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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Eitan_LivniEitan Livni - Wikipedia

    1 April 1919. Grodno, Ober Ost. (now in Belarus) Died. 27 December 1991. (1991-12-27) (aged 72) Yeruham "Eitan" Livni ( Hebrew: ירוחם "איתן" לבני ‎; 1 April 1919 – 27 December 1991) was a Revisionist Zionist activist, Irgun commander and Israeli politician, father of Israeli politician Tzipi Livni .

  2. Eitan Livni was born in Poland in 1919, and brought to Eretz Israel at the age of six by his family, which settled in Tel Aviv. At the age of 19, he joined the Betar Company at Zikhron Yaakov, where he was assigned to agricultural work and guard duty.

  3. Eitan supervised each operation from the moment the target was selected, through the planning to the implementation stage. He was arrested on April 4, 1946 after the sabotaging of the railway tracks in the south. He was sentenced, together with his comrades, to 15 years imprisonment, but two years later, was freed in the Acre jail break.

  4. Eitan Livni. Ieruham "Eitan" Livni (en hebreo: ירוחם "איתן" לבני‎), nado en Hrodna ( Polonia, actualmente Belarús) en 1919 e finado en Israel o 27 de decembro de 1991, foi un activista do revisionismo sionista, membro do Irgún, e político israelí . Traxectoria.

  5. Las operaciones conjuntas, que aprobaron los planes operacionales, se componía de Yitzhak Sadeh (de la Haganá), Eitan Livni (del Irgún) y Yakov Eliav (del Leji). Durante la existencia del movimiento, once grandes operaciones se llevaron a cabo, ocho de ellas por el Palmaj y la Haganá, y tres por el Irgún y el Lehi, así como gran cantidad ...

  6. This was reported to Eitan Livni, the most senior Irgun prisoner, who deduced that the south wall of the prison bordered on a street or alley in the Old City. The information was conveyed by underground post to the Irgun General Headquarters, with a proposal that the wall of the oil storehouse be exploited for a break-in to rescue the Irgun ...

  7. In total, the prison contained 700 Arab prisoners and 90 Jewish prisoners, the latter mainly members of the Jewish underground groups Haganah, Lehi, and Irgun, who had been captured by the British. One of those prisoners was Eitan Livni (father of Tzipi Livni ), the Irgun operations officer. [1]