Rehavam Ze'evi
Rehavam Ze'evi (20 June 1926 – 17 October 2001) was an Israeli military officer and politician who rose to the rank of major general in the Israel Defense Forces, founded the right-wing Moledet party, and briefly served as Minister of Tourism in 2001.[1][2]
Born in Jerusalem, Ze'evi joined the Palmach in 1944 and during the 1948 War of Independence served as an intelligence officer in the Yiftah Brigade, operations officer on the northern front, and later as brigade commander in the Golani Brigade.[2] Promoted to major general in 1964, he commanded the Central Command from 1968 and acted as Chief of Staff for the General Staff during the 1967 Six-Day War, retiring in 1973 after briefly returning post-Yom Kippur War.[1][2]
Entering politics, Ze'evi advised on terrorism and intelligence under Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin in the 1970s, founded Moledet in 1988 with a platform centered on the voluntary transfer of Arab populations from Judea, Samaria, and Gaza to neighboring Arab states to enable demographic separation and enhance Israeli security, and opposed the Oslo Accords while serving as a minister without portfolio under Yitzhak Shamir, resigning over the Madrid Conference.[1][2] Appointed Tourism Minister in Ariel Sharon's government in March 2001, he resigned in October over the withdrawal of IDF forces from Hebron before being assassinated on 17 October 2001 in a Jerusalem hotel by members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine in retaliation for Israeli killings of Palestinian leaders.[1][2]
Early Life
Childhood and Education
Rehavam Ze'evi was born on June 20, 1926, in the Yemin Moshe neighborhood of Jerusalem, then under the British Mandate of Palestine.[1][3] He came from a religious Jewish family of longstanding Jerusalem residents, with his father affiliated with the Gur Hasidic dynasty, and the family traced its roots in the city for six generations.[3][4] Ze'evi's early education included studies beginning in 1932 at the Rehavia Gymnasium in Jerusalem and the Givat Hashlosha agricultural regional school, where he later attended as a youth.[3][2] At Givat Hashlosha, a settlement with an agricultural focus, he earned the nickname "Gandhi" due to a resemblance or impersonation of the Indian leader during school activities.[1] During this period, from approximately 1936 to 1944, he was active in the Ha-Machanot Ha-Olim youth movement, which emphasized Zionist education and pioneering ideals.[2][5]Initial Zionist Involvement
Ze'evi, born in Jerusalem on June 20, 1926, spent his formative years in the collective settlement of Givat HaShlosha, a moshav shitufi established in 1939 as part of the Zionist effort to develop agricultural communities in Mandate Palestine.[1] During his schooling there, he engaged in Zionist youth activities through membership in Machanot HaOlim, a movement founded in 1929 that emphasized practical training in farming, leadership, and ideological education to foster Jewish settlement and self-sufficiency in the region.[6] [1] Machanot HaOlim, aligned with Labor Zionist principles, prepared participants—primarily teenagers—for roles in kibbutzim and moshavim, instilling values of collective labor (avoda) and defense readiness amid Arab-Jewish tensions in the 1930s and 1940s. Ze'evi's participation reflected the era's widespread youth mobilization for Zionist goals, including land reclamation and cultural revival, though specific personal contributions from his time in the movement are not extensively documented in primary accounts.[6] This early exposure to pioneering Zionism, conducted in a communal setting, preceded his formal entry into paramilitary structures and shaped his enduring commitment to territorial integrity and Jewish sovereignty.[1]Military Service
Service in Haganah and IDF
Rehavam Ze'evi joined the Palmach, the elite commando unit of the Haganah, in 1944 at age 18, earning the nickname "Gandhi" for his resourcefulness in operations.[6] During the 1947–1949 War of Independence, he served as a platoon commander and later as an intelligence officer in D Company of the First Battalion, Yiftach Brigade, participating in frontline engagements against Arab forces.[1] [7] Following the formation of the Israel Defense Forces in May 1948, Ze'evi transitioned into the regular army, continuing in intelligence and operational roles amid the ongoing war.[1] He advanced through the ranks, commanding forces in the 1951 Battle of Tel Mutilla in the Negev and serving as head of the IDF Operations Division by 1953.[3] Ze'evi graduated from the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, enhancing his strategic expertise.[8] In 1967, during the Six-Day War, Ze'evi acted as Chief of Staff in the IDF General Staff, coordinating logistics and intelligence for rapid armored advances.[1] He was promoted to major general that year and appointed Commanding Officer of Central Command in 1968, overseeing security in the West Bank and Jordan Valley regions amid escalating threats.[6] Ze'evi retired from active duty in September 1973, one week before the Yom Kippur War outbreak.[6]Key Operational Roles and Intelligence Contributions
Rehavam Ze'evi joined the Palmach in 1944 and during the 1948 War of Independence served as the intelligence officer for the Yiftah Brigade, contributing to operational planning through intelligence analysis in combat zones.[2] [5] In the same war, he acted as operations officer on the Northern Front, coordinating military actions against invading forces.[2] Post-independence, Ze'evi held the role of intelligence officer in the Southern Command, focusing on threat assessment and border security.[2] [5]
Following promotion to major general in 1964, Ze'evi assumed key operational leadership as commander of the Central Command in 1968, responsible for IDF forces in the West Bank amid post-Six-Day War territorial administration and counter-insurgency efforts.[2] [5] He also served as brigade commander in the Golani Brigade and headed the IDF's Operations Branch, overseeing strategic planning and execution of military operations.[2] During the 1967 Six-Day War, Ze'evi functioned as Chief of Staff in the General Staff, directing operational logistics and coordination across fronts.[1] After retiring in September 1973, he rejoined for the Yom Kippur War as Special Assistant to the Chief of Staff, providing operational advisory input during the conflict.[1]
Ze'evi's intelligence contributions extended beyond field roles; from 1975 to 1977, he advised Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin on intelligence matters, influencing policy on terrorism and security threats.[2] [1] His career emphasized integration of intelligence into operational command, particularly in frontier and occupied territories.[5]