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A passionate Zionist from an early age, he joined Zeev (Valdimir) Jabotinsky's Betar youth movement in his teens, rising quickly to important administrative and leadership positions. By 1936 Begin was in charge of Betar Czechoslovakia, and in 1938 he became the head of Betar Poland, an organization with 100,000 members which engaged in weapons training to defend Polish Jewry, preparation and transport of "illegal" immigrants to Israel, agricultural training, and communications. In 1940, Begin was imprisoned in Siberian labor camps by the NKVD Soviet secret police (a forerunner of the KGB). After the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, he was set free because of his Polish citizenship, and joined the Free Polish Army, which in 1943 made its way to British controlled Palestine for training. Contacting the dormant Jewish underground, Irgun Zvai Leumi ("Irgun" or "Etzel"), Begin set about planning a Jewish uprising against the British authorities, contrary to the Zionist organization's policy of cooperation with the British during the war. The revolt was to protest the continuing British ban on Jewish immigration to Palestine. It began in 1944, but increased in pace and scope immediately after World War II and continued until late 1947. Begin ordered many of the Irgun's operations, including the Akko prison breakout and the destruction of the central British administrative offices in the King David Hotel. In 1948, the Irgun, under his leadership, attempted to bring a shipload of arms, the Altalena, into Israel and use to arm the Irgun as an independent fighting force. Labor Zionist leaders believed that forces in the Irgun were going to attempt a coup. The Altalena was sunk on the orders of David Ben-Gurion and Begin reluctantly disbanded the Irgun. In the 1950's, he led the movement against accepting German reparations for the Nazi Holocaust. From 1948 to 1977, Menahem Begin was the leader of Israel's opposition. Begin was a fiery and hyperbolic speaker both in the Knesset and in public fora. For a long time, the Herut party was small and isolated in Israeli politics, and considered to be extreme right wing. David Ben-Gurion was particularly uninterested in cooperating with them, and the bitterness over the Altalena was not forgotten. In 1965, Begin merged his Herut Party with the Liberals to form Gahal, which later served as the foundation of the Likud Party. The crisis atmosphere in 1967 prior to the Six day war brought about the establishment of a National Unity Government, which brought Begin and other Gahal leaders to the cabinet table. The National Unity Government continued until 1970, when Begin insisted that Israel condition Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser's extension of the cease-fire across the Suez Canal on the signing of a peace treaty recognizing Israel. In 1977, Begin was elected Prime Minister. As Premier, he surprised many when he helped initiate the peace process with Egypt, which resulted in the Camp David Accords and the 1979 Israel Egypt Peace Treaty. Begin invested national resources in development programs for Israel's poorer neighborhoods and sought to liberalize Israel's economy. Rapid liberalization soon resulted in runaway inflation, corrected only after he left office. He also greatly expanded the settlement enterprise in the West Bank. In 1981, Begin activated IAF contingency plans from former administrations, that called for bombing the French-built Osirak nuclear reactor in Iraq, where the Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein was developing nuclear weapons. Though Israel was roundly condemned by the international community at the time, it became apparent during the 1991 Gulf War that Israel's action had succeeded in hampering Baghdad's drive to acquire nuclear weapons. In 1982, after repeated acts of PLO terror, Israel launched Operation Peace for Galilee to remove the terrorist threat from Israel's northern border. During the Israeli occupation of Lebanon, Christian militia entered the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps and killed large numbers of Palestinian civilians. Begin was rumored to be very distraught over the Lebanon war and claimed that Ariel Sharon had hidden information from him. Begin's decision to encourage Ethiopian Jews to immigrate to Israel later culminated in Operation Moses, which brought thousands en masse to Israel in the early 1980's. Following the death of his wife, Aliza, in the winter of 1982, Begin resigned as Prime Minister. He spent the rest of his life in seclusion, glimpsed in public only at memorials for his wife or at the weddings of his grandchildren. He died March 9, 1992, and was buried on the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem.
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