1954–55 incidents
1956 incidents
In 1956, Israeli Chief of Staff Moshe Dayan gave a eulogy for Ro'i Rothberg, a kibbutz security officer killed near the Gaza Strip.[1] Dayan's eulogy is considered one of the most influential speeches in Israeli history.[2]
Nahal Oz became a kibbutz in 1953, and was frequently in conflict with Arabs who crossed the nearby armistice line from Gaza to reap crops and conduct petty theft.[3] The previous few months had been relatively quiet on the Israel's borders with Egypt and Gaza, but escalated with several cross-border shootings in early April.[3] On April 4, three Israeli soldiers were killed by Egyptian forces on the Gaza border.[3] Israel responded the next day by shelling the center of Gaza City, killing 58 Egyptian and Palestinian civilians, as well as 4 Egyptian soldiers.[3] Egypt responded by resuming fedayeen attacks across the border, killing 14 Israelis during the period between 11 and 17 April.[3][4]
Ro'i Rothberg, sometimes spelled Roi Rotberg, was born in Tel Aviv in 1935. He served as a messenger boy for the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. After studying at the Mikveh Israel agricultural school and the Shevah Mofet vocational school, he enlisted in the IDF and joined the infantry. After completing an officer's course, he settled in Nahal Oz, which was to be the first of the Nahal settlements. He became the Nahal Oz security officer,[3][5][6][7] and was regularly involved in chasing off infiltrators, sometimes using lethal force.[3] Rothberg married Amira Glickson and had a son, Boaz, who was an infant at the time of his death.
On 29 April 1956 he was caught in a prepared ambush; Arab harvest workers began to reap wheat in the kibbutz's fields. Rothberg saw them and rode toward them to chase them off. As he approached, others emerged from hiding to attack.[3][8] He was shot off his horse, beaten and shot again, then his body was dragged into Gaza.[3] Rothberg's attackers included an Egyptian policeman and a Palestinian farmer.[9] Badly mutilated, his body was returned on the same day after United Nations intervention.[3][10][8]
According to Jean-Pierre Filiu, following the killing, emotions in Israel "ran high", leading Dayan to travel to the kibbutz to give the funeral oration.[9]
The following day, Dayan recorded his speech for Israeli radio, in a version that omitted any reference to Palestinian refugees looking on as Jews cultivate the lands they had been evicted from, and suppressing his remark that they should not be blamed for hating the people who dispossessed them.[11]