Aharon Davidi

Aharon Davidi

Aharon Davidi
Born 1927
Allegiance Israel
Service/branch Army
Years of service 1953-1970
Rank Brigadier
Commands held Paratroopers Brigade
Battles/wars Israeli War of Independence
Sinai Campaign
Six Day War
Awards Medal of Courage
Other work Lecturer
Director of Community and Cultural Activities of the Golan and Jordan Valley

Aharon Davidi (born 1927) is an Israeli general and founder of the Sar-El volunteer program of the IDF.[1]

Biography

He was born in Israel as the youngest son of an immigrant family from Bender, (Bessarabia). At the age of fifteen, he served in the Haganah and Palmach. In the Israeli War of Independence (1948) he fought in the southern front with the Negev Brigade, where he met his future wife, Hassida.

In 1953, Davidi volunteered for the new IDF paratroopers as a company commander. In the following year the unit was very active in retaliatory operations and other dangerous missions behind enemy lines. Davidi and his company supported Ariel Sharon’s Unit 101 in the raid on Qibya and they remained close friends. He was decorated for actions in the Gaza strip in 1955, with the Medal of Courage.[2]

In the Sinai Campaign, Davidi, as Lieutenant-Colonel and regimental commander, played a decisive role in the battle of Mitla Pass. From 1965 to 1968, as a colonel, he was the first commander of the IDF Paratrooper and Infantry Corps. During the 1967 Six Day War, Davidi commanded the decisive actions to capture Sharm-el-Sheik. When Raful Eitan was wounded in action, his paratroopers were led by Davidi to the Suez Canal.

In 1970 he retired as Brigadier from active military service and spent three years at the University of London earning his Masters and Ph.D. degrees. He focused on the cultural problems of Chinese minorities.

Davidi began teaching geography at Tel Aviv University in 1974. Three years later, he moved to the Golan Heights as Director of Community and Cultural Activities of the Golan and Jordan Valley. In the summer of 1982, during the 1982 Lebanon War, Davidi founded the Sar-El IDF volunteer program. In 2010, Davidi won the Moskowitz Prize for Zionism.[3]

Davidi now lives in Ramat Gan and has three children, 11 grandchildren. and two great grandchildren. His sister, Rivka Davidit, was a Hebrew children's author and theater critic.

References