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With the outbreak of the 1947–1948 Civil
War in Mandatory Palestine, the Reconstitution of
the State of Israel and the joint Arab invasion, over 450,000
Palestinians fled from their lands and villages into exile[1]
This article deals only with acts of political violence against Israeli civilians between the establishment of the 1949 Armistice Agreements and
the Six Day War in 1967.
Prior to Israel's capture of the West Bank and Gaza Strip in the Six Day War in 1967
these areas, originally destined for a Palestinian state, were
under Egyptian (in the case of
the Gaza Strip) and Jordanian
(in the case of the West Bank) occupation. Palestinians crossing
the border for a variety of reasons, primarily efforts to return to
their homes, to harvest food or visit relatives, in a small
percentage of cases for organized attacks. This resulted in
confrontations with Israeli
military and border guards, from 1949 to 1956 about 500
Israelis died, half of them "combatants," and between 2,700 and
5,000 Palestinians.[1]
Simultaneously, a variety of Israeli military attacks targeted Palestinian fedayeen, Egyptian and
Jordanian military forces in the Gaza Strip, West Bank and Jordan,
in response to the Arab offensive. A number of fedayeen attacks
deliberately targeted civilians, causing many deaths and serious
injuries and disrupting daily life. Israel's Ministry of Foreign
Affairs[2]
describes the following events as terrorist attacks, although most
media reports of that time refer to them as 'fedayeen' attacks.
Border conflict,
1949-1956
- Jan 1, 1952 - Seven armed gunmen attacked and killed a nineteen
year-old girl in her home, in the neighborhood of Beit Yisrael, in Jerusalem. The Mixed
Armistice on investigation found that the case against Jordanian
infiltrators could not be substantiated.
December 31 1951/ Jan 1 1952 a rape murder occurred. The MAC investigating officer,
Major Loreaux, reported that the body of the girl had been found
hidden in a cave about a mile from the Jordan border, the girl had
been raped and murdered her face had been mutilated. Nothing,
however, had been found to indicate that Jordanians had committed
this atrocity. The case had not been discussed by the Commission.
Major Loreaux expressed the opinion that the Israeli police would
have a better chance of finding the killer than the Arabs
would.[3]
The incident was used as pretext for the Israeli “reprisal raid”
at Beit Jalla on January 6, 1952
- Apr 14, 1953 - Infiltrators tried for the first time to
infiltrate Israel by sea, but were unsuccessful. One of the boats
was intercepted and the other boat escaped.
- June 7, 1953 - A youngster was killed and three others were
wounded, in a shooting attacks on residential areas in southern
Jerusalem.
- June 9, 1953 - Gunmen attacked a farming community near Lod, and killed one of the residents.
The gunmen threw hand grenades and sprayed gunfire in all
directions. On the same night, another group of terrorists attacked
a house in the town of Hadera.
This occurred a day after Israel and Jordan signed an agreement,
with UN mediation, in which Jordan undertook to prevent terrorists
from crossing into Israel from Jordanian territory.
- June 10, 1953 - Attackers infiltrating from Jordan destroyed a
house in the farming village of Mishmar Ayalon.
- June 11, 1953 - Gunmen attacked a young couple in their home in
Kfar Hess, and shot them
to death.
- Sept 2, 1953 - Attackers infiltrated from Jordan, and reached
the neighborhood of Katamon,
in the heart of Jerusalem. They threw hand grenades in all directions. No one
was hurt.
- Mar 17, 1954 - Scorpion Pass
Massacre - Bandits ambushed a bus traveling from Eilat to Tel Aviv, and opened fire at short range when
the bus reached the area of Ma'ale Akrabim (Scorpion Pass) in the
northern Negev. In the initial
ambush, the bandits killed the driver and wounded most of the
passengers. The bandits then boarded the bus, and shot some of the
passenger, one by one. Eleven passengers were murdered. Survivors
recounted how the murderers spat on the bodies and abused them. The
massacre was apparently reprisal raid conducted by members of a
Bedouin tribe expelled from the al-Auja region of the Sinai three
and a half years earlier.[4][5][6]
- Jan 2, 1955 - Gunmen attacked and killed 2 hikers in the Judean Desert.
- Mar 24, 1955 - Gunmen threw hand grenades and opened fire on a
crowd at a wedding in the farming community of Patish, in the Negev. A young woman was killed,
and eighteen people were wounded in the attack.
- Apr 7, 1956 - A resident of Ashkelon was killed in her home, when the
attackers threw three hand grenades into her house. Two members of
kibbutz Givat Haim
were killed, when terrorists opened fire on their car, on the road
from Plugot Junction to Mishmar HaNegev. There were further
hand grenade and shooting attacks on homes and cars, in areas such
as Nitzanim and Ketziot.
One person was killed and three others wounded.
- Apr 11, 1956 - Gunmen opened fire on a synagogue full of
children and teenagers, in the farming community of Shafrir. Three children and a
youth worker were killed on the spot, and five were wounded,
including three seriously.
- Apr 29, 1956 - Egyptians killed Roi Rotenberg, 21 years of age,
from Nahal Oz.
- Sept 12, 1956 - Attackers killed three Druze guards at Ein Ofarim, in the Arabah region.
- Sept 23, 1956 - Gunmen opened fire from a Jordanian position,
and killed four archaeologists, and wounded sixteen others, near
kibbutz Ramat
Rachel.
- Sept 24, 1956 - Attackers killed a girl in the fields of the
farming community of Aminadav, near Jerusalem.
- Oct 4, 1956 - Five Israeli workers were killed in Sdom.
- Oct 9, 1956 - Two workers were killed in an orchard of the
youth village, Neve
Hadassah, in the Sharon region.
Suez Crisis, October
1956-March 1957
Main article:
Suez Crisis
- Nov 8, 1956 - Gunmen opened fire on a train, attacked cars and
blew up wells, in the North and Center of Israel. Six Israelis were
wounded.
- Feb 18, 1957 - Two civilians were killed by landmines, next to Nir Yitzhak, on the
southern border of the Gaza Strip.
- Mar 8, 1957 - A shepherd from kibbutz Beit Guvrin was killed by terrorists in a
field near the kibbutz.
Border conflict,
1957-1967
- Apr 16, 1957 - Terrorists infiltrated from Jordan, and killed
two guards at Kibbutz Mesilot.
- May 20, 1957 - A gunman opened fire on a truck in the Arava
region, killing a worker.
- May 29, 1957 - A tractor driver was killed and two others
wounded, when the vehicle struck a landmine, next to kibbutz Kissufim.
- June 23, 1957 - Israelis were wounded by landmines, close to
the Gaza Strip.
- Aug 23, 1957 - Two guards of the Israeli Mekorot water company were killed near Kibbutz
Beit
Govrin.
- Dec 21, 1957 - A member of kibbutz Gadot was killed in the Kibbutz fields.
- Feb 11, 1958 - Terrorists killed a resident of moshav Yanov who
was on his way to Kfar
Yona, in the Sharon area.
- Apr 5, 1958 - Terrorists lying in an ambush shot and killed two
people near Tel
Lakhish.
- Apr 22, 1958 - Jordanian soldiers shot and killed two fishermen
near Aqaba.
- May 26, 1958 - Four Israeli police officers were killed in a
Jordanian attack on Mount Scopus, in Jerusalem.
At 1654 Local time Lieutenant-Colonel Flint of the Mixed Armistice Commission
was killed apparently by a single sniper round while trying to
evacuate the dead and wounded Israelis from an Israeli police
patrol. The Israeli police patrol was on a disputed route past the
al-Issawiya village
in the Jordanian controlled area of Mount Scopus.[7]
- Nov 17, 1958 - Syrian
terrorists killed the wife of the British air attaché in
Israel, who was staying at the guesthouse of the Italian Convent on
the Mt. of the Beatitudes.
- Dec 3, 1958- A shepherd was killed at Kibbutz Gonen. In the artillery attack that followed, 31
civilians were wounded.
- Feb 1, 1959 - Three civilians were killed by a terrorist
landmine near Moshav Zavdiel.
- Apr 27, 1959 - Two hikers were shot at close range and killed
near Massada.
- Oct 3, 1959 - A shepherd from kibbutz Heftziba was killed near kibbutz Yad Hana.
- Apr 26, 1960 - Terrorists killed a resident of Ashkelon south
of the city.
- Apr 12, 1962 - Terrorists fired on an Egged bus on the way to Eilat; one
passenger was wounded.
- Sept 30, 1962 - Two terrorists attacked an Egged bus on the way
to Eilat. No one was wounded.
- May 31, 1965 - Jordanian Legionnaires fired on the neighborhood of
Musrara in Jerusalem,
killing two civilians and wounding four.
- June 1, 1965 - Terrorists attack a house in Kibbutz Yiftah.
- Sept 29, 1965 - A terrorist was killed as he attempted to
attack Moshav Amatzia.
- Nov 7, 1965 - A Fatah cell that infiltrated from Jordan blew up
a house in Moshav Givat Yeshayahu, south of Beit Shemesh. The
house was destroyed, but the inhabitants were unhurt.
- Apr 25, 1966 - Explosions placed by terrorists wounded two
civilians and damaged three houses in moshav Beit Yosef, in the Beit She'an Valley.
- May 16, 1966 - Two Israelis were killed when their jeep hit a terrorist landmine, north
of the Sea of Galilee and south of Almagor. Tracks led into Syria.
- July 14, 1966 - Terrorists attacked a house in Kfar Yuval, in
the North.
- July 19, 1966 - Terrorists infiltrated into Moshav Margaliot on the northern
border and planted nine explosive charges.
- Oct 27, 1966 - A civilian was wounded by an explosive charge on
the railroad tracks to Jerusalem.
See also
External
links
References
- ^ a
b
Benny Morris, The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem
Revisited, Cambridge University Press,
Cambridge, England, 2004, provides the most up-to-date breakdown of
the reasons for the flight
- ^
"Which Came First- Terrorism
or Occupation - Major Arab Terrorist Attacks against Israelis Prior
to the 1967 Six-Day War". Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
31 March 2002. http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/Terrorism-+Obstacle+to+Peace/Palestinian+terror+before+2000/Which+Came+First-+Terrorism+or+Occupation+-+Major.htm.
- ^
E H Hutchison “Violent
Truce”
- ^
Kennet Love, Suez, New York 1969, cited Noam Chomsky
Peace in the Middle east?, (1974) 1975 p.166 n.20
- ^ E
H Hutchison “Violent Truce” p. 66-69
- ^
Report dated 19 June 1954 by
the Chief of Staff of the United Nations Truce Supervision
Organization in Palestine to the Secretary-General concerning the
Scorpion Pass incident UN Doc S/3252
- ^
UN Doc S/4030 of 17 June
1958, Report by the UNTSO of the Firing Incident of 26 May 1958
on Mount Scopus