Dov Gazit (Hebrew: דב גזית, Born: June 17, 1908, in
Baku,
Azerbaijan) was born Borys (shortened form of the Russian name Borislav) Reuvenovich/Romanovich Grobshtein (Russian: Борис Рувинович/Романович Гробштейн), was the brother of
Solomon Grobshtein, and one of three sons of Reuven (Roman) Grobshtein, an engineer in the
Baku oil fields. He was 8 years old (1916), when his father was murdered during the
Armenian-
Tatar uprisings. At age 18, Borys went to study at the
Saint Petersburg State Institute of Technology (Russian: Санкт-Петербургский Технологический Институт (Технологический Университет), where became a member of a
Zionist student group. The
NKVD crashed a Zionist group meeting, and arrested all the participants, including Borys, who was convicted and sent to a
Gulag in
Siberia for three years. After many applications for release, he was allowed to leave the Soviet Union and go to
Palestine, without permission to see his family, nor to ever return to the Soviet Union. Borys worked in the fields around
Ra'anana, but later moved to
Jerusalem, to the
Zikhron Moshe neighbourhood, next door to
Ephraim Katzir, a friend of Borys', and later to become the President of Israel. After arriving in Palestine, Borys changed his name to Dov (Hebrew: דוב, lit: bear) Gazit (Hebrew: גָזִית, lit: huge stone. dressed stone, ashlar, as used in construction of
Solomon's Temple). ==Military service==