion would reconstruct her last moments based on the testimony of another prisoner:

Hannah's execution

This prisoner was forced to clean her cell - cell 13 was the cell of those condemned to death where she had been taken on November 7th - when the military prosecutor, Captain Simon, arrived: "Hannah Senesh, you have been condemned to death, he said in a monotone voice. Do you wish to petition for a reprieve? Condemned to death? No, I want to appeal the decision. Summon my lawyer.
You cannot appeal. You can only petition for a reprieve.
I was judged by a county court. I know my rights. I want to appeal.
You cannot do so. I repeat: Do you or do you not wish to petition for a reprieve.
A reprieve, from you? Do you think I would collaborate with murderers and executioners?
I would never ask for your mercy.
In that case, prepare to die. You may write farewell letters. But hurry. You will be executed in one hour."

Hannah remained alone in the cell, seated, immobile, staring at the wall. No one will ever know what she saw. Perhaps her mother's face. Perhaps memories of her childhood - the sea, the sand, different places, the people she loved.

She requested a pen and some paper and wrote two letters, one to her mother and one to us. Only Captain Simon knows what she wrote for they never reached their destinations. I imagine that she explained why she had chosen her path and asked for forgiveness, confident that she would obtain it when her mother would understand that it was her conscience and her being that had pushed her in that direction, her ideals and her sense of moral duty that had motivated her actions.

The letter that she wrote us - and that was probably destined to all of us, the members of the pioneer movement - never reached us. It disappeared with all the rest of her file. But after her death, Captain Simon declared to a representative of Senesh:
" Hannah persisted in her insubordination until the last day. At the moment of her death, she revealed only the worst intentions as having motivated her acts. She wrote to her comrades: 'Continue along the same path, do not be discouraged. Fight until the end, until the liberation of our people and our victory.'"

The deadline had passed. At 10 o'clock, the officer reentered the cell and softly requested that she follow him. Two soldiers escorted her to the courtyard. A wooden box filled with sand with a stake driven into it stood near the gray brick wall at the side of the small prison chapel. They tied her hands behind her back and tied her to the stake. She stared at the officer that was coming towards her with a blindfold, shaking her head to refuse it. She then lifted her blue eyes to the clouds - that must have veiled the sky at the moment the three shots were fired.

Half an hour later, a car came to take the body, which was buried in the Jewish cemetery in Budapest, in the section for martyrs alongside countless anonymous victims of the Nazis. We do not know who buried her there. The Jewish Burial Society had been disbanded; the Jews were not authorized to leave their homes. Perhaps an unknown admirer wanted to render her this final honor.

Y. Palgui

This last poem by Hannah Senesh was written in Yugoslavia:

H. Senesh


The site of Caesarea is one of the most remarkable in the country. Its vestiges date to various epochs. The moles go back to the time of Herod, as do the ruins of the wall with rounded towers. From the Roman period, there are the remains of the wall that protected the city, a hippodrome measuring 230 meters long and 80 meters wide that could accommodate 20,000 spectators, a plaza rich in mosaics and statues. A Roman theater regularly hosts concerts and theater. From the Byzantine period, there remains a church paved with mosaics representing animals and birds, visible on the exterior walls, as are the vestiges of a synagogue. From the period of the Crusades, there remains the partially restored rampart of Louis IX and the ruins of a church - probably the church of Saint Paul whose construction on the site of Paul's incarceration and perhaps on that of the temple dedicated to Augustus Caesar by Herod was interrupted by the arrival of the Moslems. A 9 km long aqueduct that is partially covered by sand dunes, dating from the 2nd century, conveyed water from the Shouni sources at the foot of the Samarian Mountains to Caesarea. It is comprised of three conduits, then two, then one. This strange, distinctive feature is explained… in an Arab legend:

The three conduits

The Arab king of Caesarea had a very beautiful daughter. No one in the entire region matched her beauty. Three suitors, a Jew, a Christian and a Moslem asked for her hand in marriage. Not knowing whom to choose, the beautiful princess who was also known for her noble spirit hesitated. She decided to consult her father, who replied:
" You well know, my daughter, to what extent I look after the good of all my subjects without discriminating on the basis of race or religion. Now, if you choose the Moslem, I will incur the resentment of the Jews and the Christians; if you choose the Christian, I will alienate the Jews and the Moslems; and if you choose the Jew, I will irritate the Christians and Moslems. I suggest that you submit them to a test: since the water in the wells of Caesarea is salty and the water from sources of drinkable water flows at the foot of the mountains, announce to the three suitors that you will marry the first to succeed in bringing the water from these sources to the city. "

The beautiful princess followed her father's advice and the three suitors began to lay down conduits. After a certain period, the first, vanquished by effort and fatigue, ceased his work. Hardly any time passed before the second, fearing the triumph of his rival, withdrew from the contest in despair. And only the third proceeded with the project until its completion, bringing his conduit to Caesarea and winning the hand of the beautiful princess.

The legend does not say whether the winner was Jewish, Christian or Moslem ...


The aqueduct crosses Nahal Taninim - the Valley of the Crocodiles - frequented only by wild beasts until the decade of the 80's in the 19th century.

Back to the Top


Terms and Conditions of Use of the Website
Copyright © 1992 - 2008 The Department for Jewish Zionist Education. All rights reserved.
The e-mail addresses @jajz are being discontinued
To Contact Us, Click and Choose Educational Helpdesk under Category