Shmuel Katz, 93, died last Friday in
Well over a hundred people attended the funeral Sunday afternoon at the
Katz was elected to the First Knesset on [Menachem Begin’s] Herut list. He is believed to have been the last surviving member of that First Knesset. A Knesset honor guard placed a wreathe on his grave.
The New York Sun editorialized yesterday that Katz was “one of [
Katz himself wrote a number of important books, including “Days of Fire” and “Battleground,” as well as a two-volume biography of Jabotinsky called “Lone Wolf.” Katz served in the First Knesset; was, for a while, part of Begin’s delegation to the Camp David peace talks; and, here in New York, helped found Americans for a Safe
Last year, when Judith Miller was preparing to make a trip to
Katz had spent his last seasons finishing what would be his last book — a history of the Jewish spy ring known as Nili, which operated against the Turks in World War I, a brilliant telling of the heroism of Aaron Arohnson and his martyred sister, Sarah (whose portrait hangs in the editorial rooms of the Sun).
The book was brought out but a few weeks ago. It is how, it seems, one of our greatest journalists dealt with his discouragement — moving to inspire new generations by telling of the heroism of an earlier one at a time even more imperiled than our own.
The Jerusalem Post obituary noted that “[a]s recently as several weeks ago, [Katz] was planning a new series of short op-eds for the Post in opposition to Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s policies.”
Benjamin Netanyahu at the funeral of Shmuel Katz, May 11, 2008. Picture credit: Yisrael Medad (My Right Word). Medad reports on Netanyahu’s remarks at the funeral:
Bibi mentioned how, when he asked his father about an author named "Samuel Katz" who published "Battleground" while he was in college, his father, Ben-Tzion Netanyahu, said "why, that’s our Moekie [Katz’s nickname]. He really knows the issue". And he stressed the hasbara element in waging a struggle for
There are some excerpts from Battleground here. The one on “Arab Refugees and the Right of Return” is particularly worth reading now.