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The Letters of Jonathan Netanyahu

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Book by Jonathan Netanyahu

324 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1980

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419 people want to read

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5 stars
211 (72%)
4 stars
55 (18%)
3 stars
24 (8%)
2 stars
1 (<1%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 29 of 29 reviews
Profile Image for Daniel Frank.
309 reviews54 followers
February 13, 2013
There is a reason why Yoni Netanyahu is my personal hero. This book had a profound impact on me and I recommend this to any Jew who is trying to understand zionism.

Yoni's passion, work ethic and drive for success is unparalleled.
Profile Image for Jamie.
38 reviews5 followers
August 14, 2007
Never mind my love for all things Israeli, this is a great read because it's a look inside the mind of someone I consider to be a great model for humanity. A beatiful, noble, honest, flawed and real human who did his best to make a good mark on the world the best way he knew how. If you're looking to be a better version of yourself, this book gives you some fuel to work harder at that.
30 reviews1 follower
January 2, 2023
According to Benjamin Netanyahu's memoir "Bibi: My story", Bibi's brother Yoni was one of the most influential persons. For the memoir, the part on Benjamin's youth and his brother Yoni is the best. The rest part is about handling politics. Thus, Yoni's letters is a must read. In just a few pages, Yoni has shown to the reader as a sober and thoughtful youth. The criticism of American high school culture makes one laugh. Yoni used the words: frivolous to describe American youth. In one letter, he mentioned that in high school, people talked about just one thing: sex. Somehow he wondered whether he was with a group of apes or human. Indeed, very sharp.
Profile Image for Hercules Knight.
12 reviews7 followers
September 8, 2021
At age 17, a thought runs across the mind of a young man:

“I must feel certain that not only at the moment of my death shall I be able to account for the time I have lived; I ought to be ready at every moment of my life to confront myself and say - This is what I have done."

Yonatan Netanyahu

I can’t convey into words on the book I digested all year. It didn’t feel right to read someone’s life In one sitting. His conviction only grew at a young age into his adulthood. His love of country, self development, and integrity was felt in his writings.
Profile Image for Karen.
61 reviews
June 8, 2009
I really enjoy biographies and things Israeli. I can't remember whether I read the book first or saw the movie first. This is actually letters though, not a normal autobiography.
Profile Image for Orlee.
15 reviews5 followers
September 20, 2012
Amazing human being, being let into someone's struggles, triumphs and everyday days in letters is incomplete, inspiring, heartrending, uplifting. Plus, maybe the best eulogy ever, given by Rabin.
Profile Image for Nirmal Patel.
25 reviews2 followers
June 8, 2021
I had never read a book of letters before, but knowing how this ended with Entebbe, I decided to pick the book up. I was intrigued by the idea of knowing someone, exchanging ideas with someone, emotions, and all of a sudden communication just stopping.

The end of the book became that much harder as I got to the end knowing the fate that Yoni would face.

Using Yoni's lens of commitment to country, I can see where Bibi got his ideas from, but you can also see how far he's veered from what Yoni would consider noble and just.

I don't have much to say about the contents itself. He was/is a national hero, but it's obvious why the family would publish the letters that put him in such high regard.
40 reviews
July 3, 2024
Timely Read about Israel’s Battle to Survive

Before reading the letters of Jonathan Netanyahu, I read his brother Bibi’s autobiography. I was drawn to read more of this exemplary family. Israel’s plight today is reminiscent of the state of war in the 1960s and 70s. There’s no way the Arabs will ever accept Israel’s place in the world. “Death to Israel and death to America!” There is no possibility of reasoning with terrorists. America has once again today abandoned Israel.
20 reviews
December 4, 2021
Words from one of Israel's best and brightest hero's.

I had watched the movie about the Entebbe rescue and became interested in the commander who ran the mission which also cost him his young life. It is clear from his letters that he was an outstanding person on many levels who, had he lived, would have gone to achieve whatever he wanted. He was a true inspiration.
Profile Image for Noah Kagan.
Author 7 books587 followers
September 7, 2022
wow. no clue how heard of it but what an interesting read. the guys integrity and character were 10/10. sad ending but great inspiration of how to live. his letters to his parents, girlfriends, sibblings and more show an amazing internal strength and sense of self. if interested in israel or strong-character - read it.
8 reviews
December 10, 2022
The Soul of a Man ...The Heart of a Lion

This book is one of the best that I've read! Yoni Netanyahu exposed his inner being in his letters. His thoughts put to paper were like poetry. Israel should be forever proud of his life in its military. Had he lived, he would have been a great leader and citizen of Israel.
Profile Image for Luke.
93 reviews
May 11, 2024
“I know I’m not with you enough, and that it’s hard for you to be alone so much, but I trust you, me, both of us, to succeed in living our youth to the fullest—you to live your youth and your life, and I—my life and the flicker of my youth.
It’ll be okay.”
p.277 (to his wife, the last letter Netanyahu wrote)
4 reviews
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August 5, 2023
What a true hero!!

Fantastic! Such a credit to Yonis family, Israel and the IDF!! Wonderful to have a more rounded understanding of Yoni the man!
Thank you to his family for sharing these very personal letters!!
11 reviews
October 8, 2020
One of the best people you will ever read about.
Profile Image for Sharon M Bressen.
51 reviews7 followers
November 15, 2010
Self-Portrait of a Hero: The Letters of Jonathan Netanyahu (1963-1976)
With an Introduction and Afterword by Benjamin and Iddo Netanyahu

After reading A Voice Called by Yossi Katz and visiting the Golan Heights in Israel, I set out to read more about Yoni Netanyahu. I picked up this book as well as Yoni’s Last Battle by Iddo Netanyahu and proceeded to read both books at the same time. The 34th anniversary of the Rescue at Entebbe told place when I was reading these two books.

The book is a collection of letters collected from Yoni’s friends and family after his death. Beginning in 1963 with the first letter to an Israeli schoolmate, he chronicles the time spent in America where he is forced to move because of his father’s research. He knew at a very young age that his heart and soul belonged in Israel.

In this time and age it was very refreshing to follow a man’s maturing with his written words. It was a different time when people corresponded by letters. It made me stop and wonder if in the future we will have this documentation for our records of our heroes’ thoughts, dreams and desires.

Through his own letters, we see a man that does not blindly follow all superior’s commands but finds a way to work within the system. Yoni by way of example gets his men to follow him because of their respect for the man. Yoni is very detail orientated and never leaves anything to fate; he checks and double checks.

The last letter to his girlfriend is only days before the Raid on Entebbe in 1976 during which he is killed in the line of duty. In this letter, he pours out his frustrations and doubts about losing his joy for life; he wants to spend more time with her and start to make time for a personal life. At times, we forget our heroes are also human and have their own personal desires.

Our countries would not have succeeded without the unselfish acts of outstanding men and women. Please read this book for more insight into the makeup of one exceptional person who put his life on the line for the good of the people and made the ultimate sacrifice.
45 reviews5 followers
September 3, 2014
Self-Portrait of a Hero: The Letters of Jonathan Netanyahu is at once unlike and like the books I am more accustomed to reading. Because the book is focused on his years with the Israeli Defense Force, it reads similarly to much of the military science fiction and space operas already on my shelf. On the other hand...this is real. These are real people and places that I have some familiarity with in a historical sense, but with the added dimension of getting to know Yoni (Jonathan) and his family through the letters he wrote.

That's what makes this a sobering read, instead of just an interesting read through the lens of the consumate soldier. In some ways I prefer my books - because the end of this one was predetermined, and no matter how attached and invested the reader becomes in Yoni, there is no hope that he'll make it out alive in the end. The last 100 pages or so I was watching the dates thinking, "time is running out, he's going to die soon."

Don't get me wrong, I don't demand that every book I read have a happy ending. But one of the experiences I desire from a book I've never read before is that it surprise me. I don't want to know what happens, at least, not the first time I read it. I despise spoilers in every medium, and find myself feeling somewhat depressed and unsatisfied after finishing this book, purely because I knew the end.

I believe Self Portrait of a Hero is certainly worth reading: it's educational in multiple ways and Yoni was a skilled writer. The translations were done wonderfully and I don't feel much has been lost.

I just spent the last third of the book wishing I didn't know the ending, to create more tension and interest on my part.
Profile Image for Yair Ben-Zvi.
316 reviews100 followers
July 30, 2011
Finishing this book is a Pyrrhic victory. On the one hand I'm blown away by the image created of yoni netanyahu the man as given by his letters to family, friends, loves. On the other, (spoiler alert?) his death makes the correspondences harder and harder to read without difficulty. This was one of the few truly 'complete' men, nigh, persons I've ever read about. A giant with arrogance and coldness but brilliance and warmth to match. As complex and nuanced as any tortured poet, as wildly thinking and analyzing as any philosopher, Yoni was and continues to be a testament not only to the inherent weaknesses and greatness of the Jewish people but of humanity but of the pitfalls and grandeur of humanity as a whole. Culminating in tears, this book has forged a place in my heart, my thoughts, and every drawing breath i take from this moment onward.
Profile Image for Whitney.
270 reviews6 followers
June 20, 2017
Collections of letters are often quite dull since most of us write correspondence that would interest no one but the individual we are writing to. Yoni elevates letter-writing to an almost poetic art. My copy of this book is dog-eared and underlined. Like Love Letters from Cell 92, another stirring collection of letters, it's overshadowed by the fact that if you're reading it, you know how it ends. This adds a sense of tragedy that infuses every letter with a sense of loss and hope.
Profile Image for John.
173 reviews3 followers
August 7, 2015
It's always inspiring to run across someone who is completely true to him/herself. And not in a self-serving ARod or Richard Sherman way but rather in a Pat Tillman or Mickey Marcus way. This book will give you pause for many years.
Profile Image for Evan Friedman.
5 reviews
December 14, 2015
An overall very powerful and informational read, I was really able to personally connect to this book. I enjoyed reading it, sometimes being taken on emotional ride, and at other times, it seemed to be an action story.
Profile Image for renny feld.
16 reviews
September 4, 2007
my hero - yoni netanyahu. the hero of the israeli raid on entebbe - these were his letters written over the years to family and friends....who sez we don't need another hero?
2 reviews
December 20, 2014
This book makes me a take hard look of myself - never mind all the bestseller self-help books out there. He truly changes people's life, whether directly or vicariously through his words.
Profile Image for Aaron Lê.
32 reviews2 followers
September 27, 2014
superb letter writer and human being, I wish he was still alive
Displaying 1 - 29 of 29 reviews

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