White Nights And Bitter Days Menachem Begin's life spanned the glories and tragedies of ionism. He died this week at 78. ARTHUR J. MAGIDA Special to The Jewish News ew were neutral about Menachem Begin because there was little neutral about him. There were few shades of gray in his life, few gradations or nuances. For him, politics — and everything it countenanced — was a galaxy of polarities a series of tensions between contradictory forces. Even White Nights, the title of Mr. Begin's account of being incarcerated in Stalinist Russia during the Second World War, refracted his world view: the nights, turned white by the endless daylight of the Siberian tundra and the constant floodlights of prison interrogators, were also white because Mr. Begin's world was informed by a need for constants. And what better way to achieve this than by having a night that was no more than a continuation of that day that had preceded it? If nothing else, this would negate the need to ac- count for rival ideas and rival claims. With Mr. Begin's death from a heart attack early Monday morning at the age of 78 at Ichilov Hospital in Tel Aviv, he emerged for one last time from the shadows into which he had submerged himself for nine years. Starting a few months before resigning as Is- rael's prime minister in September 1983, and ex- tending until the death watch that began last week, Mr. Begin had been a virtual recluse. His withdrawal from public life began when his wife of 43 years, Aliza, died in November 1982. They had been extremely close, and for all his tendency to dom- inate conversations in public, he was, when he was most himself, a fairly reticent and private person. He had just weathered extraordinary criticism because of Israel's war in Lebanon, and had no one with whom to share his pain and anguish. He was harassed: A scoreboard of the dead from the Lebanese incursion faced him whenever he left his house. He was confused: When asked whether he had a message for a group of American Christians to take home, he responded with his standard exhortation to Diaspora Jews: "Learn Hebrew and come and live in Israel." And he was in retreat: Seven weeks after he sub- mitted his resignation, a memorial service was held on the Mount of Olives upon the first anniversary of his wife's death. The prime minister, slipping deeper into his reclusivity, did not attend. Life had not always been like this for Mr. Begin. He had once been a wizard with words, a commanding leader who would not take the Israeli equivalent, of gufffrom anyone. It was no accident that followers try- ing to persuade him not to resign as prime minister paraded past his house, shouting "Begin, King of Is- rael!" They remembered his glory days — and hoped he did, too. The leitmotif of Menachem Begin's life may well have been — until the tail end of his years as prime minister — an adamant certainty in himself and his vision for his people. Some of this he may have gleaned by environmental and ideological osmosis; some from his instinctual leanings for the inviolability of hard- ened, unbending principle. But regardless where it came from, it eventually left an indelible mark upon the people and the history of Israel and upon the Mid- dle East. `Zionist From Birth' m enachem Begin was born on Aug. 16, 1913 in the Polish town of Brest-Litovsk. According to his biographer, journalist Eric Silver, Mr. Begin "was in the most literal sense a Zionist from birth. The midwife who delivered him was the grand- mother of the future Israeli general and defense min- ister, Ariel Sharon...Ze'ev Dov Bein [Menachem's father] and Sharon's grandfather, Mordechai Shein-