My Father's House
In this intimate memoir, Yigal Allon shares recollections of his father, a proud pioneer-farmer in Kfar Tavor in the 1920s-30s who retired in Ginosar, the kibbutz co-founded by his son Yigal, and how his father's personality and life in Jewish settlements in the Galilee before the establishment of the State of Israel shaped his own life.

"The father thought to name the son 'Yigael,' which means 'He will be redeemed,' but decided that was too passive a name, and chose instead 'Yigal,' which means 'He will redeem.' The Russian‐Jewish farmer's son became a watchman, a British policeman, member of a kibbutz, a leader of the ragtag 1948 liberation war, a scholar, a major general and Israel's deputy prime minister and minister for foreign affairs. This book, Yigal Allon's act of homage to his father, shows a public man turning inward. He has no political argument to make, unless the word of his father about Mount Tabor makes a declaration of intention about the land of Israel: 'Maybe there are others more beautiful, but none is just as beautiful.'... a memoir, both discreet and revealing, by an important public man." — Herbert Gold, The New York Times
"1102635710"
My Father's House
In this intimate memoir, Yigal Allon shares recollections of his father, a proud pioneer-farmer in Kfar Tavor in the 1920s-30s who retired in Ginosar, the kibbutz co-founded by his son Yigal, and how his father's personality and life in Jewish settlements in the Galilee before the establishment of the State of Israel shaped his own life.

"The father thought to name the son 'Yigael,' which means 'He will be redeemed,' but decided that was too passive a name, and chose instead 'Yigal,' which means 'He will redeem.' The Russian‐Jewish farmer's son became a watchman, a British policeman, member of a kibbutz, a leader of the ragtag 1948 liberation war, a scholar, a major general and Israel's deputy prime minister and minister for foreign affairs. This book, Yigal Allon's act of homage to his father, shows a public man turning inward. He has no political argument to make, unless the word of his father about Mount Tabor makes a declaration of intention about the land of Israel: 'Maybe there are others more beautiful, but none is just as beautiful.'... a memoir, both discreet and revealing, by an important public man." — Herbert Gold, The New York Times
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My Father's House

My Father's House

by Yigal Allon
My Father's House

My Father's House

by Yigal Allon

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$9.99 

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Overview

In this intimate memoir, Yigal Allon shares recollections of his father, a proud pioneer-farmer in Kfar Tavor in the 1920s-30s who retired in Ginosar, the kibbutz co-founded by his son Yigal, and how his father's personality and life in Jewish settlements in the Galilee before the establishment of the State of Israel shaped his own life.

"The father thought to name the son 'Yigael,' which means 'He will be redeemed,' but decided that was too passive a name, and chose instead 'Yigal,' which means 'He will redeem.' The Russian‐Jewish farmer's son became a watchman, a British policeman, member of a kibbutz, a leader of the ragtag 1948 liberation war, a scholar, a major general and Israel's deputy prime minister and minister for foreign affairs. This book, Yigal Allon's act of homage to his father, shows a public man turning inward. He has no political argument to make, unless the word of his father about Mount Tabor makes a declaration of intention about the land of Israel: 'Maybe there are others more beautiful, but none is just as beautiful.'... a memoir, both discreet and revealing, by an important public man." — Herbert Gold, The New York Times

Product Details

BN ID: 2940161070871
Publisher: Plunkett Lake Press
Publication date: 07/08/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Born Yigal Paicovitch in Kfar Tavor in the Galilee, Yigal Allon (1918-1980) graduated from the Kadoorie Agricultural High School in 1937 and later studied at the Hebrew University, Jerusalem, and at St Antony’s College, Oxford. His father had immigrated to Palestine in 1890 from Grodno (Lithuania, today Belarus) and his mother’s family had lived in Safed for generations.

Allon was a founder of Kibbutz Ginosar and commanded a field unit of the Haganah during the 1936-1939 Arab revolt. In 1941 he was one of the founding members of the Palmach, of which he became commander-in-chief in 1945. Allon led several major operations on all three fronts during Israel’s 1948 War of Independence.

After the end of his military career in 1950, Allon entered politics in a left-of-center party. He served in Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, from 1955 until his death. Allon was Minister of Labour (1961-67), Deputy Prime Minister (1967–69) and Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Education and Culture in Golda Meir’s government (1969-74). He was Minister of Foreign Affairs in Yitzhak Rabin’s government (1974-77).
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