Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Reuven Yaron

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Nationality
  
Israeli


Name
  
Reuven Yaron

Reuven Yaron Reuven Yaron Bait Lazemer

Full Name
  
Ruben Mihael Freiberger

Born
  
1932

Relatives
  
Miroslav Salom Freiberger (father)Irena (nee Steiner) Freiberger (mother)

Died
  
1956, Sinai Peninsula, Egypt

Reuven Yaron (Hebrew: ראובן ירון‎‎, born Ruben Mihael Freiberger; 1932 – 1956) was an Israeli soldier, composer and son of Miroslav Šalom Freiberger, the chief rabbi of Zagreb and Croatia.

Contents

Early life

Yaron was born in Zagreb and was the only child of Rabbi Miroslav Šalom and Irena (née Steiner) Freiberger. During World War II, at the end of 1942, Yaron's father has escorted the last group of rescued Jews from Zagreb to Budapest and Istanbul, from where they were transferred to Mandatory Palestine. Among the ten underage girls and boys was Yaron. The group had received travel documents only after Archbishop of Zagreb Aloysius Stepinac and Vatican officials had intervened with the Independent State of Croatia authorities.

Life in Israel

In 1943, following 16 days of travel, Yaron arrived in Palestine. Upon his arrival, he Hebraized his name and surname. His father, mother, grandfather Antun, grandmother Anka and aunt Ljubica would all be killed in the Holocaust. He was adopted by Avraam and Lina Avni and accepted into the Sha'ar HaAmakim Kibbutz. His music talent soon became evident, inherited from his mother, who played piano, and uncle, who was a singer at the Croatian National Theatre in Zagreb. Yaron took lessons at the Tel-Aviv Conservatorium. There he studied under the mentorship of one of the most prominent Israeli composers, Mordechai Seter. At the age of 15 he conducted a choir. In March 1956, the "Rinat Choir," which he conducted, won first prize at an international festival in Paris, a competition in which 16 countries participated. The choir sang Yaron’s song.

In 1956 was killed while fighting as a soldier in the Suez War. He was buried at the cemetery on Sha'ar HaAmakim.

References

Reuven Yaron Wikipedia