“I was looking less for the sweep of history than for its human heart,” he writes, and he finds it. as Hitler, then Stalin, murdered unspeakable numbers of. That and Friedman’s familiarity with the locations he describes give his account an intimacy lacking in many espionage tales. by Matti Friedman Hardcover, 248 pages purchase My grandfather was too young to serve in World War II. The author’s best material comes from primary sources, including interviews with Shoshan, now 93, and Gamliel Cohen’s 2001 book. Often disguised as Arabs, sometimes working alone and sometimes in teams, they participated in the blowing up of a fake ambulance concealing a bomb destined for a Jewish movie theater, the failed assassination of a Muslim preacher called Nimr (“Tiger” in Arabic), and the attempted destruction of a yacht that once belonged to Hitler and was rumored to be destined for refitting as a warship. Gamliel Cohen, Isaac Shoshan, Havakuk Cohen, and Yakuba Cohen (no relation), whose fluency in Arabic and roots in Syria, Yemen, and British Palestine made them useful at the dawn of the Jewish state, were active between January 1948 and August 1949. In evocative prose detailing mid-20th-century life in the dangerous streets of Haifa and Beirut, journalist Friedman ( Pumpkinflowers: A Soldier’s Story) recounts the intertwined stories of four underground spies for the Arab Section of the Haganah, a Jewish paramilitary organization in Palestine that became part of the Israel Defence Forces after Israel’s founding.
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