On the morning of 14 May 1948, somewhere in Tel Aviv, a 31-year-old lawyer named Mordechai Beham was probably reading the newspaper. Six weeks earlier, he had been handed an impossible assignment by Pinchas Rosen, the man who would become Israel's first justice minister. Beham was asked to draft, by himself, the founding document of a country that did not yet exist. He used the American Declaration of Independence as a structural model. He inserted the phrase "Rock of Israel," a deliberately ambiguous reference to God that nobody in the secular Zionist leadership would later remove. He delivered his draft at the end of April 1948. He was 31, junior, and his name would not appear on the final document. He almost vanished from the story. In 2019,
the Israeli government had to fight his family in court to gain custody of his papers.Also Read: From King Charles to Trafalgar Square, How Britain Celebrated David Attenborough at 100
The Building on Rothschild Boulevard
The ceremony took place at 4 PM on Friday, 14 May, eight hours before the British Mandate officially expired at midnight. The location was deliberately kept secret. Members of the People's Council, the body that would sign the document, received invitations the day before with strict instructions not to disclose the venue. The fear was twofold. The British might try to intervene. The Arab armies massed on the borders might launch their invasion early. The room chosen was the Tel Aviv Museum on Rothschild Boulevard, today preserved as Independence Hall. A large portrait of Theodor Herzl, the founder of political Zionism, hung behind the podium. Herzl had died in 1904. Ben-Gurion would stand beneath him.
The Argument That Almost Sank Everything
The drafting committee had been working for weeks across multiple committees, three lawyers here, five politicians there, until the question of borders became the first explosive disagreement. The original draft committed Israel to the borders proposed by the United Nations partition plan of 1947. Pinchas Rosen and Bechor-Shalom Sheetrit wanted those borders mentioned. Ben-Gurion and Aharon Zisling refused. "We accepted the UN Resolution," Ben-Gurion said, "but the Arabs did not. They are preparing to make war on us. If we defeat them and capture western Galilee or territory on both sides of the road to Jerusalem, these areas will become part of the state. Why should we obligate ourselves to accept boundaries that in any case the Arabs don't accept?" The vote in the provisional government was 5 to 4 against mentioning borders. The reference was dropped.
The Religious Compromise
The second argument was about God. The religious members of the Council insisted on God being mentioned by name. The secular Zionists, including most of the leadership, considered this a betrayal of the movement's foundational humanism. The two sides could not agree, and the deadline was hours away. The compromise came from Beham's earlier draft, which Ben-Gurion himself had not even seen at the time. The phrase "Tzur Yisrael," literally "Rock of Israel," was deliberately ambiguous. Religious Jews would read it as God. Secular Jews would read it as the strength of the Jewish people themselves. Both sides could sign. Both sides did. The phrase remains in the document to this day, still doing exactly the work it was written to do.
The All-Night Edit
On the night of 13 May, Ben-Gurion sat down with a near-final draft and made his own changes. He did this on the fly, not in the long, considered manner of Thomas Jefferson with the American Declaration. His diary entry from that day records that his primary concern was making sure the language did not restrict Israel's freedom to fight the war he knew was coming the next morning. He cut. He sharpened. He added the historical narrative tying the Jewish people to the Land of Israel, from the Bible to the Balfour Declaration to the Holocaust to the UN vote. He worked into the early hours.
The Man Stuck in Traffic
The next morning brought one final, almost comic crisis. Ze'ev Sherf, a Jewish Agency official, was carrying the only complete copy of the Declaration through Tel Aviv. He got stuck in traffic. The official scroll itself had not been finished by the calligrapher. The ceremony was about to begin. Sherf made it just in time. Ben-Gurion stood, asked the audience to rise, and began reading. The speech took eleven minutes. The audience sang "Hatikvah." Ben-Gurion concluded with the words, "The State of Israel is established! This meeting is adjourned!" Eight hours later, Egyptian planes bombed the outskirts of Tel Aviv. The country was at war by the next morning.
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Anga, Banga, Kalinga: How Three Ancient Regions Became A Modern Metaphor In 2026The document Ben-Gurion read was the work of dozens of hands. A junior lawyer whom almost no one remembered. A future foreign minister. A drafting committee of rabbis and politicians who disagreed about almost everything. And one prime minister who, on the night before he changed the map of the world, sat down at his desk and did the final edits on the fly.