The documents reveal that in 1962 Israeli Parliament (Knesset) Finance Committee held a special session to discuss how to raise President Ben-Zvi's salary against his wishes.
Special session was commenced as Ben-Zvi's salary had not been increased since he took office 10 years earlier. Ben-Zvi was earning 40 per cent less than his driver.
He opposed any hikes in his salary as his contribution in the nation building process.
The committee voted to triple Ben-Zvi's salary despite his opposition, state archives documents published recently to commemorate the Israeli leader's 50th death anniversary say.
In December 1962, Ben-Zvi wrote to the committee's chairman, Israel Guri decrying the raise, Ha'aretz reported.
"In my opinion, as long as we are required to fulfill two important commandments - bringing in our brethren and absorbing them here, and increasing our security independence given the external threats we face - we dare not get dragged into raising our standard of living.
I have therefore opposed, in principle, a rise in my salary, in the hope that I would serve as an example to others," Ben-Zvi wrote.
"He was known for his humility and distaste for the pursuit of riches and extravagance. His associates reported that they have to persuade him to buy a new suit or a pair of shoes," it noted.
"I have too many clothes and I can distribute them to the poor," Ben-Zvi was quoted as saying.
"I have two pairs of shoes, and the second pair is unnecessary," the documents quote him as saying.
Ben-Zvi pursued his modesty also in death by refusing to be buried in the section for Israel's greats on Mount Herzl.
He was buried instead in a regular plot in the Har Hamenuhot cemetery in 1963, though his tomb was fenced off.
Two years ago his family was shocked to find that the burial society had destroyed the compound in an attempt to prepare the space for new graves, Ha'aretz reported.
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