Jesus' Coming Back

Israel locates missing remains of War of Independence fighter after 75 years

Seventy-five years after War of Independence fighter private Dov Broder died in an operation, his burial place has been identified, the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit announced on Sunday morning.

Broder fell during the May 13, 1948, Operation Medina, the Alexandroni Brigade’s push to seize Kfar Saba. Serving as an armored vehicle driver, Broder was sent with the 33rd Battalion to provide cover for another force, but his unit was attacked. Broder was killed, his vehicle damaged, and his body was never identified until now.

Broder’s family and his 95-year-old widow Batya were contacted by Personnel Directorate head Major General Yaniv Asor on Saturday night to update that investigations had found the Independence warrior’s body.

Broder was buried in Petah Tikvah as an unknown soldier in the Segula cemetery.

How were the fallen soldier’s remains recovered?

In 2006, the Missing Persons Unit began an investigation into Broder’s burial place. Over almost two decades the unit interviewed eyewitnesses from the battle, reviewed documents, the hospital’s records and performed anthropological tests.

“Seventy-five years after the death of the late Dov Broder in the War of Independence, we located his burial place,” said Asor. “This is the closing of a circle and the IDF and the State of Israel’s ethical and moral debt to Broder, who gave his life for the establishment of Israel, and to his widow and family members who lost their most beloved one.”

Batya said that she had been in regular contact with her husband, but then he suddenly disappeared. She thanked the IDF for their work.

“You don’t know anything, and you don’t have anyone to contact even to receive an answer,” said Batya. “With all this, I had faith that the army was attending to it.”

Who is Dov Broder, who died while fighting for Israel’s independence?

Asor described Broder as a young man who fell in battle, leaving behind a young wife, and was one of the people who built the country. It was both a happy and sad occasion, he said sitting in the family’s salon.

Unknown no longer, a ceremony will be held to replace the Broder’s headstone, replacing the inscription with his name.

“The IDF, the Personnel Directorate and the Missing Persons Unit will continue to do whatever is necessary to determine the status of the victims whose burial place is unknown,” said Asor. 

JPost

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