• S As prime minister, Menachem Begin was heralded for making peace with Egypt and chastised for making war with Lebanon. Menachem Begin, Soldier For Peace In death, the former prime minister is admired for his steadfastness in the face of opposition. enachem Begin's public life ended in September 1983, when, saddened by the death of his wife and disillusioned by Israel's war in Lebanon the previous year, he stepped down as prime minister. At the time he said simply, "I cannot go on." He died a recluse at the age of 78, in March, and was eulogized as a peace- maker, though he was known through much of his life as a man of the sword. In many ways his life characterized the 20th century Jew, whose world view was forged in the fires of the Holocaust and who came to see the State of Israel as the last and only hope of the Jewish people. Most of Mr. Begin's family was killed in the Holocaust. A Polish Jew, he be- came a young and avid follower of Vladimir Jabotinsky, the father of Re- visionist Zionism who envisioned no compromise between Jews and Arabs M over Palestine. Jabotinsky vowed to an- swer Arab resistance with "an iron wall of Jewish bayonets." A fiery and charismatic speaker in his own right, Mr. Begin led Betar, the mil- itaristic Zionist youth movement, es- caping from Poland to Lithuania when the Nazis invaded in 1939. Though he was arrested and imprisoned by the So- viets, some say that his "Holocaust com- plex" — a tendency to invoke the tragedy as a rationale for many of his policies — came about because of his guilt over flee- ing Poland. In 1942, having survived a Siberian labor camp, Mr. Begin was freed to join an army of Poles being formed to fight the Nazis. He enlisted with a group headed to Palestine, where he deserted and joined the Irgun, the Jewish mili- tary group that was, despite the world war, fighting the British. A year later Mr. Begin became com- mander of the Irgun, whose most dra- matic operation was the July 1946 bombing of British offices in the King David Hotel in Jerusalem. The explo- sion killed 91 British, Arabs and Jews, and wounded 45 others. Two years later, a bloody Irgun oper- ation at Deir Yassin, an Arab village near Jerusalem, resulted in charges that Jews massacred Arab civilians, though Mr. Begin, labeled a terrorist by many, maintained that it was a conventional military procedure. Even after statehood, Mr. Begin was the leader and spokesman for the op- position, calling for Israel to take a more militant stand toward the Arabs and to fulfill the Biblical command to inhabit all of the land of Israel. In 1977, after decades in the political wilderness, his Likud party was victo- rious in national elections and Men- achem Begin, the perennial outcast, became prime minister. His six years in office were marked by a commitment to establish settlements in the West Bank and Golan, the ill-fated war in Lebanon, and, of course, the 1979 peace treaty with Egypt, which remains the model for current Arab-Israel negotiations. But perhaps the act most symbolic of Mr. Begin's personality was his 1981 de- cision to send Israeli airplanes to destroy a nuclear reactor nearing completion in Iraq. Israel's successful mission was condemned by the United States and the United Nations but was recalled more respectfully a decade later when Iraq provoked the Persian Gulf war. Mr. Begin felt vindicated by his ac- tions, in which he invoked the Holocaust and his commitment to protect his peo- ple. He did not care about world reac- tion, only about the Jewish people. Right or wrong, he stood up for his embattled beliefs, whether that meant making war, or peace.