Joining the "Masu'ot" Group At the end of 1943/44 academic year, Jakobovits finished high school at Mikveh Israel and, with other graduates of the school, formed the "Czech Gar'in" ["Gar'in" refers to a "nucleus" or formative group] which began its training at Kibbutz
Tirat Zvi in 1943. During his training at Tirat Zvi, he volunteered to be a "
Noter" in the
Jewish Settlement Police set up by the British, serving as a Noter in the
Gilboa Brigade at Tirat Zvi station, and, in parallel, continued to be active in the Haganah. During this period he met his spouse to-be, Sarah Schwarz. In November 1944, he and fellow members of his Gar'in, then already called the "Masu'ot Group", established a temporary kibbutz settlement within the bounds of
Kfar Haroeh, with the objective of establishing a permanent settlement on
Mount Hebron, next to Kibbutz Kfar Etzion. In April 1945, the Gar'in moved to
Gat Rimon, next to
Petach Tikva. At the beginning of November 1945, the Gar'in established a settlement on the land of Hubela, to the west of Kfar Etzion, and decided to name the new kibbutz "Masu'ot Yitzhak," after the
Chief Rabbi of Israel, Rabbi
Yitzhak HaLevy Herzog, then still living.
Commander of Masu'ot Yitzhak Moshe Jakobovits continued to serve as a Noter at Masu'ot Yitzhak as well. He was sent to a Notrim course at the central school for Notrim at a youth village next to
Afula, and, upon his return from the course, he was appointed commander of the Notrim station at Masu'ot Yitzhak. In parallel, he continued his activity with the Haganah, as was customary in that period. In this context he participated in the squad leader training course of the Haganah,
Jerusalem District, conducted at Gush Etzion (the "Etzion Bloc") in the summer of 1946. That same year, he was called upon to serve as regional director of Masu'ot Yitzhak – this, too, in the context of the Haganah. A dispute erupted between the people of the young kibbutz and the
Arabs of the area over a portion of the lands of the settlement, especially concerning a plot that was called the "600 dunam". In the summer of 1947, the Arabs attacked a group of kibbutz members engaged in agricultural work in the disputed area, and a squad of Notrim was summoned from Masu'ot Yitzhak under the command of Moshe Jakobovits. On the heels of a riot that erupted, the British police were summoned and separated the belligerents. An investigation was launched against Moshe Jakobovits for use of arms, and he was suspended from his post as commander of the Notrim station until the investigation was completed. During the period of his suspension (summer to fall, 1947), the Haganah Jerusalem Zone Command sent him to a course for
platoon commanders, at that time, effectively an officers' training course.
Platoon Commander Course The platoon commander course in which Jakobovits participated (Course 19) was the last such course directed by the Haganah. The course, under the command of Mundak Pasternak (Moshe Bar-Tiqvah), was initially conducted at the kibbutzim
Sarid and
Ginegar in the
Jezreel Valley, with the participants under the cover of naturalists. The platoon of Moshe Jakobovits – Platoon 1, under the command of Danny Mass – trained unarmed at Kibbutz Sarid, while Platoon 2, under Natanel Hitron, and Platoon 3 under
Uzi Narkis, trained at Kibbutz Ginegar and included training with a
medium machine gun in a hidden cave. A British patrol detected the site of machine gun training and it was consequently decide to move the entire course to Juara. At the end of the course, in November 1947, Moshe Jakobovits stood for oral examination by
Haim Laskov and
Yigael Yadin, and participated in the graduation review in the presence of Haganah
Commander-in-chief Yaakov Dori. Beside Moshe Jakobovits, other graduates of Platoon Commander Course 19 included personalities who held key positions in the War of Independence, and thereafter, as major generals and brigadier generals. Among them were
Yekutiel Adam,
Avraham Adan ("Bren"),
Uri ben Ari,
Mordechai ben Porat,
Rehavam Ze'evi ("Gandhi"), Avraham Tamir (Avrasha),
Israel Tal (Talik), Yaakov Salman,
Elad Peled, Moshe Rusnak, Nachum Shoshani, Aharon (Jimmy) Shemi, and many others. == During the Course of the Battles ==