Uziel "Uzi" Gal (Hebrew: עוזיאל "עוזי" גל),
born Gotthard Glas (December 15, 1923–September 7, 2002), was a
German-born- Israeli
gun designer
best remembered as the designer and namesake of the Uzi submachine gun.
Gal was
born in Weimar
, Germany
.
When the
Nazis came to power in 1933 he moved
first to England
and later,
in 1936, to Kibbutz Yagur
in the
British Mandate of
Palestine. In 1943 he was arrested for illegally
carrying a gun and sentenced to six years in prison. However he was
pardoned and released in 1946, serving less than half of his
sentence.
Gal began designing the Uzi submachine gun in 1948, shortly after
the
Israel War of
Independence. In 1951 it was officially adopted by the
Israeli Defense Forces and was called
the Uzi after its creator. Gal did not want the weapon to be named
after him but his request was ignored. In 1955 he was decorated
with
Tzalash
HaRamatkal and in 1958, Gal was the first person to receive the
Israel Security Award,
presented to him by
Prime
Minister David Ben-Gurion for
his work on the Uzi.
In 1975
Gal retired from the IDF, and the next year he moved to Philadelphia
, Pennsylvania
, so that his daughter Tamar, who had serious
brain damage, could receive special
medical attention.
Gal continued his work as a firearms designer until his death from
cancer in 2002.
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