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Reuven Dafni
Reuven Dafni was born in 1913 in Zagreb,
Yugoslavia to a family of three children. When he was 14 years old,
the family moved to Vienna, Austria. In Austria, Dafni first
experienced antisemitism, which reinforced his commitment to
Zionism. He began attending a Jewish school and studied Hebrew in
preparation to make aliyah.
In 1936, Reuven moved to Palestine on
his own and was among the founders of Kibbutz Ein-Gev. In January
1940, he was drafted into the British Army and was entrusted with
establishing a Yugoslavian Brigade, which was to handle contact with
the partisans in occupied Europe.
Around the same time, Reuven met the
“Israeli” group that was supposed to parachute behind enemy lines to
rescue Jews and bring them to Palestine. He was accepted to their
unit and Like Hannah Szenes and her comrades, he was sent to the
paratroopers’ school in Ramat David. After a short training period,
Dafni was sent to Cairo, and then to Bari, Italy.
On 13 March 1944, at midnight, Hannah
Szenes, Yona Rosen, Abba Berdiszew, and Reuven parachuted into
Yugoslavia: Hannah and Yona with the purpose of reaching Hungary,
Abba with the aim of reaching Romania, and Reuven who was to remain
in Yugoslavia. Once in Yugoslavia, Reuven was to help rescue Jews
and send them to Italy.
Upon landing, the partisans who awaited
them led them to a village. After marching for several days they
reached the headquarters of the partisans, and Reuven and Hannah
Szenes met General Roseman, who sent them to the Croatian partisans.
They walked for 12 days under close accompaniment to the Croatian
area, and remained there for about three months. During that time
two other Jews from Ha Shomer Ha-Tza’ir movement
joined them—a French soldier and a young Christian woman who
switched identities with Hannah Szenes.
On 9 June 1944, Hannah Szenes and three
young men crossed the border into Hungary. Hannah had arranged with
Reuven that he would wait for her for three weeks at the exit point,
and if she had not arrived by then, he was to assume she had been
captured. Reuven waited for six weeks, during which time he remained
in Yugoslavia helping dozens of Jews escape with aid from the
partisans. Then he received word from headquarters in Palestine that
Hannah Szenes had been captured. She was tortured, sentenced, and
then executed on 7 November 1944.
Following her murder, Dafni returned to
Cairo to join the Jewish Brigade. Thanks to a fortuitous meeting in
Bari, Italy with one of his brothers (who was serving in the
American army) he learned about the fate of his family: his father
and older brother had survived. After staying at a refugee camp in
Italy they came to Palestine. Reuven followed them soon after,
discovering upon his return that his mother had been killed in 1941.
Reuven returned to Kibbutz Ein-Gev and
later worked in the diplomatic service with Israel’s Foreign
Ministry. Between 1982-1995 he served as Deputy Chairman of the Yad
Vashem Directorate. Reuven has two children and two grandchildren,
and presently lives with his partner, Na’avah, in Jerusalem. |