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Arlosoroff, Chaim (1899-1933)
The murder of Chaim Arlosoroff robbed the Jewish people of one of the most
brilliant and exciting Zionist leaders in Palestine. Arlosoroff was born
in Russia, but anti-Semitism forced his family to leave his birthplace and
to settle in Germany, where Chaim grew up and went to school. Being very
interested in economics, he studied at the University of Berlin where he
received a doctorate in that subject. While he was attending the university,
Arlosoroff wrote articles on Zionist matters, such as getting money to the
settlers in Palestine, and planning a program of cooperation between Jews
and Arabs. After finishing his studies he left Germany for Erez Israel in
1924.
Arlosoroff became a leader of Mapai, the most important Jewish
political party of the time, and was a close friend of the great scientist
and statesman, Chaim Weizmann. His talents were
recognized early, and Arlosoroff was soon appointed head of the political
department of the Jewish Agency. At first he believed that the British
would help settling Jews in Palestine, so he worked with the British government
which was in charge of running that territory. Soon Arlosoroff came to
feel that the British could not be trusted and that the Jews must risk
angering them in order to rebuild their own homeland and save the Jews
of Europe. As the terrible deeds of the Nazis against the Jews became
known to him, Arlosoroff
threw himself into the work of rescuing Jews. He was willing to fight
the British and the Arabs in order to do that.
In 1933, in the middle of his great work as a Zionist political leader
and as a writer with great influence, Chaim Arlosoroff was murdered. He
was killed while walking with his wife on a beach in Tel Aviv. Even today
the mystery of who killed him has not been solved. Some think that other
Zionists who disagreed with his views killed him; another opinion is that
two Arabs did it. His death was a terrible loss for the entire Jewish
community. His memory is honored today by the many streets named after
him throughout the towns of Israel and in the names of the settlements
Kefar Hayyim, Kiryat Hayyim, and Kibbutz Giv'at Hayyim.
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by C.D.I. Systems 1992 (LTD) and Keter. cdisys@actcom.co.il
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