Israeli-Palestinian Conflict - Jerusalem Pogrom of 1920
Warning signs
During their annual spring festival Nebi Musa (Prophet Moses), Muslims
march from Jerusalem on the road to Jericho to where they believe Moses
is buried. In the years predating 1920, these processions were marked by
intimidation of Christian communities on their way.
After Emir Faisal I had agreed to the establishment of a Jewish National
Home in Palestine by signing the Faisal-Weizmann Agreement at the Paris
Peace Conference of 1919, the local leaders of the Palestinian Arab
community, among them the Jerusalem Mayor Musa Khazim al-Husayni,
rejected this agreement made in their name and relations between Arabs
and Jews worsened. This agreement was rejected because it did not meet
the conditions that Prince Faisal wrote next to his signature, which
rendered the agreement non-binding. This condition was that an
independent Syrian state be created prior to the agreement taking
effect. It is worth noting that this state was never created during
Prince Faisal's reign.
The Arab attacks of March 1920 in Galilee (see the fall of Tel Hai and
Joseph Trumpeldor) and the activities of the Arab terrorist group Black
Hand (Palestine) caused deep concerns among Zionist leaders, who made
numerous requests to the Mandate administration to address the Yishuv's
security. Their fears were ruled out by the Chief Administrative Officer
General Louis Bols, Governor Ronald Storrs and General Edmund Allenby,
particularly at their meeting with the president of the World Zionist
Organization Dr. Chaim Weizmann, who warned them: "pogrom is in the
air".
Storrs issued a warning to Arab leaders, but his forces included only
188 policemen, among them but 8 officers. The Ottoman Turks had usually
deployed thousands of soldiers to keep order in the narrow streets of
Jerusalem during the Nebi Musa procession.
Zeev Jabotinsky, who was earlier discharged from the British army as an
"indiscreet political speaker", led an effort to openly train Jewish
volunteers in self-defense. The request to the British authorities to
allow arming of the defenders was declined, however about 600 Jews were
secretly armed with small guns.
April 4-7, 1920 in the Old City
During a procession on April 4, 1920, inflammatory anti-Zionist rhetoric
led to rioting in Jerusalem. One of the inciters was Hajj Amin al-Husayni,
a young nephew of the mayor of Jerusalem, another was the editor of the
newspaper Suriya al-Janubia ("Southern Syria") Aref al-Aref, who
delivered his speech on horseback. The Arab mob went on to ransack the
Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem, beating anyone they could find and looting
shops and homes. The riots lasted for four days.
Arab educator and a essayist Khalil al-Sakakini witnessed the eruption
of violence in the Old City:
"[A] riot broke out, the people began to run about and stones were
thrown at the Jews. The shops were closed and there were screams... I
saw a Zionist soldier covered in dust and blood... Afterwards, I saw one
Hebronite approach a Jewish shoeshine boy, who hid behind a sack in one
of the wall's comers next to Jaffa Gate, and take his box and beat him
over the head. He screamed and began to run, his head bleeding and the
Hebronite left him and returned to the procession... The riot reached
its zenith. All shouted, "Muhammad's religion was born with the
sword"... I immediately walked to the municipal garden... my soul is
nauseated and depressed by the madness of humankind." (Source: Khalil
al-Sakakini, Such am I, Oh World!, quoted by Benny Morris, Righteous
Victims)
The British acted erratically. After the violence broke out, Jabotisky
met Storrs and suggested deployment of his volunteers, but this request
was rejected. Later Storrs changed his mind and asked for 200 volunteers
to report to the police headquarters to be sworn in as deputies. After
they arrived and the administering of the oath had begun, orders came to
cease and send them away. The army imposed night curfew on Sunday night
and arrested several dozen rioters, but on Monday morning they were
allowed to attend morning prayer and then released.
On Monday disturbances grew worse and the Old City was sealed off by the
army. Even the Jews who sought to flee were not allowed to leave.
Martial law was declared, but looting, burglary, rape and murder
continued. Several homes were set on fire.
On Monday evening, the soldiers were evacuated from the Old City, a step
that was later declared an "an error of judgment" by a court inquiry.
Jewish volunteers entered the Old City to organize self-defense of its
residents. One of the volunteers was Nehemia Rabin (Rubitzov), future
father of Yitzhak Rabin. Eventually, the violence was quelled by the
British.
The aftermath
Fatalities: 5 Jews, 4 Arabs. Wounded: 216 Jews (18 critically), 23 Arabs
(1 critically), 7 British soldiers.
The majority of the victims were old-Yishuv (non-Zionist, and some
anti-Zionist Orthodox Jews). About 300 Jews from the Old City were
evacuated.
After the riots, Storrs visited Menachem Ussishkin, the chairman of the
Zionist Commission, to express "regrets for the tragedy that has
befallen us," Ussishkin asked, "What tragedy?"
"I mean the unfortunate events that have occurred here in the recent
days," Storrs said.
"His excellency means the pogrom," suggested Ussishkin. When Storrs
hesitated to categorize the events as such, Ussishkin replied, "You
Colonel, are an expert on matters of management and I am an expert on
the rules of pogroms."
At the demand of the Palestinian Arab leadership, the British searched
the offices and apartments of the Zionist leadership, including
Weizmann's and Jabotisky's homes, for arms. At Jabotinsky's house they
found 3 rifles, 2 pistols, and 250 rounds of ammunition. Nineteen men
were arrested, including Jabotinsky.
A committee of inquiry placed responsibility for the riots on the
Zionist Commission, for provoking the Arabs. Jabotinsky was given a
fifteen year prison term for possessing weapons. The court blamed
"Bolshevism," claiming that it "flowed in Zionism's inner heart" and
ironically identified fiercely anti-Socialist Jabotinsky with the
Socialist-aligned Poalei Zion ("Zionist Workers") party, which it called
"a definite Bolshevist institution".
Some of the rioters were punished. Musa al-Hussayni was replaced as
mayor by the head of the rival Nashashibi clan. Hajj Amin Al-Husayni and
Aref al-Aref were each sentenced to ten years in absentia, since by then
both had fled to Syria.
The official inquiry that followed found that the British military
administration was rife with anti-Semitism and that the measures taken
to maintain order were inadequate, but no one was charged. Not a single
policeman was charged for failing in his duties.
A few weeks later, the San Remo conference replaced military
administration of the Mandate with a civil government under Sir Herbert
Samuel.
One of the most important results of the riot was that legal Jewish
immigration to Palestine was halted, a major demand of the Palestinian
Arab community. Feeling that the British were unwilling to defend them
from continuous Arab violence, the Palestinian Jews decided to set up an
underground self-defense militia, the Haganah ("defense").
From:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerusalem_pogrom_of_April%2C_1920
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