June 05, 2008
Today In Jewish History
Yahrtzeit
of David "Mickey" Marcus (1902-194
, an American Jew who volunteered
to fight for the Israeli army in the 1948 War of Independence. Marcus
was a tough Brooklyn street kid who attended West Point and then law
school. In World War II, Marcus rose to the rank of Colonel in the U.S.
Army, where he helped draw up surrender terms for Italy and Germany.
While serving in the occupation government in Berlin, he was
responsible for clearing out the Nazi death camps, and then as chief of
the War Crimes Division, where he helped arrange the Nuremberg trials.
Seeing the Jewish suffering first-hand, Marcus became a committed
Zionist, and in 1947 he volunteered to help secure the Jewish
settlements which were under attack from hostile Arabs. Marcus designed
a command structure for Israel's new army and wrote manuals to train
it. His most famous achievement was ordering the construction of the
"Burma Road," a winding mountainous path which allowed Jewish convoys
to reach Jerusalem and relieve the Arab siege. Tragically, on the day
that the war's cease-fire took effect, Marcus was mistakenly shot by a
Jewish guard. His story became the subject of a movie, Cast a Giant Shadow, starring Kirk Douglas, John Wayne, Frank Sinatra and Yul Brynner.
Posted by: Robert Woolwine at
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