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Aliza Magen, Mossad’s only female deputy director, dies aged 87

The veteran security agent served for almost 40 years and played a role in major intelligence missions

April 28, 2025 09:37
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Aliza Magen was a veteran Mossad agent who served for almost 40 years under three security chiefs. (Kan 11)
4 min read

In 1960, an eight-year-old Soviet-Israeli boy was abducted and taken out of the country by friends of his strictly Orthodox grandparents, who were worried the child would grow up secular. Two years later, it was Mossad agent Aliza Magen who located the whereabouts of Yossele Schumacher and brought him back to Israel, solving a national crisis.

Leading the international hunt for the boy was just one of hundreds of missions that Magen, who died aged 87, played a major role in during her 40 years of service at the Israeli intelligence service Mossad.

The Mossad described the Jerusalem-born veteran agent as "an esteemed commander, groundbreaking, who had devoted her life to the security of Israel and its citizens”. As the only female deputy director in the 75 year history of the organisation, Magen torpedoed the glass ceiling in the male-dominated security institution with her sheer brilliance. 

Two years after the Yossele Schumacher affair, which became a cause célèbre in Israel, Magen played a pivotal role in Operation Damocles: a covert mission that targetted German scientists – many of whom were former Nazi rocket technicians – who were building missiles for Egypt. As a fluent German speaker, Magen was stationed in Salzburg, Austria, from where she recruited a former top-ranking Nazi officer to the Israeli side.