Shlomo Gur

Shlomo Gur (Gerzovsky) (1913-2000), founder member of Kibbutz Tel Amal, is credited with creating and then managing the construction of 57 homa u'migal (tower and stockade settlements) during the 1936–39 Arab revolt in Palestine. Following the establishment of the state of Israel, he was project manager of the Hebrew University, the National Library and the Knesset.

In summer 1936, the expanding Arab revolt endangered the Jewish population of Beit She'an Valley. Concerned with safety and security, Shlomo Gur and other members of Kibbutz Tel Amal built the first homa u'migal settlement. Subsequently, Shlomo Gur consulted Jerusalem architect Yohanan Ratner and was provided with blueprints for the other settlements.[1]

Shlomo Gur was the first director of Israel's Military research department.

gollark: I have a script to do it. It repeatedly found the most common symbol pair and replaced it with a new symbol.
gollark: Decompress the dictionary thing and substitute the longer sequences in first. Might be a bit slower.
gollark: Oh, you mean decompress the dictionary thing? Sure, my solution involves that too.
gollark: That would be silly.
gollark: Okay, I know how you would solve it but don't care much.

See also

References

  1. Segal, Rafi & Weizman, Eyal (editors) (2003) A civilian occupation. The politics of Israeli architecture. Verso. ISBN 1-85984-549-5. p.54 (Sharon Rotbard)
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