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bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful


=== News Update ===

Special Report


Hamas: A Pale Image of the Jewish Irgun And Lehi Gangs



By Donald Neff

Emacs!



A photograph dated 1947 shows a poster issued by British police forces 
seeking 18 wanted Jewish terrorists from the Irgun Zvai Leumi and Stern 
Gang. Pictured at top left is Irgun commander and future Israeli Prime 
Minister Menachem Begin (AFP Photo)



AS EASY as it is to dismiss clichés as banal and misleading, the troubling 
problem is that they often cloak an essential truth. Scoffs and derision 
often greet the cliché that “one man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom 
fighter.” Yet freedom fighters is exactly how Israelis view the early 
Zionists who fought in 1947 for the establishment of Israel­and how 
Palestinians now consider their fighters resisting Israeli occupation.

The reality is that when faced with a superior military force, such as 
Britain possessed in 1947 and Israel does today against the Palestinians, 
terror is the underdog’s only viable weapon. Once a state has been 
established and legitimized, however, as in the cases of Israel and South 
Africa, the former “terrorists” tend to gain a veil of legitimacy as well. 
But legitimacy is now being denied Hamas. Even though Palestinians elected 
a Hamas-led government in free and fair elections, Israel denies it 
legitimacy on the grounds that Hamas is a terrorist organization.

Sixty years ago, however, at the time of the British Mandate, it was Jews 
in Palestine who mainly waged terrorism against the Palestinians. As Jewish 
leader David Ben-Gurion recorded in his personal history of Israel: “From 
1946 to 1947 there were scarcely any Arab attacks on the Yishuv [the Jewish 
community in Palestine].”

The same could not be said for the Zionists. Jewish terrorists waged an 
intense and bloody campaign against the Palestinians, British, and even 
some Jews who opposed them leading up to the establishment of Israel.

The two major Jewish terror organizations in pre-independence Palestine 
were the Irgun Zvai Leumi­National Military Organization, NMO, also known 
by the Hebrew letters Etzel­founded in 1937, and the Lohamei Herut Israel, 
Fighters for the Freedom of Israel, Lehi in the Hebrew acronym, also known 
as the Stern Gang after its leader Avraham Stern, known as Yair, founded in 
1940.

The Irgun was led by Menachem Begin, the future Israeli prime minister who 
was a leading proponent of Revisionist Zionism, the militant branch of 
Zionism pioneered by Vladimir Zeev Jabotinsky, which openly despised the 
Arabs and sought restoration of what it called Eretz Yisrael, the ancient 
land of Israel. By this was meant “both sides of the Jordan,” the Irgun 
slogan meaning all of Palestine and Jordan was the rightful home of the Jews.

Another belief of Begin’s was that of the “fighting Jew,” a romanticized 
idea expressed in Jabotinsky’s old Betar movement song of “we shall create, 
with sweat and blood, a race of men, strong, brave and cruel.” Israeli 
scholar Avishai Margalit translated the verse as “proud, generous and 
cruel,” adding: “Many are still waiting for the generous part to emerge.”

The Irgun was the dominant Jewish terrorist organization, both in size and 
the number and frequency of its attacks. Its most spectacular feat up to 
this time had been the July 22, 1946 blowing up of the King David Hotel in 
Jerusalem, with the killing of 91 people­41 Arabs, 28 British and 17 Jews. 
Mainstream Zionists despised Begin and his Revisionists, although there was 
cooperation between the two on military matters. Ben-Gurion, the leader of 
mainstream Zionism, fought throughout his premiership with Begin.

The other major Jewish terrorist group, Lehi, was more extremist than the 
Irgun, claiming all the land between the Nile and the Euphrates as 
belonging to the Jews. When Jabotinsky declared a cease-fire in the fight 
against Britain and its mandate troops in Palestine during World War II, 
Stern broke with him and founded Lehi. Stern sought alliance with the 
Nazis, both because they shared an enemy in Britain and because Lehi shared 
Hitler’s totalitarian ideology. During the war Sternists openly celebrated 
Nazi victories on the battlefield.

An infamous document called the “Ankara Document” because it was found in 
the German Embassy in Ankara after the war, detailed Avraham Stern’s ideas 
“concerning the solution of the Jewish question in Europe.” It was dated 
Jan. 11, 1941. At the time, Stern was still a member of the Irgun, which he 
called by its initials, NMO. Wrote Stern: “The evacuation of the Jewish 
masses from Europe is a precondition for solving the Jewish question; but 
this can only be made possible and complete through the settlement of these 
masses in the home of the Jewish People, Palestine, and through the 
establishment of a Jewish state in its historical boundaries....The 
NMO...is well acquainted with the goodwill of the German Reich government 
and its authorities toward Zionist activity inside Germany and toward 
Zionist emigration plans....The NMO is closely related to the totalitarian 
movements in Europe in its ideology and structure.”

In the Partition period, Irgun had around 2,000 men, while Lehi had about 
800. Though the memberships were comparatively small, the damage these two 
groups caused in inflaming animosity between Arab and Jew was considerable. 
When Stern was killed by British police in 1942, leadership of Lehi was 
shared; among the leaders were Nathan Yalin-Mor, one of the eventual 
killers of Count Bernadotte, and Yitzhak Shamir, another future prime 
minister of Israel.

Arab terrorists carried out some major operations as well, including the 
bombing of the Jewish Agency and the Palestine Post. But in contrast to 
Jewish violence, it was unorganized and episodic. As historian Michael C. 
Hudson noted: “Organized Jewish violence against the British and Arabs 
(exemplified by the Irgun’s bombing of the King David Hotel in 1946), 
however, was far more systematic and successful than that of the 
Palestinians, and the latter were unable to play a significant role in the 
final years of the Mandate.”

The Jewish Agency, as the official representative of the Jewish community, 
repeatedly denied any responsibility for the acts of the Irgun and Lehi, 
maintaining they were underground terrorist groups operating outside the 
law. However, there was close cooperation among Irgun, Lehi and the Haganah 
underground army under an agreement called the Hebrew Resistance Movement 
and aimed specifically against the British Mandatory government. It went 
into force in the fall of 1945, when “Irgun and Lehi accepted Haganah 
discipline in the conduct of all armed operations,” in the words of 
historian Noah Lucas.

By December 1947, British High Commissioner Alan Cunningham reported to 
London: “...the Haganah and the dissident groups are now working so closely 
together that the Agency’s claim that they cannot control the dissidents is 
inadmissible.”

Donald Neff is the author of the Warriors trilogy, Fallen Pillars: U.S. 
Policy towards Palestine and Israel, and Fifty Years of Israel, all 
available from the AET Book Club.

source:
http://www.wrmea.org/archives/May-June_2006/0605014.html

===


-muslim voice-
______________________________________
BECAUSE YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO KNOW  

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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