1938 Tiberias massacre
1938 Tiberias massacre | |
---|---|
Part of the 1936–1939 Arab revolt in Palestine | |
![]() Memorial and graves of victims in Tiberias' old cemetery | |
Native name | הטבח בטבריה |
Location | Tiberias, Mandatory Palestine |
Coordinates | 32°47′40″N 35°32′00″E / 32.79444°N 35.53333°E |
Date | 2 October 1938 c. 21:00 pm (UTC+2) |
Target | Jewish Kiryat Shmuel neighbourhood |
Weapons | Stabbing, arson |
Deaths | 19 (including 11 children)[1] |
Victim | Jews |
Perpetrators | Palestinian Arabs |
No. of participants | 70 |
Defenders | 15 Jewish guards |
The Tiberias massacre took place on 2 October 1938, during the
After infiltrating the Jewish Kiryat Shmuel neighbourhood,
The historian Shai Lachman has attributed the massacre to Abu Ibrahim al-Kabir.[4]
A representative of the British mandate reported that: "It was systematically organized and savagely executed. Of the nineteen Jews killed, including women and children, all save four were stabbed to death. That night and the following day the troops engaged the raiding gangs".[5] After the massacre, the Irgun proposed a joint retaliatory operation with Haganah to deter such events, but the latter group did not agree.[6]
Tiberian Arabs murdered the Jewish mayor, Zaki Alhadif, on 27 October 1938.[7] The Haganah sent a party, led by Yosef Avidar, a Haganah leader who later became a general (Aluf) in the Israel Defense Forces, to investigate the failed defense of the city.[8]
See also
- Hebron massacre
- The Bloody Day in Jaffa
- List of killings and massacres in Mandatory Palestine
References
- ^ a b "League of Nations Photo Archive - Chronology 1938". Indiana University. October 2002. Archived from the original on 8 June 2019. Retrieved 3 November 2023.
- ISBN 978-0-674-03959-9. Archivedfrom the original on 14 November 2017. Retrieved 10 October 2016.
- ^ Sefer Hahagana (ספר ההגנה) part B', by the Israeli Defense Ministry (1973)
- ISBN 9781317442721, archivedfrom the original on 14 July 2021, retrieved 30 December 2020
- ^ British mandate report United Nations
- ^ Yevin, Ada Amichal. In Purple, The Life of Yair - Abraham Stern, Hadar Publishing House, Tel Aviv, 1986, p. 135.
- Touro CollegeLibraries. p. 1860.
- ^ M. Gilbert, Israel: A History (1998), p. 85