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<text>
<title>
(1940s) State Of Israel
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1940s Highlights
</history>
<link 07792>
<link 00117><article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
State of Israel
</hdr>
<body>
<p> [Still another British possession evolved into an independent
state in a paroxysm of violence: Palestine, a mandate Britain
took on after the breakup of the Ottoman Empire in World War I;
British foreign Minister Balfour had promised that Jews would
be allowed a "National Home" there. The British had also
promised the territory to the Arabs, however, so they restricted
Jewish immigration to Palestine in 1939, just in time to trap
millions of desperate Jews in Europe. In 1946, displaced Jews
who had survived the war and the concentration camps began
heading, illegally, toward the Middle East.]
</p>
<p>(May 6, 1946)
</p>
<p> Only Jehovah knew last week how many Jews were moving out of
their modern bondage toward the ancient promised land. By
thousands they fled from eastern Europe, where three-fourths of
the Continent's 1,300,000 surviving Jews (not including those
of Russia) have found no victory in Hitler's defeat. Their
exodus was illegal, clandestine, and humanitarian. A Polish
Jewess explained why: "You know what Europe is to me? It's a
cemetery. When I walk into a store and see soap on sale, I
remember that this may be the body of my sister."
</p>
<p> The underground was shifting its human freight out of the
villages of eastern Europe. Operated by Haganah (Hebrew for
"self-defense"), the movement is largely financed by funds
collected in the U.S.
</p>
<p> Bari in Italy is the chief jumping-off place; it has large
reception camps where the travelers are housed and fed until the
night they crowd aboard a little tramp ship for the voyage to
Palestine.
</p>
<p> Landing in Palestine is a touch-&-go operation. The vigilant
British patrol is composed of coast guard stations on 24-hour
watch, motor launches and cutters, radar posts. If a ship eludes
all these, the authorities may throw a smoke screen around a
suspected landing place, then intensively search nearby homes
and fields. "Illegals" who are caught are herded into a
concentration camp. The Jewish Agency for Palestine, recognized
as spokesman for world Jewry, negotiates for their release.
Usually the British deduct the "illegals" from the regular quota
for immigrants (1,500 a month), before freeing them.
</p>
<p> Haganah men say that in the last four months they brought
7,000 out of 10,000 "illegals" safely through the British
cordon. Once ashore, the travelers find the channels of
absorption into the Jewish community efficient and heartwarming.
</p>
<p> [The conflicting nationalisms of Jews and Arabs had been
causing bloodshed in Palestine at least since 1936. After the
war's end, Jewish extremist groups like the Irgun Zvai Leumi,
headed by Menachem Begin, and the Stern Gang, frustrated by
Britain's refusal to admit more than 1,500 of the desperate
Jewish DPs per month, initiated terrorist actions aimed at
driving the British out of Palestine. In August 1946, the Irgun
blew up Jerusalem's King David Hotel, killing 80 people.]
</p>
<p>(August 26, 1946)
</p>
<p> Electric tension gripped Jerusalem. Outside the Jaffa Gate
the tension was even greater. A Government "fortress" went up
last week in the heart of the New City. The British evicted
shopkeepers and business firms along Jaffa Road, stretched
tangles of barbed wire from rooftops to the ground and along the
road. Sand-bagged guard posts manned by grim-faced infantrymen
and paratroopers in maroon berets hemmed in the precincts of the
British rulers. Tommy gunners covered everyone entering
Barclay's Bank to cash a check. The Post Office, Government
Lands Office, Overseas Airways office jittered as Jewish
extremists carried on a "telephone terror," threatening bombings
(the blasted walls of the King David Hotel were still vivid in
everyone's mind). On Zion Circus the marquee of a cinema
twinkled: "They Were Expendable."
</p>
<p> When London announced last fortnight that illegal immigration
of Jewish refugees into Palestine must end, the 1st Infantry
Division threw barbed wire round the port area, patrolled its
perimeter with tanks and armored cars. Early one morning Tommies
and Royal Marines began transferring 1,286 refugees from two
small sailing craft (popularly called "floating sewers") where
they had sweltered in filth for two weeks. Like Moses, these
Jews might glimpse the Promised Land, but they could not enter
it.
</p>
<p> Some hurled sticks, cans, jars of preserves as the British
moved them to barbed-wire pens aboard British troopships. At the
Henrietta Szold, the soldiers threw smoke bombs to quiet the
Jews. The Jews tossed them back. At last the screaming cargoes
were embarked. Sympathizers ashore tried to aid them. About a
thousand Jews from Haifa defied the British curfew, tried to
crash through the barbed wire to the docks. Tommies fired; three
Jews were killed, seven more wounded.
</p>
<p> [Once again, Britain gave up; this time it dumped the
responsibility on the U.N.]
</p>
<p>(December 8, 1947)
</p>
<p> Last week the United Nations General Assembly after much
anxious hesitation, "settled" the 30-year-old Palestine dispute.
They voted, 33 to 13, to partition Palestine into two states,
Arab and Jewish.
</p>
<p> "This is the day that the Lord hath made!" cried a rabbi in
the U.N. delegates' lounge after the vote. "Let us be glad and
rejoice therein!"
</p>
<p> But Arab representatives stalked out of the Assembly chamber,
saying they would fight the plan. U.S. Delegate Herschel
Johnson, who had steered the partition plan to parliamentary
victory, was wary of premature rejoicing. "This thing is just
beginning," he said wearily.
</p>
<p> Until the very moment of public decision at Flushing meadow,
no one knew whether U.N. would approve partition. A two-thirds
vote among nations voting in the full Assembly was needed to win
final approval.
</p>
<p> But the very fact of U.S.-Russian agreement seemed to free
many smaller nations from the necessity of taking a stand.
</p>
<p> After the vote was announced, the six Arab delegations (Iraq,
Syria, Lebanon, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Yemen) arose and strode
out of the Assembly chamber. Pakistan's delegation soon
followed. The U.N. Charter, said an Arab delegate, is dead. "Not
of a natural death--it was murdered." added Syria's Faris el
Khoury. The U.N. decision, he said, "will establish a Jewish
patrol at the door of Asia. The Arabs and the Asiatics will not
accept it." All Arab delegations announced that they would
boycott the partition plan, have nothing more to do with U.N.
discussions of Palestine.
</p>
<p> In the early morning hours, when news of the U.N. vote reached
Tel Aviv, cheering crowds danced the traditional hora. In
Jerusalem and Haifa, jubilant thousands paraded the streets
waving blue & white Zionist flag. Even British Tommies joined
in the fun.
</p>
<p> The Arabs planned uprisings, an economic blockade,
concentrated attacks on outlying Jewish settlements and pinpoint
attacks against the long exposed borders of the crazy-quilt
Jewish state. The Arabs seemed resigned to the prospect of an
armed struggle. They regarded partition in its present form as
so outrageous that there was no alternative.
</p>
<p>(December 15, 1947)
</p>
<p> Mobs of Jews and Arabs surged and countersurged through Old
and New Jerusalem, killing, stoning, stabbing, burning, looting.
Arab and Jewish slum-dwellers along the dividing line of Jewish
Tel Aviv and Arab Jaffa made armed forays into each other's
quarters. Gunmen from rooftops covered arsonists while they put
dwellings to the torch. Arab gangs waylaid Jewish buses on
Palestine's roads. Jerusalem's water supply gave out as firemen
fought blazes. Dr. Huessein F. Khalidi, secretary of the Mufti's
Arab Higher Executive, then called off the strike, which he said
was just a "token of protest" against the U.N. decision. But he
could not call a stop to violence.
</p>
<p> By the end of a bloody week, 62 Jews and 32 Arabs had died of
violence in Palestine. More than 200 were wounded.
</p>
<p> On the Jewish side, part of the underground army Haganah came
out into the open to protect Jews from Arab attacks. Jews set
up twelve recruiting center in Palestine. Increased immigration
(present limit fixed by the British: 1,500 a month) would
increase Jewish strength. The British government considered
transferring 16,000 Jews to Palestine from Cyprus before Feb.
1, admitting 10,000 Jews a month to Palestine thereafter. U.S.
officials in Germany, Austria and Italy began planning the
movement of 6,250 Jewish D.P.s a month, beginning in February.
The Jewish Agency for Palestine gave priority to young people,
able to build or fight.
</p>
<p>(April 19, 1948)
</p>
<p> It was war in Palestine last week. The hit-&-run raids, the
bombings and the skirmishes were giving way to something bigger.
Now there were pitched battles, between thousands of men in
organized bands, for definite objectives. A prime objective for
both Arabs and Jews: control of Jerusalem.
</p>
<p> Ever since U.N. voted partition, Arabs have been tightening
their grip on the lifeline of Jerusalem's 100,000 Jews--the road
to Tel Aviv, which twists from the city through the rocky Judean
hills to the coastal plain. The city's Jewish population, which
used to buy 80 to 90% of its food from neighboring Arabs, now
depends on food convoys from the Jewish settlements along the
coast.
</p>
<p> Cabled TIME Correspondent Eric Gibbs, who watched the battle
of the Jerusalem roads last week: "I stood on a high escarpment
amid a crowd of Arab soldiers, watching their 105-millimeter
Schnieder howitzer lob big shells into Jewish convoys trying to
round a perilous bend in the road, two miles away. A Haganah
truck or armored car looked like a tiny beetle as it climbed
slowly and unsuspectingly towards danger. As the howitzer fired,
Arabs waited tensely for the shell to land, bony brown hands
clutching at rifles, eyes narrowed to slits. Another instant and
a black mushroom of smoke grew silently out of the road. By the
time the sound had echoed back, the vehicle was rolling
helplessly down the precipice. From the escarpment rose an Arab
cheer.
</p>
<p> Elsewhere, savage raids turned into brutal massacres. Four
miles from Kastel, about 100 Jews (two-third Irgun, one-third
Stern Gang) swept into the village of Deir Yesin at dawn, blew
up its huts with demolition charges. More than 200 Arabs, half
of them women & children, died in the slaughter. The rest of the
village's 700 dwellers surrendered or fled to caves in the
nearby hills.
</p>
<p>(May 3, 1948)
</p>
<p> While U.N. talked, the Jews were carving Palestine with a
sword, In a whirlwind week they seized Haifa, attacked Jaffa,
won Tiberias on the Sea of Galilee and tried to cut the Arab
supply road into Jerusalem. For the first time since the Romans
leveled Jerusalem 1,800 years ago, a Jewish army ate Passover
matzoth and bitter herbs around campfires in the field. Said
Jewish Agency Chairman David Ben-Gurion: "We stand on the eve
of the Jewish State...heartened by the victories of our
army...We have just begun to buckle on the sword."
</p>
<p> The Jews' most dazzling military prize of the week was Haifa,
the only port where seagoing ships can dock. As British troops
prepared last week to withdraw from all the city except the dock
area, Jewish soldiers began to filter into the town. Others
gathered on the slopes of Mount Carmel. One morning at 1 a.m.
they struck. Behind a creeping mortar barrage, the Jews moved
into the Arab quarters of the city. Bewildered Arabs gathered
for one brief counterattack, then collapsed in leaderless
confusion. Within a day, the Jews had taken Haifa.
</p>
<p>(May 24, 1948)
</p>
<p> Between one pink dawn and another over the Moabite hills last
week came The Day. It brought forth events sufficient to crowd
aside the worries of tomorrow. To the Jews of Palestine this day
brought a state of their own, first in 1,878 years. To the
British it brought the loss of a 10,460-square-mile base in the
Mediterranean--and relief from burden they had snatched up with
imperial optimism 31 years ago. To the Arabs, it brought a
tautening of determination as well as more sober assessing of
their chances for victory.
</p>
<p> That day, 400 Jews gathered at the Tel Aviv Museum under the
watchful eyes of Haganah Bren-gunners. The 13 men who would rule
the new Jewish state sat down at a long table on a raised dais.
Over their heads were white Zionist flags bearing two pale blue
stripes and a blue Star of David. The assemblage rose to sing
the Zionist anthem Hatikvah--"The ancient longing will be
fulfilled, to return to the land...of our fathers..."
</p>
<p> A stocky man with a halo of electric white hair, dressed in
alight blue suit and tie and white shirt, fiddled nervously with
his glasses and papers, looked frequently at his watch. On the
dot of 4 p.m., David Ben-Gurion, first Prime Minister of the
Jewish state, banged the table with his fist and began to read.
As he reached the words proclaiming "the establishment of the
Jewish State in Palestine, to be called Israel," the audience
cheered and wept.
</p>
<p> In the two hours that remained before sundown, when the
Jewish Sabbath would begin, Tel Aviv's jubilant people danced
in the streets, paraded with blue-&-white streamers and Star of
David flags, prayed in their synagogues, with tears and cheers
waved off truckloads of Haganah youths headed for the frontiers.
</p>
<p> At 21 minutes past midnight, Palestine time, President Truman
announced: "The U.S. Government recognizes the provisional
government as the de facto authority of the new state of
Israel."
</p>
<p> [The Israelis and Arabs agreed to and broke several truces.
Between two of them, Stern Gang terrorists murdered the U.N.
mediator, Swedish Count Folke Bernadotte. The final set of
armistices was hammered out by a new U.N. mediator from the U.S.
Ralph Bunche. Israel was by no means secure, but was spared a
full-scale war with her Arab neighbors for another 18 years.]</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>