Eizehu Gibor: Living Jewish Values

Page 74

Kiddush ha-Shem Hero: Hannah Szenes Zionist Hannah Szenes (pronounced Shenesh) was born in Budapest, Hungary on July 17, 1921. She and her brother were raised by their mother after her father died. While attending public school she experienced anti-Semitism. She then began to attend an all-girls Protestant high school where one of her teachers was the chief rabbi of Budapest. It was his influence that encouraged Hannah to join Maccabea, a Zionist youth group in Hungary. From the age of thirteen Hannah kept a diary, and at the age of nineteen, when she immigrated to Palestine, she wrote in her diary, “I’ve become a Zionist. This word stands for a tremendous number of things. To me it means, in short, that I now consciously and strongly feel I am a Jew, and am proud of it. My primary aim is to go to Palestine, to work for it.” Hannah moved to Eretz Israel by herself. She went to an agricultural college and then joined a kibbutz called Sdot Yam near Caesarea, by the sea. Soldier World War II had begun. Hannah was happy living in Palestine, but she could not give up on the Jews being killed in Europe. She felt the need to help them escape the Nazis. Hannah joined a group of Palestinian Jews who were being trained by the British army as parachutists. She was the first woman volunteer, and she joined the British Royal Air Force. Their mission was to go into countries that were controlled by Nazis and work with partisan groups there to fight the German army. A second mission was to save as many Jews as possible from concentration camps. In addition, Hannah was to help British pilots who had been shot down.

quickly captured by Germans and imprisoned in Budapest. Hero After being captured Hannah was tortured repeatedly in the hope that she would reveal her secret communication codes. She never did. She was determined to stay true to what she believed in. They tried to get her to speak by capturing her mother and threatening to torture her in front of Hannah’s eyes. She still would not give in. Her mother was later released unharmed. Hannah never revealed her code to her captors. On November 7, 1944, Hannah Szenes was killed by a firing squad. She refused the blindfold and stared squarely at her executioners. She gave her life to save other lives and to protect the Jewish people.

In March of 1944 Hannah parachuted into Yugoslavia. She spent three months living there, trying to find a way to sneak into Hungary. In June she and three others crossed the Hungarian border. Once in Hungary she was 73


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Rebecca Gratz

4min
pages 98-99

Talmud Torah

2min
pages 96-97

Jonas Salk

4min
pages 88-89

Danny Siegel

4min
pages 92-93

Tzedakah

1min
pages 90-91

Pikuah Nefesh

2min
pages 84-85

Debbie Friedman

4min
pages 80-81

Henrietta Szold

4min
pages 86-87

Craig Taubman

2min
pages 82-83

Hank Greenberg

5min
pages 76-77

Hannah Szenes

2min
pages 74-75

Moses

3min
pages 70-71

Kiddush ha-Shem

2min
pages 72-73

Anavah

1min
pages 66-67

Albert Einstein

2min
pages 68-69

Rabbi Mark Borovitz

4min
pages 62-63

John Paul ll

3min
pages 64-65

Tzedek Tzedek Tirdof

2min
pages 54-55

T’shuvah

1min
pages 60-61

Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel

3min
pages 58-59

Justice Louis Brandeis

4min
pages 56-57

Rabbi Regina Jonas

3min
pages 50-51

Golda Meir

3min
pages 46-47

Rabbi Leo Baeck

3min
pages 52-53

Ometz Lev

1min
pages 48-49

Theodor Herzl

4min
pages 44-45

Robert and Myra Kraft

4min
pages 38-39

Tzionut

2min
pages 42-43

Gershom Sizomu

3min
pages 40-41

Zikaron

2min
pages 30-31

Dov Noy

3min
pages 34-35

Kol Yisrael Arevim Zeh ba-Zeh

1min
pages 36-37

Elie Wiesel

4min
pages 32-33

The Four Chaplains

4min
pages 28-29

Yitzhak Rabin

4min
pages 26-27

Lenny Krayzelburg

4min
pages 22-23

Shmirat ha-Teva

1min
pages 12-13

Shmirat ha-Guf

1min
pages 18-19

Rodef Shalom

1min
pages 24-25

David Ben-Gurion

4min
pages 14-15

The Maccabiah Games

3min
pages 20-21

Tikkun Olam

1min
pages 6-7

Rabbi Harold M. Schulweis

2min
page 8
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