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Colin Shindler

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Colin Shindler,

Colin Shindler

Analysis

Arieh, the last witness

May 26, 2011 12:53
1 min read

Arieh Handler was known to generations of British Jews for his intensive contribution to communal life, from founding Bnei Akiva in the 1930s to campaigning for Soviet Jewry in the 1980s.

Yet his proudest moment was listening to Ben-Gurion reading out the Declaration of the State of Israel in Tel Aviv on May 14 1948.

Arieh was an active figure in Hapoel Hamizrachi, the Labour religious Zionist movement which had voted for partition and a two-state solution in 1947. He was close to Ben-Gurion's Mapai party and to his good friend Yosef Burg, the towering figure in religious Zionism. But he felt distant from the more conservative Mizrachi - "a party of businessmen", he termed it. He strongly opposed the merger of the two parties in 1956 to form the National Religious Party - and this was a factor in his return to Britain.

Along with others in his party, Arieh opposed any postponement of the declaration of the state. He received an instruction by motorcyclist to be present before 4pm at the Tel Aviv museum. He was even unsure what the new state would be called - Judea, Ivria?