Metzudat Koach
Coordinates: 33°06′53″N 35°33′22″E / 33.11472°N 35.55611°E
The Metzudat Koach Memorial (Hebrew: מצודת כ"ח, also Nabi Yusha fort) commemorates 28 soldiers who died during the 1948 conquest of a strategically important fort. The fort and observation point is located in the Upper Galilee, close to the tomb of Nabi Yusha.[1] Its name, Koach, has a double meaning: in gematria it corresponds to 28 (the number of fallen soldiers), and the Hebrew word "כח" meaning "strength".
The Metzudat Koach memorial is currently part of the Israel National Trail, while the fort serves as an Israel Border Police base.[2]
History
The fort is not a "Tegart fort" — it is not as large as a Tegart and has a round turret. Commissioned by the British and constructed by Solel Boneh, the fort was a key observation point on the Naftali heights, overlooking the Hula Valley, and used to monitor the Palestine/Lebanon border.
By mid-April 1948, the British army had evacuated most of Upper Galilee. A number of key points were subsequently occupied by Arab forces, including the police fort at Nabi Yusha. This fort commanded the main road to Upper Galilee and the routes to the Jewish settlements of Ramot Naftali and Manara. The Palmach understood that this observation point had a strategic importance for the safety and future of the kibbutzim below.
In the evening hours of April 15, the police station was attacked by a company composed of Golani, Palmach and irregulars from nearby Jewish settlements, which moved in two armored cars and two armored Egged buses. Strong fire was opened on the attacking force which was compelled to withdraw. 4 Jews were killed.
On April 20, a second attempt was made to occupy the fort by a force from the third Palmach battalion. A small force succeeded in breaking the barriers and reaching the wall but two of its members were hit, which delayed the detonation of the explosives until their evacuation. During their evacuation, enemy fire was directed at them and many of the unit soldiers were killed. The troops fought to their last man. Altogether, 22 Jews were killed in the battle.
During the night of May 16/17, a company of the third battalion of the Yiftach Brigade occupied the fort after driving away their enemy. On the next day, two of the soldiers were killed.
In the battles for the occupation of the fort 28 Jewish soldiers fell and "Metzudat Hakoach" (Fort of the 28) is named after them today.[3]
The 28 fallen soldiers
Date | Name | Age | Rank | Birthplace[4] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
20/04/48 | Akerman | Amnon | 19 | Private | Haifa |
Ohali | Yosef | ||||
20/4/48 | Barzilai | Aryeh | 19 | Private | Lithuania |
13/05/48 | Ben Nevet | Eliezer | 21 | Corporal | Turkey |
17/05/48 | Ben Bassat | Meir | 20 | Private | Bulgaria, Plovdiv |
20/04/48 | Horowitz | Zvi | 19 | Private | Haifa |
20/04/48 | Wissotzky | Nehemia | 20 | Private | Jerusalem |
20/04/48 | Tolitzinsky | Yuval | 19 | Private | Haifa |
20/04/48 | Yekutieli | Amnon | 19 | Corporal, Squad commander | Jerusalem |
20/04/48 | Yizraelowitz | Yitczhak | 25 | Private | Poland |
20/04/48 | Cohen | Avraham | 18 | Private | Jerusalem |
20/04/48 | Kochba | Hanan | 19 | Private | Germany |
22/04/48 | Levinsky | Yisrael | 19 | Private | Poland |
20/04/48 | Moskowitz | Malachi | 19 | Private | Tel Aviv |
20/04/48 | Mizrachi | Shlomo | 19 | Private | Jerusalem |
20/04/48 | Neeman | Moshe | 19 | Corporal | Tel Aviv |
15/04/48 | Stashi | Moshe | 18 | Private | Bulgaria, Sofia |
20/04/48 | Amikam | Boaz | 19 | Private, paramedic | Haifa |
20/04/48 | Armoni | Yizhar | 18 | Private | Jerusalem |
20/04/48 | Friedman | Filon | 18 | Private | Poland |
Fute | Eliezer | ||||
20/02/48 | Cherkaskyrman | David | 22 | Lieutenant, Platoon commander | Haifa |
20/04/48 | Rauch | Mordechai | 26 | Private | Poland |
20/02/24 | Shevet | Eliezer | 20 | Private | Nahala |
20/02/24 | Shwartz | David | 26 | Private | Czechoslovakia |
15/04/48 | Gutman | Joseph | 20 | Private | Tel Aviv |
20/04/48 | Ahali | Joseph | 20 | Corporal | Gedera |
20/04/48 | Poterman | Eliezer | 18 | Corporal | Poland, Nova Korsha |
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Metzudat Koach. |