The Spy Who - The Spy Who Ran Mossad’s Fake Hotel | The Escape | 1
Episode Date: May 20, 2025When a surprise S.O.S. reaches Israeli spy agency Mossad, it sparks a wild plan to help Jews in Ethiopia. But to work, Mossad must go undercover in hostile territory.See Privacy Policy at htt...ps://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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July 1978, Gondar Province, Ethiopia.
In a sparse one-room home in the remote hill country,
Ferede Akllem strokes his wife's
cheek as she weeps into her hands.
Close by, their five-month-old baby sleeps in its bed.
My love, I'm sorry.
The police are hunting me.
I have to leave.
But you've done nothing wrong.
It doesn't matter.
The Jews, the secret police police are always looking for reasons
to hunt us. If they catch me, I'm as good as dead.
Aklum and his wife are part of Beta Israel, an isolated Jewish community that's lived
in Ethiopia for more than two and a half thousand years. Throughout that time, they've often
been persecuted and ostracized, but have fiercely maintained their loyalty to their Jewish identity and beliefs. But now a Marxist junta has
seized power and is increasing the oppression with brutal rounds of
arrests, harassment and disappearances and acclums on its blacklist. He's a
teacher and community leader, someone who could mobilize opposition to the regime.
The secret police have already raided his home once
and could return any minute.
If they catch him, he faces prison, torture or execution.
His only option is to run, to get out of Ethiopia entirely.
And that means finding a smuggler
who can guide him
on the perilous trek across the desert.
Aklem walks in the cold desert night
through the rough back country.
Next to him is the smuggler he's hired
to get him out of Ethiopia.
It's taken them three weeks to walk here.
They move at night to avoid the police.
Aklam is exhausted.
His entire body aches with hunger.
But now they're near the border with Sudan.
Just a few miles more,
and he'll be beyond the police's reach.
The smuggler grabs his arm and pulls him down.
Crouching, he points at a line of four-by-fours driving in the distance.
Bandits, we hide here, and we can cross the border.
Khartoum, the capital of Sudan.
Aqlam wakes with a start.
He looks around the garbage-strewn salvage yard where he has slept rough for weeks.
It's more than a month since he crossed the border, but as an undocumented refugee, he's
still far from safe.
Sudan is a dictatorship and a member of the Arab League. As a Jew, if
Aklam is arrested, his life will be at risk. He's also out of money. The cash he brought
with him from Ethiopia is long gone, and he hasn't eaten since yesterday. As he gazes
at the rats scurrying through the salvage yard, a desperate idea comes to
him. Many years ago, he worked with American Jewish organizations in Ethiopia. If he could
contact them, maybe they could help. But Aklem doesn't even have the money to write a letter
or send a telegram. He slides off his right shoe. Inside is his wedding ring,
his last possession. Tears come to his eyes as he squeezes the ring tightly, knowing what
he must do.
A few hours later, in a telegram office, Acklem scratches out a message to his American contacts.
He sold his wedding ring so he could send a telegram.
His message asks for help, but is written in carefully coded language so as not to identify
himself as Jewish.
Acklem raises the message to his lips and kisses it, whispering a silent prayer.
This is his last hope.
Two days later, Tel Aviv, Israel. David Kimchi sits at his desk at the headquarters
of the Israeli spy agency Mossad.
He's an agency veteran with years of high- spy agency Mossad. He's an agency veteran
with years of high-level operations behind him.
A subordinate appears at his office door.
Kimchi waves him over.
Sir, we've just had a call from a contact.
They've received a telegram from an Ethiopian Jew
seeking help.
Kimchi shakes his head in frustration.
We can't operate in Ethiopia.
You know that.
It's too dangerous. I don't think in Ethiopia. You know that. It's too dangerous.
There's nothing we can do.
But that's the thing.
This guy's not in Ethiopia.
He's in Sudan.
Kim Chi's expression changes.
He gestures for the subordinate to sit.
An audacious plan already forming in his mind.
Mossad never thought that Ethiopian Jews might escape to Sudan.
But this could change everything. Mossad never thought that Ethiopian Jews might escape to Sudan.
But this could change everything.
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Beneath the veneer of the everyday lurks the realm of the spy.
It's a dank, murky world, full of dark corners, sinister motives, and corrupted morals.
A place of paranoia and infiltration, sabotage and manipulation.
In this season, we're covering one of Mossad's most daring operations.
A mission to help Ethiopia's Jews make the perilous journey to Israel.
And to do it, the Israeli spy agency
would create one of the wildest cover stories
in espionage history.
What you're about to hear are dramatized reconstructions of events
based on the information that's been made public.
But remember, in the shadowy realm of the spy,
the full story is rarely clear.
This is episode one of The Spy Who Ran Mossad's Fake Hotel.
The Escape.
February 1979, one week after Ferede Akhlam's telegram was passed to Israeli intelligence,
Mossad headquarters, Tel Aviv.
Dani Limor strides down the corridor.
He's a lean athletic officer in his early thirties, who's just returned from a dangerous
mission in Nigeria.
He still sports the scraggly beard and unkempt blonde hair of his time in the field.
Up ahead he sees his commander, David Kimche, waiting outside the office of Mossad's director,
Yitzhak Hoffi.
Kimche scowls at Limor.
Danny, you could have at least shaved.
Come on, this isn't about my beard.
Are we going to Sudan or not?
That depends.
The Prime Minister wants us to help the Ethiopians,
but Hoffy doesn't trust you to follow the rules, David.
You know I'm the only guy who can do this.
Kim Chi gives Limor a hard stare.
Maybe, but if Hoffy thinks he wants to do it,
he won't let you, so let me do the talking.
Kim Chi opens the door to Hoffy's office and raises his hand in greeting.
Hoffy's receding hairline and grandfatherly air belie his history as one of Israel's
most fearless spymasters.
He looks straight at Kimche.
Okay, what have you got for me?
Something about Ethiopia?
Kim Chi smiles at Hoffy's straight-to-business manner.
Bringing the Jews of Ethiopia to Israel is still a priority, right?
Yes, but we can't operate in Ethiopia.
The Jews of Ethiopia were only officially recognized by the State of Israel in 1975, three years earlier.
Since then, Mossad has tried to assist them.
But thanks to Ethiopia's ongoing civil war,
those operations have become impossible.
Kim Chi gives Hoffi another smile.
Well, a few days ago, a contact of Danny's
received credible information that one Ethiopian Jew
made it across the desert to Sudan. If
one guy can do it, maybe others can too. It could become the basis of a new evacuation
route.
Hoffi pauses, glancing at Limor.
Sudan is an enemy state. We're officially at war.
That's why it would have to be an undercover operation. First, someone would have to go to
Cartoon and find this guy. Let's say I approve this. Who do we send there? Well, there's Avner,
or maybe Shai. Hoffie shakes his head. They're good, but they don't have the balls for something
like this. Well, there's always Danny. It was his contact who got in touch.
Hoffie fixes Lemoore with a steely gaze.
Okay.
But only if you shave off that beard.
Boss, I'll shave my head if that's what it takes.
As the officers stand, Hoffie points at Lemoore.
And Danny, I want none of your usual shit.
Be careful out there.
Lemoore flashes Hoffie a broad smile. Ah, you know me, boss. none of your usual shit. Be careful out there. Meemoor flashes Hoffy a broad smile.
Now you know me, boss.
I'll do my best.
Two weeks later, Khartoum.
Danny LeMoure weaves through the crowded streets,
a baseball cap pulled low over his face.
He turns into a cluttered shop, Weaves through the crowded streets, a baseball cap pulled low over his face.
He turns into a cluttered shop piled high with canned food and old clothes.
He smiles at the shopkeeper who watches him warily. Assalamu alaikum. I don't suppose you know a man named Feredi Aklem? He's Ethiopian.
The shopkeeper shakes his head, any more sighs,
and backs out of the shop.
All he knows about Feredi Aqlam is his name.
He doesn't even have a picture of the man
he's trying to find in a chaotic city
of over a million people.
So he's mapped out the areas where Ethiopian refugees
congregate and is now methodically asking
every shopkeeper if they know Aklum.
But all he has gotten is hostile stares. He's not surprised. He entered Sudan two weeks
ago under a false identity. But everywhere he goes he encounters the same wall of silence
and suspicion. The refugees are desperately afraid of the authorities and of informers in their midst.
And any Ethiopian Jew will be doubly cautious.
For them, Sudan is enemy territory.
Limor enters the next shop.
This one sells wigs and hair extensions.
Salam alaikum.
I don't suppose you know a man named Ferideh Aklam.
He's Ethiopian.
The shopkeeper's eye is narrow.
Why do you want to know?
Who are you?
Nimor's heart leaps.
This might be it.
But he understands the shopkeeper's distrust about the unknown white man asking after a
refugee.
I have a message from his wife, but I have to give it to him personally.
Look, you don't have to give it to him personally. Look,
you don't have to tell me where he is. Just tell him to meet me at the Blue Nile Hotel.
I'll be there every evening between six and seven."
The shopkeeper nods his head slowly. Limor places his hand on his heart and bows in a traditional Arab gesture of thanks.
Two nights later, 6.30pm, Limor sips hibiscus tea in the restaurant of the Blue Nile Hotel.
Khartoum has only two major hotels, and most foreigners stay at the Hilton.
As a white man, Limor is glaringly out of place here.
Across the restaurant, he sees a man enter. Limor's pulse starts to race.
The man looks Ethiopian,
and Limor's seen him before.
Yesterday evening, he came into the restaurant,
but left almost immediately.
Could it be Aklam?
The man circles the room, trying not to draw attention. Then for a split second their eyes meet. The
man immediately turns and strides out of the restaurant.
Lemur springs up and follows. The man is walking away fast.
Lemoore runs to catch up and grabs his shoulder.
Are you Faradeh Aklem?
The man hesitates with fear.
Why, your telegram asked for a ticket out of here.
I'm your ticket.
Aklem's eyes widen in surprise.
But then Lemoore remembers that a white man
and an Ethiopian talking together on the street
might attract the wrong sort of attention. Keep walking.
Aklam seems to understand and resumes walking. Limor pulls his baseball cap down low and follows.
Did you walk here from Ethiopia? Yes, from my village. Do you think others could make this journey?
Aqlam pauses as if he had barely even considered the possibility.
Maybe.
But the way is hard.
Are there other Ethiopian Jews in Sudan now?
Possibly.
Maybe a few, but we keep ourselves hidden.
Can you help me find them?
If you can bring them to me, I might be able to get them to Israel.
Aqlam stops in his tracks.
He turns to Lemur, his eyes shining.
To Israel?
To Jerusalem?
For more than 2,000 years, the Jews of Ethiopia have told stories of the land of Jerusalem
and dreamed that one day they would return.
Lemur can see Acklem blinking back tears.
My wife and baby are still in Ethiopia. I have to get them to Israel.
Limor fixes Aqlam with a penetrating stare.
I can help you get there, but you have to help me find others
who have made it here as well. Aqlam nods in agreement.
Tears of relief now streaming down his cheeks.
tears of relief now streaming down his cheeks.
Two weeks later, Limor speeds down a highway at the wheel of a Land Rover.
In the passenger seat, Atlam leans back,
letting his hand catch the breeze through the open window.
The two are driving from Khartoum to the refugee camps
in the Sudanese state of Kadaref, near the border with Ethiopia.
They want to find out if other Ethiopian Jews made it there.
Limor can see that Aklam is starting to relax around him. He's no longer the terrified refugee
he met at the Blue Nile Hotel. Even so, Limor's not ready to reveal that he's with Mossad.
Even so, Nemo is not ready to reveal that he's with Mossad. As far as Achlam knows, Nemo is a French anthropologist
studying East African tribes.
Achlam turns to him, shielding his eyes from the blazing sun.
So in Jerusalem, is it true the streets are made of gold?
Jerusalem?
No.
The streets are made of stone and cement like everywhere else.
Achlam grins in resignation.
When we were young, they told us that Jerusalem was made of gold and the water tastes sweet
like honey.
Jerusalem has always been our people's dream.
Well, I hate to disappoint you, but the water just tastes like water.
But you know, when you're there, when you stand by the wall of the temple, well, when
you feel something.
L'Amour stops talking mid-sentence.
A row of military jeeps is blocking the road ahead.
He turns to Acklem.
Roadblock, stay calm, let me do the talking.
Acklem tenses as they slow down for the roadblock.
L'Amour lowers the window as a Sudanese soldier approaches.
Papers, no.
L'Amour hands over the fake French passport that Mossad prepared for him.
The soldier examines it, comparing the picture to L'Amour's face.
After a moment, he hands the passport back.
Then he looks at Aklum and gestures for his papers.
Aklum simply shakes his head helplessly.
As an unregistered refugee, he has no papers.
Limor turns to the soldier.
Wait with me, my assistant.
The soldier's hand moves to his gun.
Papers now, or he comes with me.
Get out of the car!
Limor's heart races.
If the soldiers seize Acklem, the mission is over.
And if they find out Acklem is Jewish, they might torture or kill him.
Limor makes a split second decision and snaps at the soldier.
I said he's with me!
Give me your commanding officer!
The soldier hesitates for a moment, his hands still on his gun.
Then, seemingly cowered by L'Amour's fury, he turns and walks towards one of the tents to fetch his commander.
The moment the soldiers enter the tent, L'Amour slams his foot on the accelerator.
Gunshots ring out behind them, but the car is soon out of range.
But the soldiers don't give chase.
Once they're a safe distance away, L'Amour slows the car to a stop
and turns towards Acklem, who is ashen with terror.
It's Acklem that speaks first.
You don't drive like you're just an anthropologist. He turns towards Acklem, who is ashen with terror. It's Acklem that speaks first.
You don't drive like you're just an anthropologist.
Nemo stays poker-faced, ignoring the implication.
From now on, we drive at night,
and we'll keep to back roads to avoid the roadblocks.
Acklem simply nods, still terrified about what, and who,
he's got himself involved with.
Two weeks later, L'Amour and Acklem sit by their campfire, warming themselves as evening falls.
Over the fire, Acklem fries a pan of desert ants for their dinner.
The two have been living rough for weeks while searching the refugee camps.
They are both filthy and utterly exhausted, and they haven't found any other Ethiopian Jews.
The strain is showing on Ahlum's face.
Nimor also feels the pressure.
He hasn't made contact with headquarters in almost two months, and he knows that if they can't find any other Ethiopian Jews in Sudan,
Mossad will call off the mission.
Limor sits up as he hears a 4x4 approaching.
He tenses, preparing to either run or fight.
But Aklem motions him to be still.
It's okay. This is the man we're waiting for.
You're sure we can trust him?
Akhlam shrugs.
What choice do we have?
The car stops and a tall thin man emerges.
He's a Muslim cattle smuggler Akhlam has made contact with.
Akhlam invites the smuggler to join them by their fire.
Salam, my friend, salam.
What can I do for you two travellers?
Aqlam fixes the smuggler with an intense stare.
You know where I'm from, and I know you crossed the border to Ethiopia.
I need you to take a message to my people.
Tell them to come here, To make the journey to Sudan.
The smuggler looks thoughtfully into the fire.
The village is a long way away.
The journey will be expensive.
Nemur leans forward, holding out a wad of US dollars.
The smuggler's eyes widen at what is a small fortune in Sudan.
Okay.
The sea're serious.
I'll deliver you a message. I can leave tomorrow.
As the smuggler takes the money,
Limor and Aqlam share a glance.
This is a huge risk.
The smuggler could simply disappear, or worse, betray them to the authorities.
But he also knows A Aklam is right.
They have no choice.
If there's any hope for the mission,
they must take this risk.
Spring, 1979. Two months after meeting the smuggler. Paris, France. In a secure room of the Israeli embassy, Danny Lemur picks up the phone. A few days ago,
he was urgently summoned from Sudan
to check in with Mossad headquarters,
and he's terrified that the mission will be canceled.
He's spent months in the field and is yet to find
any more Ethiopian Jews.
Limor readies himself as his commander, David Kimshi,
answers the call.
David, what's going on?
Why am I sitting in Paris not doing my job in Khartoum?
Hoffy wants you back in Tel Aviv.
He wants a briefing on your progress in person.
And he more goes quiet.
Hoffy is Mossad's director.
He's sure that if he returns to Tel Aviv,
Hoffy won't let him go back to Sudan.
Before he left, he promised Aklam he would return.
It's a promise he intends to keep.
David, please.
We're trying to get messages to the villages in Ethiopia.
We need more time.
There's a pause.
Then a new voice comes on the line.
Hoffi.
He's been listening the whole time.
Darn it, we need to assess this mission.
Have you even found any of our people there?
Boss, please, we're close.
I need at least one more month.
Lemoore senses Hoffy hesitating.
You have one week.
Lemoore smiles and punches the air at this small triumph.
Let's say two weeks. You got some, Hoodspar. one week. Limor smiles and punches the air at this small triumph.
Let's say two weeks.
You got some, Hoodspar.
All right, two weeks, but not one day more.
Limor exhales in relief, but it's only a brief respite.
If he and Akhlam cannot find any more Ethiopian Jews, the mission is over.
Two days later, Gadaref, Sudan.
Aklem walks through a squalid refugee camp.
Ethiopian refugee families, fed with hunger, shiver around campfires,
trying to make the supplies they get from Western aid
agencies stretch to another meal.
Aqlam knows he can't simply approach people and ask if they're Jewish.
The camps are full of people who would readily turn over Jews to win favour from the authorities.
Any Ethiopian Jews in this camp will be hiding their identities.
Then, in the corner of his eye,
Acklem sees them.
A small group of refugees gathered together,
but without their campfire lit.
It's Friday night,
the start of Sabbath.
Even in the freezing desert night,
having walked many hundreds of miles,
these families won't break the
Sabbath by lighting a fire. And if they're here, there's only one explanation. The smuggler
must have delivered his message. Aqlam has found his first Jewish refugees. Four days later, near the Gadarif refugee camps in Sudan,
Limor speeds through the desert in his Land Rover.
It's only three days till Hoffi's deadline,
just 72 hours to save his mission.
Ahead, he sees the place he agreed to meet Akhlam
before he went to Paris, a scraggly tree
blown almost sideways by the desert wind.
Limor slows the car and jumps out.
As he does, several figures rise from the ground where they've been sleeping.
One of them is Akhlam.
Limor runs over and embraces him.
Daddy, you came back.
I told you I would, didn't I?
Who are your friends?
Limor gestures to the five men standing nearby.
Ahlum smiles, a twinkle in his eye.
These are our brothers.
Our message got through. They walked here from Ethiopia.
Limor looks at the men.
They are in terrible condition, starving and terrified.
Juan is covered in bruises, the victim of a savage beating.
His arm hangs limp in a makeshift sling.
Still, they have found Ethiopian Jews.
The mission can continue.
But now, Limor has a bigger problem.
He may have convinced some of Ethiopia's Jews to come to Sudan,
but now he needs a way to get them out.
One month later, Khartoum. Lemur breaks to start a game of pool, managing to pot a red
ball. He glances over at his friend Jean-Michel and gives a wink of confidence.
Jean-Michel rolls his eyes and takes a swig of beer.
The two are relaxing in the bar of the Hilton Hotel, the main gathering place for Westerners in Khartoum.
Jean-Michel is a Belgian official for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. commissioner for refugees. Lemur met him a few weeks earlier and is developing him as a contact,
bonding over a shared love of motorbikes, beer and football.
Lemur pots another ball as Jean-Michel chalks his queue.
So back from the field huh? How's the anthropology survey going?
Lemur doesn't bat an eyelid at the inquiry into his cover story.
Yeah, interesting. I was up near the border with Ethiopia. You know what's crazy?
But you know I'm Jewish, right? Well up in the refugee camps there are black Jews
from Ethiopia. Black Jews? You're kidding. It's true. They walked across the desert
because of the persecution in Ethiopia. But here in Sudan, they're obviously targets as well.
Lemo takes another shot, missing on purpose.
Then gestures for Jean-Michel to take his turn, then continues.
I want to try and help them get to France, but obviously in Sudan I can't go through
official channels.
You do some passport work for the UNHCR, right?
Jean-Michel pauses as he leans over the pool table.
I'd love to help you, but I can't bypass the rules.
If I got caught, I'd lose my job. I might end up in jail.
Oh, man, I'm not asking you to break any rules.
Just take me along next time you go and collect passports for your refugees at the Interior
Ministry.
Just so I can see how the process works.
Jean-Michel thinks for a moment before giving a shrug.
Oh, well that should be fine.
Yeah, sure.
Limor smiles in thanks before leaning over and smashing another red into the pocket.
Three weeks later, Khartoum.
Lemoore waits in line at the passport office of the Sudanese Interior Ministry.
He's come here three times with Jean-Michel now.
Enough time for the clerks to get to know his face and for
him to memorise the process the UNHCR goes through to obtain passports for the refugees
in its care. The space at the clerk's desk becomes free and Lemoore steps forward. The
bored clerk flashes a momentary glance of recognition. Refugees. Lemore smiles.
Just as he hoped, the clerk assumes he works for the UNHCR.
Yeah, 16 please.
Lemore watches as the clerk pulls 16 passports from the pile on his desk and begins robotically
stamping them with the officer' insignia.
Four days later,
Lemur and Aklem stand at the entrance of Khartoum Airport,
watching as a group of 16 Ethiopian Jews walk towards passport control.
Most of them are from villages where life has remained unchanged for hundreds of years.
Many had never ridden in a car before, let alone an airplane.
Lemur and Aklem have tried their best to prepare the refugees for the journey ahead,
and to instruct them on how to navigate the airport security.
Lemur turns to Aklem.
Do you think they'll be okay?
Aklem pauses, then turns his eyes up towards the sky.
We've done all we can.
It's in God's hands now.
May 1979. Ben Gurion Airport, Tel Aviv. One day after Limor and Ahlam watched their first group of refugees pass through airport security. A Mossad officer sits at the front of an El
Al flight that's just landed. He cranes his neck to look back at the 16 Ethiopian refugees
under his care. There are no direct flights from Sudan to Israel. So, Dani Lemur put the
group on a flight to Athens, where this officer met them the previous day. Now they are finally
in Israel. But their arrival is top secret. One leak to the media could alert Sudanese
authorities to what's going on and endanger future flights. The refugees press their faces
to the plane's windows, trying to steal a glance at their promised land. The plane stops
and the door swings open. OK, everybody up.
Welcome to Israel.
The Mossad officer leads the refugees out of the plane.
He can read the shell shock on their faces.
They're traumatized from being forced to leave their homes
and the hardships they've endured on the journey.
But there's also something else in their expressions,
something the officer can't quite put words to.
He watches as each refugee descends the ladder and immediately drops to their knees to kiss the ground.
The Mossad officer's eyes fill with tears as he realizes that for these people, this flight doesn't just mean safety. It's the fulfillment of an ancient prophecy held for countless generations that one day they would return home
to the land of Jerusalem.
7 months later, Lemur drives a large flatbed truck through the Sudanese desert. Aklam sits in the passenger seat, watching the road ahead.
In the back of the truck are several dozen Ethiopians. Entire families who risked death to make the arduous walk to Sudan.
Because they heard that there are people there waiting to take them to the promised land.
And not all who left survived the journey.
Aklam turns to Lemur.
It used to be that we couldn't find enough Jews in Sudan.
Now we have too many.
Lemur flashes Aklam a smile. The smuggler Now we have too many. Lemoore flashes Aqlam a smile.
Your smuggler did his job too well.
But there's only so many people we can put on flights
without the secret police noticing.
We may have to find a new way to get them out.
Aqlam nods, but then jolts to attention and points ahead.
Roadblock.
Lemoore strains his eyes and sees the military checkpoint.
Aklem sticks his arm out of the window and bangs on the side of the truck.
This is the signal for the refugees to lie flat in the back of the truck
and cover themselves with tarpaulin.
Lemur and Aklem can only pray that they will obey their instructions
and hold their nerve.
Lemur pulls the truck to a stop.
A soldier approaches,
an AK-47 rifle slung over his shoulder.
Papers!
Lemur smiles at the guard,
handing over the false identity papers Mossad prepared
for him and Ucklem.
The guard studies the papers,
his eyes flicking to Lemur and Ucklem's faces.
Lemur feels tension rising within him.
If the guard chooses to search the truck, they will all be thrown in prison, or worse.
But even as his heart thumps, he's amazed by the refugees hiding in the back.
They are staying absolutely silent, even the babies and young children.
Eventually, the guard hands back the documents and motions for the truck to drive on.
As the checkpoint recedes in the distance, Lemur turns to Aklam.
How did they manage to stay quiet like that? They are real heroes.
Acklem nods thoughtfully.
Where people know what it is to suffer, to live in danger, and they can hold their nerve.
Nine months later, September 1980,
Limo and Acklem drive through Khartoum, towards one of their
safe houses.
What started as a trickle of refugees fleeing Ethiopia has become a flood. There are only
so many passports that Limor and Aklem can procure at any one time, so they've set
up two safe houses for the refugees to live in while waiting for flights out.
But as they pull up outside one of the safe houses, Lemur notices something's wrong.
A lookout should be keeping watch outside, but he's not there.
Lemur turns to Akla.
Stay here.
Keep our sight.
Lemur slides out of the truck and approaches the safe house.
Lemur gives the coded knock.
The door slams open and two Sudanese secret police officers rush out.
Who are you? What are you doing here?
They grab Lemur roughly, throwing him against the wall.
Lemur feels the cold metal of a gun barrel pressed against his temple.
Adrenaline courses through his body, but he stays ice cold.
United Nations! United Nations! Haram!
At the mention of United Nations, the secret police officers seem to pause.
They release him and back away slightly, but keep their guns pointing at him.
Lemur doesn't wait for permission, but begins backing off slowly.
When he's halfway to the truck, he turns and begins walking fast,
half expecting to be shot in the back.
Lemur climbs back into the truck and exchanges a glance with Aklem,
who is hiding in the passenger footwell.
Without a word, Lemoore drives off.
He knows it's already too late for the Ethiopian Jews who were in this hideout. But now his mind races with anxiety.
What about the other safe house?
Have the secret police found that too?
Is the entire operation compromised?
Here's the entire operation compromised.
That night, Lemur darts from alley to alley on the streets of Khartoum, keeping to the shadows. Gradually, he approaches the wall of the second safe house.
This time, he's not going to risk knocking on the door.
This time he's not going to risk knocking on the door.
Lemur lodges himself up the wall behind the house,
lifts himself over and drops quietly into the courtyard.
Moving silently he comes up behind the sentry who is keeping lookout.
Moving like a cat, Lemur grabs the sentry from behind, clamping a hand over his mouth.
It's me, stay calm. I just need to know if everything's okay.
Have the police been here?
Lemur feels the man relax and releases his grip.
The sentry turns to face Lemur.
There's a look of fear in his eyes.
We're okay.
The police haven't been here, but they raided the other house.
They have a photo of your partner, Aklam.
They're hunting him.
Lemur freezes. If the secret police know They have a photo of your partner, Aklam, they're hunting him. Lemur freezes.
If the secret police know about Aklam and have his picture,
they could arrest him at any moment.
He's already helped transport dozens
of Ethiopian Jews to safety.
Now he must get Aklam out of Sudan as well.
The next morning, Lemur drives Achlem towards Khartoum Airport. For the past year, Lemur has been charming a young woman who works for Swissair by bringing
her regular gifts of European chocolate.
Now he's cashing in that goodwill. Lemoore has convinced her to sneak Ucklem onto the VIP list for a flight to
Switzerland and make arrangements to ensure his papers won't be checked
before boarding. With the secret police hunting him this is Ucklem's only hope
of escape. Both men tense as they approach the airport's traffic barrier.
If the guard demands to see Ucklem's papers he will almost certainly be Both men tense as they approach the airport's traffic barrier.
If the guard demands to see Acklem's papers, he will almost certainly be arrested.
L'Amour flashes the car lights just as the Swiss airwoman said to do.
After a tense moment, the barrier raises to let them through.
L'Amour guides the car to the VIP gate.
But before he gets out, Aklem turns to him.
Danny, thank you for what you've done for our people.
No, for Reddy.
Thank you, as you started everything.
I promise you, I'll continue the mission
and we'll meet again in Israel.
Aqlam smiles, tears coming to his eyes.
Next year, in Jerusalem.
The two comrades pause for a moment.
Then Aqlam opens the car door
and heads towards the waiting plane and to freedom.
One year later, 1981, the Red Sea coast, Sudan.
Lemur manoeuvres his jeep through the desert, as another Mossad officer struggles with a map and compass.
They've been driving for days.
Their new mission is to find a location
from which the refugees can be evacuated by sea.
There are simply too many to sneak out
on commercial flights, but so far,
all they've managed to do is bake in the desert heat
and dig their car out when it gets stuck on a sand dune.
The car crests a hill, and both men sit bolt
upright in their seats. The Mossad officer with the map blinks in disbelief. What the
hell is that? At the bottom of the hill, nestled on the shore of the sparkling blue sea, are
several dozen buildings. But these aren't traditional Sudanese houses. Instead, they resemble Mediterranean vacation chalets,
with red-tiled roofs and whitewashed walls.
Lemur gives the officer a quizzical glance and rolls the car forward.
Lemur drives down into the out-of-place settlement.
The two men get out of their vehicle.
They look around in complete bewilderment. It's
like someone has built a French Riviera village deep in the desert wilderness.
An old Sudanese man walks out from behind one of the buildings. L'Amour waves him
over.
Hello? What is this place?
The old man leans on his cane.
This is Arous. Arus?
Okay, but what is it for?
Some Italians built it.
They thought Europeans would come here to dive in the sea,
but the Europeans never came, so the Italians left.
Now I take care of the place.
L'Amour claps his hands together.
It's perfect.
The other officer spins around. What do you mean it's perfect? Danny, what
are you planning? Lemore gives his fellow officer a mischievous smile. What am I planning?
I'm gonna buy the place. Wandery plus subscribers can binge full seasons of the spy who early and add free on Apple podcasts or the Wandery app
Have you got a spy story you'd like us to tell?
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From Wandery, this is the first episode in our season The Spy Who Ran Mossad's Fake
Hotel.
A quick note about our dialogue.
We can't know everything that was said or done behind closed doors, particularly far
back in history, but our scenes are written using the best available sources.
So even if a scene or conversation has been recreated for dramatic effect, it's still
based on biographical research.
We used many sources in our research for this season, including Mossad Exodus by Gad Shimran
and Red Sea Spies by Rafi Berg.
The Spy Who is hosted by me, Raza Jafri. Our show is produced by Vespucci with writing and
story editing by Yellow Ant for Wondery. For Yellow Ant, this episode was written by J.S.
Raffaelli and researched by Louise Byrne with thanks to Guy Bahie. Our Managing Producer is Jay Priest.
For Vespucci, our Senior Producers are Ashley Clevery and Philippa Gearing.
Our Sound Designer is Ivor Manley.
Rachel Byrne is the Supervising Producer.
Music Supervisor is Scott Velasquez for Frison Sink.
Executive Producers for Vespucci are Johnny Galvin and Daniel Turkin.
Executive producer for Yellow Ant is Tristan Donovan. Our Senior Producer for Wondery is
Theodora Louloudis and our Senior Managing Bourne and Marshall Lewy.