Yad Mordechai is a kibbutz near the Gaza border, named after Mordechai Anielewicz, the 24-year-old commander of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in 1943. The kibbutz was founded in 1943 by Polish Jewish immigrants who chose to name their new home after the young man who led the most significant act of Jewish armed resistance during the Holocaust. Five years later, the kibbutz itself became the site of one of the most important battles of the 1948 War of Independence, when 130 defenders held off the Egyptian army for five days and changed the course of the war.
Battle of Yad Mordechai (May 1948)
On May 19, 1948, five days after the declaration of independence, the Egyptian army advanced northward along the coastal road toward Tel Aviv. The Egyptian force included infantry, artillery, armor, and air support. To reach Tel Aviv, they had to pass Yad Mordechai. The kibbutz, defended by approximately 130 fighters (kibbutz members and a small Palmach reinforcement), stood directly in the path of the Egyptian advance.
The Egyptians expected to take the kibbutz in hours. Instead, the defenders held out for five days (May 19-24), fighting from trenches, bunkers, and the kibbutz buildings against a force that outnumbered them many times over. Egyptian artillery pounded the kibbutz. Aircraft strafed the positions. Armor advanced to point-blank range. The defenders, armed with rifles, a few machine guns, and Molotov cocktails, fought back with a desperation born of the knowledge that they were the last obstacle between the Egyptian army and the heart of Israel.
After five days of continuous fighting, with casualties mounting and ammunition running out, the survivors evacuated the kibbutz under cover of darkness. The Egyptians occupied the ruins. But those five days had given the Israeli forces the time they needed to organize a defensive line further north. The Egyptian advance was slowed, and Tel Aviv was saved. Yad Mordechai fell, but its defense changed the war.
The Monument
A large bronze statue of Mordechai Anielewicz stands at the entrance to the kibbutz, depicting the young commander holding a grenade in a gesture of defiance. The statue, by the sculptor Nathan Rapoport (who also created the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising monument in Warsaw), connects the two battles: the ghetto uprising of 1943 and the kibbutz battle of 1948. The people who named their kibbutz after a ghetto fighter found themselves fighting their own desperate battle five years later, for the state that the ghetto fighters never lived to see.
Battlefield
The 1948 battlefield has been preserved as an outdoor museum. Visitors can walk through the reconstructed trenches, see the positions where the defenders fought, and view the Egyptian tanks and artillery that were used in the assault. Metal cutout figures of Egyptian soldiers advance across the field toward the kibbutz positions, creating a three-dimensional recreation of the battle. The combination of the trenches, the tanks, and the advancing figures gives visitors a visceral sense of what the defenders faced.
Holocaust Museum
Yad Mordechai houses a museum dedicated to the Holocaust, with a particular focus on the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and the story of Mordechai Anielewicz. The museum tells the story of Jewish resistance during the Holocaust, connecting the fighters of the Warsaw Ghetto to the founders of the kibbutz. The exhibits include photographs, documents, weapons, and personal testimonies. The museum draws a direct line from the ghetto to the kibbutz: the people who fought in Warsaw and the people who fought at Yad Mordechai were part of the same generation, driven by the same understanding that Jewish survival required Jewish arms.
October 7, 2023
Yad Mordechai, located near the Gaza border, was affected by the events of October 7. The kibbutz that held off the Egyptian army in 1948 found itself once again in a war zone 75 years later. The connection between the Warsaw Ghetto, the 1948 battle, and October 7 adds another layer to the story of a community that has faced existential threats in three different centuries.
Bees
In peacetime, Yad Mordechai is known for something entirely different: honey. The kibbutz operates one of the largest apiaries in Israel and produces the country’s most famous honey brand, “Yad Mordechai Honey.” The image of the kibbutz on the honey jar, with the Anielewicz statue in the background, is one of the most recognized food brands in Israel. A bee museum on the kibbutz grounds tells the story of beekeeping and allows visitors to see the hives and taste fresh honey.
Visit with Hoshen Tours
Yad Mordechai connects the Warsaw Ghetto, the War of Independence, and October 7 in a single location. Hoshen Tours walks the battlefield, visits the Holocaust museum, and tells the story of a kibbutz that was named for resistance and has lived it ever since.