Moshe Mann (Hebrew: משה מן; 13 April 1907 – 17 October 2004)[1] was an Israeli military officer who was the first commander of the Golani Brigade.[2]
Moshe Mann | |
---|---|
Native name | משה מן |
Born | Turka, Austro-Hungarian Empire | 13 April 1907
Died | 17 October 2004 Israel | (aged 97)
Allegiance | Israel |
Service | |
Years of service | 1933–1948 |
Commands | |
Battles / wars |
Biography
editMoshe Mann was born in Turka, Austro-Hungarian Empire (today Ukraine). This area became part of Poland after World War I. He immigrated to Mandatory Palestine in 1926 from Lviv,[3][4] as part of HaShomer HaTzair movement. He lived in a kibbutz near Haifa and participated in the founding of the National Kibbutz Movement. He joined the Haganah and moved to Merhavia.[3]
Military career
editMann was involved in building several pre-state Jewish police and paramilitary organizations, including the Notrim, Hish and Palmach.[4]
He participated in the Haganah's first rifle course and became an instructor. One of his students was Yigal Allon. He was then responsible for commanding the Afula area forces, and from 1939 the entire Jezreel Valley. During this time he worked with Orde Wingate. In 1942 he was tasked with curbing the activities of the Irgun and Lehi in his area under the nickname "Saadya".[3]
With the forming of the military structure of the Haganah from 1946 onward, Mann was appointed to head the newly created Levanoni Brigade, controlling the north of the country. As the 1947–48 Civil War in Mandatory Palestine broke out, the brigade split into two—Golani and Carmeli—and Mann got the command of Golani. One of Mann's first actions as commander of the north was to organize the Jewish pioneers in the Birya affair.[3]
During his tenure as Golani commander he was responsible among other things for the call-up of able men and women into the brigade and HIM in the areas under Golani's jurisdiction, and acquiring arms from the local population for the war effort. The most notable events of his tenure as commander of that brigade were the Battles of the Kinarot Valley in May 1948.
Mann had tensions with the IDF high command after Moshe Dayan was appointed to an unspecified post in the Golani Brigade, technically higher than a battalion commander (a post usually reserved just for the brigade commander), and Moshe Carmel was appointed his superior as commander of the northern front. After Mann's wife Zilka died in an Iraqi air raid on his home village on 31 May 1948, Mann quit the military and returned home. He died in 2004 at the age of 97.[3]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "קרב נגד הסורים - ומול הפיקוד העליון". הארץ.
- ^ Amiram Ezov (2013). Mishmar HaEkem Will Not Fall: A Turning Point in the 1948 War (in Hebrew). Dvir Publishing. p. 42.
- ^ a b c d e Dromi, Uri (27 October 2004). "Battle Against the Syrians – and Against the High Command" (in Hebrew). Haaretz. Retrieved 6 February 2014.
- ^ a b Amiram Ezov (2013). Mishmar HaEkem Will Not Fall: A Turning Point in the 1948 War (in Hebrew). Dvir Publishing. pp. 41–42.
External links
edit- Biography at the Golani Brigade website Archived 5 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine (in Hebrew)
- Select images left by Moshe Mann found after his death at Ynet (in Hebrew)