Menachem Begin

“ War is avoidable; Peace is inevitable.”

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Menachem Begin's acceptance speech at the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony, December 1978

Menachem Begin is memorialized in Jewish history as the commander of the Irgun, the leader of the opposition in the Knesset, the Prime Minister of Israel and the first Israeli statesman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize.



We are now celebrating the centennial year of Menachem Begin. In this framework, we are proud to present you an exhibit that will outline in broad strokes the life and achievements of Menachem Begin from his early youth at Brisk through his activity in the Betar movement, his imprisonment by the Soviets and his arrival to Israel.



His story continues with his fight for the liberation of Israel and his activities through the years as a key figure in Israeli politics in the opposition and as a government member.



As Prime Minister of Israel, he signed the peace treaty with Egypt and in 1978, he was the first Israeli statesman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize. Through the years he served as a model of integrity and leadership, based firmly on Jewish values and the sanctification of Israel's parliamentary democracy.



It is not an easy task to fold one man’s life, with more than 50 years in public service, into one exhibit; we have done our best to highlight the key points in his life and in our nation.



Herzl Makov

President and CEO 

Menachem Begin Heritage Center

Menachem Begin at as a young child, 1920/1924, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Childhood in Europe 1913-1931

Brisk

“We lived under the shelter of our mother's love. No matter how much she suffered, she never complained, and in this, she served as an example to us. My father was chairman of the Jewish Council in Brisk. Our home was a center for discussions about Zionism and community affairs. In my parents' house, the conversation always centered on the fate of the Jewish people and on the Land of Israel."

Ze'ev Jabotinsky's visit to Brest-Litovsk, Menachem Begin (Jabotinsky's second right), 1931/1931, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Meeting with Ze'ev Jabotinsky - 1931

“The first time I saw Jabotinsky was when he spoke at a conference in Brisk. I was sixteen years old. My life had changed. You sit and listen to a man and feel with all your being how he raises you higher and higher. Were you captivated? No, you were sanctified.”

Begin with the heads of Betar headquarters in Poland, 1935/1935, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Joining Betar - 1929

The Begin Family early 30's, 1930/1932, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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"“No, I will no longer go to Brisk, but Brisk will always go with me. For there are three main lessons that I took with me from my parents' house:  to love the Jewish people, not to fear the
Gentiles, and the third, that it is good for a man to bear hardships in his
youth”."

Menachem Begin about his Parents home and Childhood in Brisk, Menachem Begin Heritage Center, 1913/1930, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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“Since I was born in the Diaspora, my first wish was to be in the Land of Israel. As for a profession, I wrote that I wanted to be a lawyer, and explained it by saying that there were many poor people in Poland who could not afford a lawyer, but that I would ask for no payment from them.”

Menachem Begin's student card, Warsaw University, 1931-1932, 1931/1932, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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"“Having seen political Zionism and practical Zionism, we are now facing the age of military Zionism.”"

Menachem Begin, Betar in Warsaw 1938, 1938/1938, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Appointed as Betar governor in Poland - March 1939

Aliza Begin, 1948/1950, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Aliza Arnold (Begin)

"“Sitting at the table were two seventeen-year-old girls, twins. Right then and there I decided that one of them would be my wife. The next day I sent her a note: I saw you, miss, for the very first time, but it seems that I've known you my entire life.”  

"

Aliza and Menachem Begin on their wedding day, 1939-05-30, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Aliza and Menachem Begin on their       wedding day - 30 May 1939

World War II breaks out when Begin is with 1,000 illegal immigrants trying to cross the Romanian border on their way to Israel. The operation fails and Begin returns to Warsaw. With the news of the progress of the German army Begin tries to arrange for the recruitment of Betar members to the Polish army but when the Soviet Union invades from the East and the Polish army starts to fail, Begin leaves Warsaw with his wife and other Betar members on their way to Vilna where they re-establish the Betar movement.

Vilna

Although he was offered a certificate that allows him into Palestine, he chooses to stay in Vilna and to reorganize the movement's activities in occupied Europe. On 20 September 1940 the agents of the “NKVD” - Soviet secret police - arrive to arrest him. For eight months he was imprisoned, cold and hungry, in Lukishki prison where he was interrogated day and night for the crime of Zionist activity. Finally, he is sentenced in absentia for his crimes and as a “dangerous individual” is sent to a corrective labor camp for a period of eight years of hard labor. The camp was in Pechora in northern Russia. His book “White Nights” describes this difficult period in his life.

"“No, not guilty … To you, the very fact that I am a Zionist, a member of Betar, is my crime; to me this is serving my people.”  "

Menachem Begin as a prisoner by the Soviets in Vilna, 1940/1940, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Arrested by the Soviet secret police and sentenced to eight years in prison. September 1940  

Menachem Begin's Fingerprints, Lukishki Prison 1940, 1940/1940, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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"“Since my earliest childhood, my father taught me that we must return to the Land of Israel. Not to walk and not to ride and not to come but to return to the land of our forefathers.” "

Aliza and Menachem Begin with friends in Tel-Aviv, 1943-04, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Released from Pechora and recruited into the Polish army -1942 

The Anders Army

On July 30, Free Poland representatives signed the Sikorski-Mayski Agreement in London allowing the release of Polish citizens, like Menachem Begin, from Soviet camps and mobilizing them into fighting units under the command of General Władysław Anders to fight the Nazi forces. This army officially became the 2nd Polish Corps with 194,000 soldiers, among them some 10,000 Jews. Due to political disputes with the Soviets as well as shortages of equipment, food and clothing on the Eastern front, and the break between the Polish Government-in-Exile with Stalin, Anders and his army left the Soviet Union. In March 1942, via Persia (today, Iran), Iraq and Palestine, the Anders Army connected with the British army.  In addition, 74,000 family members and other civilians accompanied them. Once in Mandatory Palestine, 3,085 Jews went AWoL (Absent Without Leave), another 2,000 enlisted in the British Army, fighting in the Jewish Brigade in Europe, others joined the Jewish underground groups in Eretz-Yisrael.  Begin was discharged in 1943 and became the head of the Irgun Zvai Leumi.

Aliza and Menachem Begin with their son Binyamin Ze'ev, 1943/1943, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Etzel - The “Irgun”

Menachem Begin served for a year and a half in the Polish Army stationed in Israel. After receiving his official release from the Polish army he was appointed commander of the Irgun. He spent five years in  the underground as the Irgun commander, during which he was persecuted by the British police and sometimes even by the leadership of the Yishuv. Begin and his family traveled between various places, hiding with different identities; first as bearded Rabbi Sassover from the Hasidof neighborhood in Petah Tikva and later as Jonah Konigshoffer from Tel Aviv. When it was finally revealed, people did not believe that this young man with glasses and a mustache was the admired commander that tipped the British Empire.

Menachem Begin giving a speech at the Irgun dismantling ceremony in Jerusalem, August 1948, 1948-08, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Appointed  as commander of the Irgun –  December 1943

Menachem Begin's wanted ad, by the British who offered a reward for his extradition, 1943/1948, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Menachem Begin - wanted by the British who offered a reward for his extradition

Menachem Begin disguised as Rabbi Sassover, 1943/1943, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Menachem Begin as Rabbi  Sassover from Hassidof neighborhood in Petah Tikva

Menachem Begin disguised as Jona Konigshoffer, 1946/1946, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Menachem Begin as Jonah Konigshoffer from Tel-Aviv

Establishment of the State of Israel  - out of the underground - 14 May 1948 





“Soldiers of Israel, Hebrew youth, brothers and sisters in Zion! The British who subjugated our Homeland have been defeated and expelled. After a bloody war, the State of Israel has risen. And so, let us say on this, the first day of our freedom from the yoke of British subjugation, “Blessed is He Who kept us alive and maintained us and caused us to reach this day.”

Altalena on fire after being shelled near Tel-Aviv, 1948-06, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Altalena on fire after being shelled near Tel-Aviv. June 1948

About a month after the British left the country, the boat Altalena arrived in the country, carrying 940 immigrants as well as large quantities of arms. Following negotiations with the government of Israel over the distribution of arms, an IDF mortar fired at the ship, and it began to sink. Sixteen Etzel members were killed, among them survivors of the Holocaust. Many others were wounded. Begin gave the order to cease fire. “It was obvious to me that I had to order the Etzel fighters to restrain themselves, in order to prevent a civil war,” Menachem Begin later explained.  “It was the most important decision of my life.”

Years of Opposition

At the age of thirty-five, Begin finally left his life in the underground and returned to public life. He established a new party, the “Freedom Party founded by the National Military Organization,” better known as Herut. He spent twenty-nine years leading his party in the Opposition. During that time, the party grew from fourteen members to forty-five in the ninth Knesset.

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Menachem Begin addressing a party meeting in Tel-Aviv, Hans Pinn, Courtesy of GPO, Israel, 1948/1948, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Establishment of the "Herut" party -  August 1948

Menachem Begin giving a speech at the mass rally against the reparations agreement with West Germany, Tel-Aviv, February 1952, Hans Pinn, Courtesy of GPO, Israel, 1952-02, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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"The vote has already been held in Treblinka, in Auschwitz, in Ponary … where Jews voted in the throes of death. Reparations money will cleanse the German murderers of their guilt. Such a disgrace must not be committed in Israel!.”

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The Fifth Knesset 1961-1965

Prime Minister Levi Eshkol accompanied by Menachem Begin and GOC of Southern Command, Gavish, visiting troops in Sinai, Moshe Milner, Courtesy of GPO, Israel, 1967-06, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Prime Minister Levi Eshkol accompanied by Menachem Begin and O.C. Southern command General Gavish visiting troops in Sinai

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The Sixth Knesset 1965-1969

Aliza and Menachem Begin vote on Election Day, May 17, 1977, Sa'ar Ya'acov, Courtesy of GPO, Israel, 1977-05-17, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Prime Minister Menachem Begin, Al Gilbert, 1981/1982, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Prime Minister of the State of Israel  - May 17 1977 

“Today there has been a turnaround in the history of the Jewish people, in the history of the Zionist movement, the likes of which we haven’t seen in the past forty-six years. Zeev Jabotinsky dedicated his entire life to this goal. He was not privileged to see the establishment of the State of Israel, nor did he see the turnaround that occurred today.  We have reached this day through a loyal pact with the disciples of David Ben Gurion, our dear friends… My first thanks go out to my wife, because she had to put up with more than any other person on earth. I dedicate to her the eternal words, “I remember you, the kindness of your youth, when you went after me in the wilderness, in a land strewn with mines.” And I would like to thank the hundreds of thousands of men and women, citizens of Israel, who, according to all the polls, we can now say, have raised the Likud to the position of the first parliamentary party, which - according to the custom, which is like a law in the State of Israel - will be asked by the President to form the government of Israel.”

Prime Minister Menachem Begin saying a prayer at the Wailling Wall in the Old City of Jerusalem, Chanaya Herman, Courtesy of GPO, Israel, 1981-05-31, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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“The first thought was, and the first action, to bring the Vietnamese refugees whom our boat in the Pacific Ocean saved, but no country in Asia wanted to accept them. So my first action was [to] bring them to Israel. And my second act was [to think] how to make peace. "

A Vietnamese child at Ben Gurion Airport, Moshe Milner, Courtesy of GPO, Israel, 1977-06, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Egyptian President Anwar Sadat between Menachem Begin and the Israeli President Efraim Katzir at Ben-Gurion Airport, Moshe Milner, Courtesy of GPO, Israel, 1977-11-19, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Following secret messages forwarded by Prime Minister Begin, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat announced on 9 November 1977: “I am willing to come to them, to their home, to the Knesset itself and argue with them.”  This announcement was not left unanswered. In an appeal broadcast to the Egyptian people via an American television channel, Begin said, “Let us say to one another, and let it be a silent oath between our two nations, Egypt and Israel: No more war, no more bloodshed, no more threats…Only peace, true peace, and forever.”  



One week later, on Saturday night, 19 November 1977, Begin received his former enemy at Ben-Gurion airport. In five private talks held during the two days of the historic visit, “chemistry” was created between the two leaders and both agreed: “No more war.” 

Menachem Begin and Zbigniew Brzezinski engrossed in a game of chess at Camp David, Moshe Milner, Courtesy of GPO, Israel, 1978-09-09, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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The Camp David Agreement - September 1978

When the negotiations came to a standstill, President Carter invited Begin and Sadat to Camp David. There, Begin learned of the steep cost of responsibility, pressure, pain, and compromise. In order to achieve peace, he was forced to give up the settlements in Rafiah and the Sinai. Another six months passed before the Camp David Accords were signed. There were hundreds of documents, dozens of rebellions and crises, demonstrations and pressure from home, the visit of an American president to Israel, and a stormy session in the Knesset.

Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat at a meeting at the President's guest house in Aswan, Egypt, Moshe Milner, Courtesy of GPO, Israel, 1980-01-10, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Menachem Begin earned international recognition and honor when he was given the Nobel Peace Prize in December 1978 together with his Egyptian partner in the peace efforts. However, Sadat himself did not travel to Oslo to accept the prize and instead sent a representative. Begin went to Oslo and in his acceptance speech, he said, “The prize is not only mine; it belongs to my nation, for the terrible suffering it has undergone, for its many losses of life, for its love of peace and deep longing for it.” 

Certificate of the Nobel Peace Prize, Nobel Committee, 1978-12, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Nobel Peace Prize –  December 10 1978

The Nobel Peace Prize Medal, Nobel Committee, 1978/1978, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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PM Begin shakes hands with Egyptian President Sadat at the peace agreement signing at the White House in Washington, DC, Sa'ar Ya'acov, Courtesy of GPO, Israel, 1979-03-26, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Peace agreement with Egypt - March 26 1979

In March 1979, the first Peace Agreement between Israel and an Arab state was signed on the White House lawn. The triple handshake between Begin, Sadat, and Carter, has become an icon in the history of international relations. 

"No more war, no more bloodshed, no more bereavement. Peace on to you, Shalom, Salaam for ever! ... And they shall beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning-shears; Nation shall not hold up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more.” 

The peace treaty between Israel and Egypt, 1979-03-26, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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"“We under no circumstances will allow any enemy to develop weapons of mass destruction against our people. We will defend Israeli citizens with all of the facilities available to us.”

 7  June 1981"

Menachem Begin next to an F16 plane which was used in the raid on the nuclear reactor in Iraq, Chanaya Herman, Courtesy of GPO, Israel, 1981/1981, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Raid on the reactor –  June 1981

To prevent Saddam Hussein from developing nuclear weapons, the Israeli government approved Prime Minister Menachem Begin's proposal to destroy the nuclear reactor near Baghdad. Menachem Begin saw the attack as a rescue operation for the people of Israel, and especially for the children. From this action, Begin developed what was later called the Begin Doctrine:  “On no account shall we permit an enemy to develop weapons of mass destruction (WMD) against the people of Israel.”

On June 6, after heavy rockets fire landed on northern Israel, the government decided to embark on Operation “Peace for the Galilee.” The operation was meant to last only a few days to create a 40-kilometer security buffer on the northern border of Israel. The operation dragged on and by August 1982 Yasir Arafat left Beirut with 9,000 terrorists.  In September 1982, the newly-elected president of Lebanon, Bashir Gamayel, was assassinated.  Almost immediately afterwards, Phalangist troops went into the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps and killed 800 civilians. With casualties mounting and public support waning, Israel eventually withdrew from Lebanon. 

Operation "Peace for the Galilee", Yoel Kantor, Courtesy of GPO, Israel, 1982-06, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Operation Peace for Galilee - June 1982

"“I remember the kindness of your youth, when you followed me in the wilderness, in a land strewn with mines.”"

GP14, Moshe Milner, Courtesy of GPO, Israel, 1979/1979, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Aliza Begin passed away on  November 13 1982 at the age of 62

Prime Minister Menachem Begin announcing his resignation at a meeting with senior Likud party members, held at the Prime Minister's Office, Nati Harnik, Courtesy of GPO, Israel, 1983/1983, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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On 15 September 1983, Menachem Begin announced that he intended to resign and retire from public life. “I cannot go on” simply does not explain it. 

In the following years, he shut himself in his apartment in Jerusalem and rarely left it, except to visit the grave of his wife for the annual memorial service. Only close family and a few friends were allowed to visit him. 

Obituary of Menachem Begin, 1992-03, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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GP18, Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, 1979/1979, From the collection of: Menachem Begin Heritage Center
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Menachem Begin passed away on  March 9 1992 at the age of 79

Credits: Story

Curator—Malki Pomeranc

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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