Ruth Dayan, matriarch of one of Israel’s most famous families, passed away on February 5, just one month short of her 104th birthday. The story of her life, which she described as cinematic, is inextricably intertwined with that of the Jewish state.

She was born in Haifa in 1917 — the same year as the Balfour Declaration, the daughter of new immigrants from Russia, Rahel and Zvi Schwartz. They would become part of the “Jerusalem aristocracy,” friends with the top echelons of both the British military government and Arab leaders.

Ruth Dayan was the first wife of Moshe Dayan, the legendary and charismatic former defense and foreign affairs Minister and IDF chief of staff.  She was the mother of former Knesset member and deputy mayor of Tel Aviv, Yael Dayan, the late filmmaker Assi Dayan, and late sculptor Udi Dayan. Her sister, Reuma, was married to Ezer Weizman, the seventh president of the state. The extended Dayan family included writers, statesmen, poets and musicians and were Israel’s favorite tabloid subject.  
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