Memorial for Natan) is a moshav in southern Israel in Hevel Lakhish, near the town of Kiryat Gat.
[1] Moshav Yad Natan was founded in 1953 by Jewish immigrants from the Hungarian youth movement HaNoar HaTzioni who survived the Holocaust.
It was named after Ottó Komoly (Natan Kohn), a leader of the Zionist movement in Hungary.
Roses for export, orchards, vegetable farming and poultry-breeding are the primary economic branches.
[2] The moshav was built 800 m (2,600 ft) south and 1 km (0.62 mi) north-east, respectively, of the sites of the Palestinian villages of Bayt 'Affa and Iraq Suwaydan, which were depopulated in 1948.