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Dayan, Gen Moshe (1915-81), Israeli general and politician. Gaoled in 1939 by the British as a member of the Haganah (Jewish underground), Dayan was released in 1941 to fight the Vichy French in the Syria campaign, where he lost his left eye, thereafter sporting a characteristic eyepatch. A major defending the Jordan valley against a larger Syrian force at the start of the Arab-Israeli wars (1948-9), he was GOC Southern Command by the war's end. In 1953 as its COS, he started to rebuild the IDF, instituting rigorous training, increasing the number of infantry and armoured formations, and creating an airborne forces élite. His reforms were vindicated in the 1956 war when his forces routed four Egyptian divisions with minimal casualties in the Sinai. Elected to the Knesset in 1959, he was minister of defence for the Six Day War (1967), destroying the Egyptian air force on the ground with a bold pre-emptive strike, and capturing the Golan Heights from Syria. But, criticized for IDF lack of preparedness at the start of the Yom Kippur war (1973), Dayan resigned the following year. In 1977 he was appointed foreign minister but eventually resigned over policy towards the Israel-Egypt peace process. Exuding a swashbuckling, piratical air, the energetic and charismatic Dayan learned his trade the hard way, without formal military or staff training, and is considered the father of the IDF and its greatest commander.
— Peter Caddick-Adams
| Biography: Moshe Dayan |
The Israeli general and statesman Moshe Dayan (1915-1981) served as minister of defense of Israel, beginning in 1967.
Moshe Dayan was born in the kibbutz of Degania, Palestine, in 1915. His father Samuel, a farmer, was a founder of Degania and Nahalal and a leader of the cooperative settlement (moshavim) movement. During the riots of 1936 to 1939 Dayan joined the Supplementary Police Force of Palestine under the British. Later he joined the first mobile commando platoons (palmakh) of the Haganah. In 1940 Dayan was arrested by the British because of his participation in the underground Haganah organization. After his release from prison in 1941, however, he joined the British army in order to fight against Nazi Germany. On a foray into Vichy-controlled Syria, he was wounded and lost his left eye. This scar, or rather the patch that covered it, would become his lifelong trademark.
During the struggle between the Palestine Jewish community and the British mandatory government in 1947, Dayan again served in the underground Haganah. During the War of Independence in 1948 he participated in the campaign against the Egyptian army. In 1949 he led the Israeli forces in the final battles around Jerusalem, and after the war he represented Israel at the Rhodes Armistice Conference. He was acclaimed a national hero for his part in the Sinai campaign against Egypt in 1956.
After retiring from the army in 1958, Dayan entered politics as a leading member of the "Young Mapai" and was appointed minister of agriculture in 1959, a post he occupied until 1964. Shortly after David Ben-Gurion's resignation as prime minister in 1963, Dayan also withdrew from government. But he soon returned to politics as a member of the Rafi opposition party, which Ben-Gurion formed in 1965.
In May of 1967 Dayan became minister of defense for Israel. Under his command and with the close collaboration of the chief of staff, General Itzhak Rabin, the Israeli armed forces won an unprecedented victory over the combined Arab military forces of Egypt (United Arab Republic), Jordan, Syria, Iraq, and Saudi Arabia in the Six Day War of June 1967. As a result of its victory, Israel occupied vast Arab territories and blocked the Suez Canal to international navigation. After this conflict, Dayan continued to strengthen Israel's military forces in order to ensure the state's survival in the troubled Middle East. Dayan had a deep concern for the soldiers in the field and always paid meticulous attention to their safety and comfort. He became upset when, during retaliatory actions, lives were lost without territorial gains.
In the minority among Israel's leaders, Dayan foresaw a new war if the nation did not retreat from the Suez Canal. Mounting tensions exploded on October 6, 1973, the high holy day of Yom Kippur, the Jewish day of atonement. Forces from Egypt and Syria attacked Israel from north and south. Dayan predicted a grim, costly effort, yet he stood alone among Israel's military leaders. He flew to the Sinai after he received news of embattled Israeli troops, and reorganized command and strategy. Likewise, he worked with prime minister Golda Meir to organize an immediate airlift of supplies from the United States. The war turned in Israel's favor on October 10, and a cease-fire was declared by October 23.
Despite his efforts, Dayan was harshly criticized for what was seen as unpreparedness for the assault, and soon left the Ministry of Defense. In 1977 he was elected to the Ninth Knesset on the Labor party ticket, but continued to serve as foreign minister to the Begin administration until 1980. The next year he formed the Telem party and was its representative until he died on October 16, 1981, with his wife and his daughter by his side. He was buried in Nahalal, site of the Dayan family farm.
Dayan vigorously denied the allegation that he saw the problem of Arab-Israeli relations "through the sights of a gun." As minister of agriculture, he met frequently with Arab farmers and tried to give them every assistance. He always held that the Arabs of Israel should have equal rights and bear equal responsibilities with the other citizens of Israel.
Dayan's attitude toward prisoners of war and Arab civilians in the territories occupied after the Six Day War attested to his strong sense of justice. While energetically combating terrorist activities, he maintained a liberal policy toward the people of the occupied areas, giving them as much freedom as possible to run their own affairs and allowing commercial and social relations with Jordan.
Dayan had sides to his character that belied his image as a tough, unemotional fighter. He was passionately attached to the land and in particular to his farm in Nahalal. He had a great interest in archaeology, which he pursued through digging in his spare time and reading extensively on the subject. Dayan was also an author, and among his publications are Israel's Border and Security Problems (1955), Diary of the Sinai Campaign (1966), and A New Map, New Relationships (1969).
Further Reading
One of the best books on Dayan's life is his own autobiography, Moshe Dayan: Story of My Life. A biography was written by his daughter, Yael Dayan, My Father, His Daughter. Naphtali Lau-Lavie's Moshe Dayan (1968) is also a full-length biography. Moshe Ben Shaul, ed., Generals of Israel (trans. 1968), contains a succinct portrayal of Dayan by Doris Lankin. Two works that rely primarily on pictures are David Curtis and Stephen G. Crane, Dayan: A Pictorial Biography (1967), and Pinchas Jurman, ed., Moshe Dayan: A Portrait (1969).
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Moshe Dayan |
Bibliography
See his autobiography (1976); account by his daughter Yael Dayan, My Father, His Daughter (1985).
| Mideast & N. Africa Encyclopedia: Moshe Dayan |
1915 - 1981
Israeli military leader and politician.
Moshe Dayan was born at Kibbutz Degania in the Jordan valley. His family left in 1920 to join the founders of Nahalal, the first moshav (cooperative settlement) in the Jezreel valley, where Dayan was educated at an agricultural school. During the Arab revolt, Dayan served in a Jewish patrol unit (notrim) of Britain's mandatory police in Palestine under the command of Captain Orde Wingate. As a member of Haganah - the defense force of the Jewish national institutions in Palestine - and a student of its officers' school, he was arrested in 1940 by the British. Released after fifteen months in jail, Dayan commanded an advance unit of the Haganah that was sent by the Allies into Syria, then controlled by Vichy France. It was here that he lost an eye in battle, and the black patch that he subsequently wore became his trademark. The injury put a temporary halt to Dayan's military career. In 1946, he received his first political assignment, representing the MAPAI (Labor) at the World Zionist Congress in Basel.
At the beginning of the Arab - Israel War of 1948, Dayan served as an officer for Arab affairs at Haganah headquarters. In May he was given his first combat position - organizing the defense of the kibbutzim on the Kinneret (Sea of Galilee) front. He next led a mobile commando regiment that captured the city of Lydda. In July 1948, Dayan was named commander of Jerusalem. In this position, he negotiated a cease-fire in the Jerusalem area and an armistice with Jordan. He and Reuven Shiloah drew up a draft of principles for a territorial agreement with King Abdullah of Jordan; it was not negotiated, however, because the king refused to be the only Arab ruler to sign a peace treaty with Israel.
Between 1949 and 1953, Dayan held several senior positions in Israel's army. Appointed chief of staff in December 1953, he reshaped Israel's army as a fighting force. The greatest achievement of the army under Dayan's direct command was the Sinai campaign of 1956, in which it took over the entire Sinai peninsula in a week. Dayan objected to Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion's decision to withdraw Israel's forces from all positions in Sinai in response to U.S. pressure and Soviet threats, and in return for Western guarantees of free passage in the Strait of Tiran and the placement of UN observers in Sharm al-Shaykh and Gaza. Dayan resigned from the army in January 1958. Following two years of study at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, he was elected a MAPAI member of the Knesset and named minister of agriculture in Ben-Gurion's government (1959). With Shimon Peres, Dayan became prominent in MAPAI's young leadership club, which aspired to democratize the party and take over its leadership. Although Ben-Gurion had encouraged their entry into politics and the government, his veteran associates, including Levi Eshkol and Golda Meir, felt threatened by the younger group and were alienated by its criticism of the party. Eshkol succeeded Ben-Gurion as prime minister in June 1963. In November 1964, Dayan resigned from the Eshkol government to protest what he described as the prime minister's lack of confidence in him.
Prior to the 1965 elections, Dayan joined BenGurion's Rafi Party. His greatest political hour came in the Arab - Israel War of 1967. Criticism of Eshkol's hesitancy to react forcefully to Egypt's blocking the Strait of Tiran to Israel's shipping and its rapid military buildup in Sinai created pressure for Dayan's appointment as defense minister and the formation of a national unity government. Dayan led the army as a civilian. He was reluctant to occupy the Golan Heights but succumbed to pressure from the government. He also did not want Israel's forces to reach the Suez Canal but did not prevent it. After the war, Dayan was put in charge of the territories occupied by Israel - the Golan Heights, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip. He promulgated the economic integration of the territories, Israeli settlement there, and the maintenance of open bridges over the Jordan River.
The 1967 war and its aftermath made Dayan a leading, though controversial, national political contender. In 1968, Rafi joined MAPAI to form the Labor Party. Dayan supported the merger but kept alive his option to run as an independent until the Arab - Israel War of 1973, which severely undermined his public support. The coordinated attack by Egypt and Syria, which caught Israel unprepared, shattered Dayan's leadership credibility and produced demands for his and Prime Minister Meir's resignations. The Labor party managed to win the next election (31 December 1973), though with decreased representation. Although a state commission of inquiry (the Agranat commission) found no personal negligence in the conduct of the war, criticism did not wane. A large segment of the public was not prepared to put all the blame for the army's lack of preparedness on military officers. Israel's advantageous military position at the end of the war, and the beginning of diplomatic negotiations, did not put an end to criticism.
Prime Minister Meir resigned on 18 January 1974, and Dayan refused to serve in the Labor government headed by Yitzhak Rabin. In the 1977 elections, Dayan ran on the Labor party's Knesset list; he had first negotiated with the Likud and had contemplated an independent run. Following Likud's electoral victory, its leader, Menachem Begin, invited Dayan to serve as foreign minister in his government. In this position, Dayan launched the secret talks with Egypt that eventually led to President Anwar al-Sadat's visit to Jerusalem, and he is largely credited with playing a major role in the Camp David Accords between Israel and Egypt (1978), and the subsequent peace treaty with Egypt (1979). Nevertheless, he resigned from the Begin government on 23 October 1979, criticizing its handling of the talks with Egypt on the implementation of the Camp David autonomy plan for the Palestinians in the occupied territories. He believed that Israel should have negotiated more vigorously, unencumbered by internal political restraints. Subsequently, Dayan advocated unilateral implementation of the autonomy plan. Under this banner he ran as an independent in the 1981 elections, but his list (Telem) received meager support. He died soon afterward. An accomplished amateur archaeologist, Dayan also was a prolific writer.
Bibliography
Dayan, Moshe. Breakthrough: A Personal Account of the Egypt - Israel Peace Negotiations. New York: Knopf, 1981.
Dayan, Moshe. Diary of the Sinai Campaign. New York: Harper and Row, 1966.
Dayan, Moshe. Living with the Bible. New York: Morrow, 1978.
Dayan, Moshe. Story of My Life. New York: Morrow, 1976.
Slater, Robert. Warrior Statesman: The Life of Moshe Dayan. New York: St. Martin's, 1991.
Teveth, Shabtai. Moshe Dayan: The Soldier, the Man, the Legend, translated by Leah and David Zinder. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1973.
— NATHAN YANAI
| Quotes By: Moshe Dayan |
Quotes:
"If you want to make peace, you don't talk to your friends. You talk to your enemies."
| Wikipedia: Moshe Dayan |
| Moshe Dayan | |
|---|---|
| 20 May 1915-16 October 1981 (aged 66) | |
Dayan in 1978 |
|
| Place of birth | Degania, Jordan Valley, Vilayet of Beirut (then part of the Ottoman Empire) |
| Place of death | Tel Aviv, Israel |
| Allegiance | British Army Haganah Israel Defence Forces |
| Years of service | 1932 - 1974 |
| Rank | Brigade commander Lieutenant General Chief of Staff |
| Battles/wars | World War II 1948 Arab-Israeli War Suez Crisis Six-Day war Yom Kippur War |
| Awards | Distinguished Service Order Legion of Honour |
Moshe Dayan, (Hebrew: משה דיין, 20 May 1915 – 16 October 1981) was an Israeli military leader and politician. The fourth Chief of Staff of the Israel Defense Forces (1953–1958), he became a fighting symbol to the world of the new State of Israel. He went on to become Defense Minister and later Foreign Minister of Israel.
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Dayan was born on Kibbutz Degania Alef near the shores of Lake Kinneret (Sea of Galilee) in pre-Mandate Palestine. His parents were Shmuel and Devorah, Jewish immigrants from Ukraine. He was the second child to be born on the kibbutz (after Gideon Baratz). He was named Moshe after Moshe Barsky, the first member of the kibbutz to be killed in an Arab attack.[1] Soon after, his parents moved to Nahalal, the first Moshav to be established. He attended the Agricultural School there. At the age of 14, he joined the newly formed Jewish militia known as the Haganah. In 1938 he joined the Palestine Supernumerary Police and became a company commander. One of his military heroes was the British pro-Zionist officer Orde Wingate, whom he served as second-in-command.
He was arrested by the British in 1939 (when the Haganah was outlawed), but released after two years in February 1941, as part of Haganah cooperation with the British during World War II.
Dayan was assigned to a small Australian-Palmach-Arab reconnaissance task force,[2] formed in preparation for the Allied invasion of Syria and Lebanon and attached to the Australian 7th Division. Using his home kibbutz of Hanita as a forward base, the unit frequently infiltrated Vichy French Lebanon, wearing traditional Arab dress, on covert surveillance missions.
On 7 June, the night before the invasion, the unit crossed the border and secured two bridges over the Litani River. When they were not relieved as expected, at 04:00 on 8 June, the unit perceived that it was exposed to possible attack and — on its own initiative — assaulted a nearby Vichy police station, capturing it in a firefight. A few hours later, as Dayan was using binoculars they were struck by a French bullet, propelling metal and glass fragments into his left eye and causing it severe damage. Six hours passed before he could be evacuated and Dayan lost the eye. In addition, the damage to the extraocular muscles was such that Dayan could not be fitted with a glass eye, and he was forced to adopt the black eyepatch that became his trademark.
In the years immediately following, the disability caused him some psychological pain.[3] Dayan wrote in his autobiography: "I reflected with considerable misgivings on my future as a cripple without a skill, trade, or profession to provide for my family." He added that he was "ready to make any effort and stand any suffering, if only I could get rid of my black eye patch. The attention it drew was intolerable to me. I preferred to shut myself up at home, doing anything, rather than encounter the reactions of people wherever I went."
During the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, Dayan occupied various important positions, first as the commander of the defense in the Jordan valley; he was then given command over a number of military units on the central front. He was the first commander of the 89th Armoured Battalion and took part in Operation Danny and Ten Days. He was extremely well-liked by Israel's founding Prime Minister, David Ben-Gurion and became his protégé, together with Shimon Peres (a future Prime Minister and President). It was on Ben-Gurion's insistence that he became Military Commander of Jerusalem.
After the war, Dayan began to rise rapidly through the ranks. From 1953 to 1958, he was the Chief of Staff of the Israel Defense Forces. In this capacity, he personally commanded the Israeli forces fighting in the Sinai during the 1956 Suez Crisis. It was during Dayan's tenure as Chief of Staff that he delivered his famous eulogy of Roi Rutenberg, a young Israeli killed in 1956.
On taking over command, based on Ben-Gurion's three year defence programme, Dayan carried out a major reorganisation of the Israeli army which, among others, included:-[4]
| Moshe Dayan | |
|---|---|
| Knesset(s) | 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th |
| Party | Telem |
| Former parties | Mapai, Rafi, Alignment |
| Gov't roles (current in bold) |
Minister of Agriculture Minister of Defense Minister of Foreign Affairs |
In 1959, a year after he retired from the IDF, Dayan joined Mapai, the leftist party in Israeli politics, then led by David Ben-Gurion. Until 1964, he served as the Minister of Agriculture. Dayan joined with the group of Ben-Gurion loyalists who defected from Mapai in 1965 to form Rafi. The Prime Minister Levi Eshkol disliked Dayan; however, when tensions began to rise in early 1967, Eshkol appointed the charismatic and popular Dayan as Minister of Defense in order to raise public morale and bring Rafi into a unity government.
Although Dayan did not take part in most of the planning before the Six-Day War of June 1967, his appointment as defense minister contributed to the Israeli success.[citation needed] He personally oversaw the capture of East Jerusalem during the 5 June-7 June fighting. During the years following the war, Dayan enjoyed enormous popularity in Israel and was widely viewed as a potential Prime Minister. At this time, Dayan was the leader of the hawkish camp within the Labor government, opposing a return to anything like Israel's pre-1967 borders. He once said that he preferred Sharm-al-Sheikh (an Egyptian town on the southern edge of the Sinai Peninsula overlooking Israel's shipping lane to the Red Sea via the Gulf of Aqaba) without peace to peace without Sharm-al-Sheikh. He modified these views later in his career and played an important role in the eventual peace agreement between Israel and Egypt.
In 1997, years after Dayan died, an Israeli journalist, Rami Tal, published conversations he had with Dayan in 1976. In that conversation Dayan claimed that 80 percent of the cross-border clashes between Israel and Syria in the years before the war were a result of Israeli provocation (Dayan was not Defense minister at the time). He confessed[5][6]:
I know how at least 80 percent of the clashes there started. In my opinion, more than 80 percent, but let's talk about 80 percent. It went this way: We would send a tractor to plough someplace where it wasn't possible to do anything, in the demilitarized area, and knew in advance that the Syrians would start to shoot. If they didn't shoot, we would tell the tractor to advance farther, until in the end the Syrians would get annoyed and shoot. And then we would use artillery and later the air force also, and that's how it was.
Also, later, he regretted it as:
I made a mistake in allowing the Israel conquest of the Golan Heights. As defense minister I should have stopped it because the Syrians were not threatening us at the time [fourth day of the war].
He also portrayed the desire of the residents in the Kibutzim beneath the Golan Heights that they be captured as stemming from the desire for their agricultural land and not primarily for security reasons. This description was hotly denied by the Kibutz leaders (the Hula Valley kibutzim did not get any land on the Golan). [7][8]
Dayan's contention was hotly denied by Muky Tsur, a longtime leader of the United Kibbutz Movement who said "For sure there were discussions about going up the Golan Heights or not going up the Golan Heights, but the discussions were about security for the kibbutzim in Galilee," he said. "I think that Dayan himself didn't want to go to the Golan Heights. This is something we've known for many years. But no kibbutz got any land from conquering the Golan Heights. People who went there went on their own. It's cynicism to say the kibbutzim wanted land." [9]
About Dayan's comments, Israeli ambassador to the United States Michael Oren says
"There is an element of truth to Dayan's claim, but it is important to note that Israel regarded the de-militarized zones in the north as part of their sovereign territory and reserved the right to cultivate them—a right that the Syrians consistently resisted with force. Syria also worked to divert the Jordan River before it flowed into Israel, aiming to deprive the Jewish state of its principle water source; Syria also actively supported Palestinian terrorist attacks against Israel. Israel occasionally exploited incidents in the de-militarized zones to strike at the Syrian water diversion project and to punish the Syrians for their support of terror. Dayan's remarks must also be taken in context of the fact that he was a member of the opposition at the time. His attitude toward the Syrians changed dramatically once he became defense minister. Indeed, on June 8, 1967, Dayan bypassed both the Prime Minister and the Chief of Staff in ordering the Israeli army to attack and capture the Golan."
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After Golda Meir became Prime Minister in 1969 following the death of Levi Eshkol, Dayan remained Minister of Defense. He was still in that post when the Yom Kippur War began catastrophically for Israel on 6 October 1973. As the highest-ranking official responsible for military planning, Dayan may bear part of the responsibility for the Israeli leadership having missed the signs for the upcoming war.[11] In the hours preceding the war, Dayan chose not to order a full mobilization or a preemptive strike against the Egyptians and the Syrians.[11] He assumed that Israel would be able to win easily even if the Arabs attacked and, more importantly, did not want Israel to appear as the aggressor, as it would have undoubtedly cost it the invaluable support of the United States (who would later mount a massive airlift to rearm Israel, a major turning point of the war).
Following the heavy defeats of the first two days, Dayan's views changed radically; he was close to announcing "the downfall of the "Third Temple" at a news conference, but was forbidden to speak by Meir. Dayan further backed from high level political role, and turned publicly as symbol for Israel independence and hope for a Third Temple to be built.
Dayan suggested options at the beginning of the war, including a plan to withdraw to the Mitleh mountains in Sinai and a complete withdrawal from the Golan Heights in order to carry the battle over the Jordan, abandoning the core strategic principles of Israeli war doctrine, which says that war must be taken into enemy territory as soon as possible.[citation needed] The Chief of Staff, David Elazar, objected to these plans and was proved correct. Israel broke through the Egyptian lines on the Sinai front, crossed the Suez canal, and encircled the 3rd Egyptian Army. Israel also counterattacked on the Syrian front, successfully repelling the Jordanian and Iraqi expeditionary forces and shelling the outskirts of Damascus, ending the war on favorable terms.
According to those who knew him, the war deeply depressed Dayan. He went into political eclipse for a time. In 1977, despite having been re-elected to the Knesset for the Alignment, he accepted the offer to become Foreign Minister in the new Likud government led by Menachem Begin. He was expelled from the Alignment, as a result and sat as an independent MK. As foreign minister in Begin's government, he was instrumental in drawing up the Camp David Accords, a peace agreement with Egypt. Dayan resigned his post in October 1979, because of a disagreement with Begin over whether the Palestinian territories were an internal Israeli matter (the Camp David treaty included provisions for future negotiations with the Palestinians; Begin, who didn't like the idea, did not put Dayan in charge of the negotiating team). In 1981 he founded a new party, Telem.
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Telem won two seats in the 1981 elections, but Dayan died shortly thereafter, in Tel Aviv, from a massive heart attack. He had been in ill-health since 1980, after he was diagnosed with colon cancer late that year. He is buried in Nahalal in the moshav (a collective village) where he was raised.
Dayan was very complicated and controversial; his opinions were never strictly black and white. He had few close friends; his mental brilliance and charismatic manner were combined with cynicism and lack of restraint. Ariel Sharon noted about Dayan:
Dayan combined a kibbutznik's secular identity and pragmatism with a deep love and appreciation for the Jewish people and the land of Israel --but not a religious identification. In one recollection, having seen rabbis flocking on the Temple Mount shortly after Jerusalem was captured in 1967, he asked "what is this? Vatican?" Dayan later ordered the Israeli flag removed from the Dome of the Rock, and gave administrative control of the Temple Mount over to the Waqf, a Muslim council. Dayan believed that the Temple Mount was more important to Judaism as a historical rather than holy site.
Dayan was also an author and an amateur archaeologist, the latter hobby leading to some controversy as his amassing of historical artifacts, often with the help of his soldiers, broke a number of laws. Dayan's habit of pilfering newly discovered archaeological sites, before arrival of the Antiquities Authority and State-authorized archaeologists, once almost cost him his life and left him with a slight permanent impairment. Shortly after the Six-Day War Dayan heard of a new archaeological find near Holon, due south of Tel Aviv. Not wanting to arouse suspicion, he entered the dig alone, and started to look for artifacts, when suddenly the entire dig caved in upon him, burying him alive. Only a hand remained visible. Shortly thereafter, a group of playing kids passed and saw a human hand protruding from the caved-in hole in the ground. They managed to dig him out alive, but due to possible oxygen deficiency in his brain, he remained with a speech impairment during the rest of his life, as well as with a partially paralyzed hand. Upon his death, his extensive archaeological collection was sold to the state.[citation needed]
His daughter, Yael Dayan is a novelist. She followed him into politics and has been a member of several Israeli leftist parties over the years. She has served in the Knesset and on the Tel Aviv City Council, and is the current Deputy Mayor of Tel Aviv, responsible for social services.
One of his sons, Assi Dayan, is an actor and a movie director.
Another son, novelist Ehud Dayan, who was cut out of his father's will, wrote a book critical of his father after Moshe died. Ari Ben Canaan in the book Exodus is susposely based on him.
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