Thirty years after Operation Solomon, in 1991 when close to 15,000 Ethiopian Jews were flown to Israel, the Defense Ministry has released rare footage of the operation that has sat in the IDF archives.
The video footage from the operation and recordings made by the elite Shaldag unit's commander at the time, Benny Gantz, now the defense minister.
The video material was recently found during a comprehensive digitization project in which tens of thousands of hours of IDF archive footage is being converted from video and film reels to more durable digital media for posterity.
In March, the last flight of Operation Rock of Israel to bring the remainder of the Falash Mura community in Ethiopia landed in Israel.
Some 2,000 Falash Mura community members were brought to Israel in a number of flights that began last December.
Among the 2,000 new immigrants were 893 children including 70 babies aged under a year old.
Diplomatic ties between Israel and Ethiopia were renewed in 1989 after a 16-year cut and Mengistu allowed several hundred Jews to immigrate to Israel each month as part of a family reunification program. At the beginning of 1991, the security situation in Ethiopia deteriorated as conflicts between the central government and Mengistu’s opponents intensified. With tensions increasing, there was growing concern for the fate of Ethiopia's Jews and it was decided to evacuate them to Israel in a swift operation. Israel paid about $35 million to the Ethiopian government, including donations from American Jewry, for its consent to allow the Jews to be flown to Israel. The evacuation was named “Operation Solomon,” after King Solomon, who according to the bible, met the Queen of Sheba, who was thought to be from what is now Ethiopia, although some scholars say that she was actually from Yemen.
Tobias Siegal, Jeremy Sharon and Carmit Sapir Weitz contributed to this report.