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Al-Khisas raid

Coordinates: 33°13′31″N 35°37′10″E / 33.22528°N 35.61944°E / 33.22528; 35.61944
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Al-Khisas raid
Part of the 1947–1949 Palestine war and the Nakba
Remains of a house destroyed in the attack
LocationAl-Khisas, Mandatory Palestine
Coordinates33°13′31″N 35°37′10″E / 33.22528°N 35.61944°E / 33.22528; 35.61944
Date18 December 1947
TargetPalestinian Arabs
Attack type
Arson, Massacre
Deaths10-15 villagers, including 5 children
PerpetratorsPalmach, Haganah

The al-Khisas raid, also known as the al-Khisas massacre, was an attack on the Palestinian village of al-Khisas carried out by the Palmach on December 18, 1947 during the 1948 Palestine war. 10-15 Palestinian villagers were killed in the attack, including 5 children.

Background

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The attack took place during the civil war phase of the 1948 Palestine war and was conducted as a reprisal for the killing of a Jewish man near Al-Khisas.[a] Local Palmach commanders decided to launch a retaliatory attack on the village, arguing that "if there was no reaction to the murder, the Arabs would interpret this as a sign of weakness and an invitation to further attacks".[1] The Haganah High Command approved the action on condition that the attack be directed against "men only and they should burn [only] a few houses".[1]

The attack

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The massacre was carried out by the Palmach's 3rd Battalion, which later became part of the Yiftach Brigade.[citation needed]

According to Haim Levenberg:

One unit attacked with hand-grenades a four-roomed house killing two men and five children, and wounding five other men. At the same time, another unit attacked a house in the village owned by Amir Al-Fa’ur of Syria, in which one Syrian and two Lebanese peasants were killed and another Lebanese and two local men were wounded. According to HQ British Troops in Palestine, the villagers did not use any firearms to defend themselves.[2]

10-15 Palestinian villagers were killed in the attack, 5 of them children.[3][4]

Aftermath and reactions

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Following the attack a large number of al-Khisas' residents fled their homes, becoming a part of the 1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight.[5]

The events led to an escalation in violence that rapidly spread through the Upper Galilee region;[1] the region had generally been quiet before the massacre, which was blamed for unnecessarily widening the hostilities.[6]

The Jewish leadership at the time sharply criticized the attack.[1] Three weeks later, Arab forces crossed the Syrian border and carried out a reprisal attack on the kibbutz Kfar Szold, but suffered heavy losses and were repulsed.[1]

On 1 January 1948, David Ben-Gurion wrote in his diary about the attack, stating:[7][8][b]

"The question is not if there is a necessity to retaliate ... We need strong and harsh retaliation ... When the family is known, we must be merciless in hitting them; including women and children, or our retaliation will not be efficient. No need to differentiate ... between the guilty and the innocent."

During the operation a female member of the battalion had refused to throw a grenade into a room in which she could hear a child crying; following the event the battalion's commander Moshe Kelman argued that women should not be used on front line duties but should be used as "cooks and service people."[9]

On the night of 5 June 1949, the remaining inhabitants of Khisas were forcibly expelled as part of the 1949–1956 Palestinian expulsions.[10] Some time after the village was destroyed.[1]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Benvenisti, M. (2000). Sacred Landscape: The Buried History of the Holy Land Since 1948. University of California Press. p. 103. ISBN 9780520211544.
  2. ^ Levenberg, H.; Lewenberg, H. (1993). Military Preparations of the Arab Community in Palestine, 1945-1948. Frank Press. p. 183. ISBN 978-0-7146-3439-5. Retrieved 2021-12-12.
  3. ^ Pappé 2006, "Fifteen villagers, including five children, were killed in the attack."
  4. ^ Benny Morris, 1948 and After (1990), "ten Arab civilians, including five children"
  5. ^ Morris 2004, "Following the raid, a large part of Khisas’s population left their homes"
  6. ^ Abbasi, Mustafa. “The Battle for Safad in the War of 1948: A Revised Study.” International Journal of Middle East Studies 36, no. 1 (2004): 21–47. http://www.jstor.org/stable/3880136.
  7. ^ Saleh Abdel Jawad, 2007, Zionist Massacres: the Creation of the Palestinian Refugee Problem in the 1948 War
  8. ^ Pappé 2006
  9. ^ Kurzman, Don (1970). Genesis 1948. The First Arab-Israeli War. New York: New American Library (NAL). p. 65. LCCN 77-96925.
  10. ^ Benny Morris, 1948 and After (1990), page 200
  1. ^ Reports differ as to the details of this killing, with Meron Benvenisti writing that "a horse-cart from an adjacent kibbutz was fired upon while traveling past al-Khisas, and one of the passengers was killed." Benny Morris writes that a Jewish man from kibbutz Ma'ayan Baruch was killed as revenge for the shooting of an Arab a few days prior. (Morris 2004) Saleh Abdel Jawad writes that "a settlement police car was attacked, which killed one man." (Jawad, 2007, Zionist Massacres: the Creation of the Palestinian Refugee Problem in the 1948 War)
  2. ^ Translation of Saleh Abdel Jawad