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Most Crowded Hours in Palestine's History
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| Jewish forces engage the enemy from a
secure position (photo David Rubringer) |
(May 16) -- Between Thursday night and this morning Palestine
went through what by all standards must be among the most
crowded hours in history.
For the Jewish population there was the anguish over the
fate of the few hundred Haganah men and women in the Kfar
Etzion bloc of settlements near Hebron. Their surrender to
a fully equipped superior foreign force desperately in need
of a victory was a foregone conclusion. What could not be
known, with no communications since Thursday morning, was
whether and to what extent the Red Cross and the Truce Consuls
would secure civilized conditions for prisoners and wounded,
and proper respect for the dead. Doubt on some of these anxious
questions have now been resolved.
On Friday afternoon, from Tel Aviv, came the expected announcement
of the Jewish State and its official naming at birth, "Medinat
Yisrael" - State of Israel, with the swearing in of the first
Council of Government. The proclamation of the State was made
at midnight, coinciding with the sailing from Haifa of Britain's
last High Commissioner. Within the hour, President Truman
announced in Washington that the Government of the United
States had decided to give de facto recognition to the Jewish
State, with all that such recognition implied. The Assembly
of the United Nations, meeting since the middle of April for
"further study" of the Palestine problem was thus left, by
one means or another, to ratify the Two-States decision of
November last year, or dissolve with nothing concrete to its
credit. The Assembly adjourned with the resolution to appoint
a mediator between the Jew and Arabs, to cooperate with the
Security Council's Truce Commission in Jerusalem.
Russian Recognition Awaited
Russia and her allies had given early assurance of their intention
to recognize the Jewish State, whoever else did or did not.
As a result of Washington's action and the Eastern Bloc's
stand, other countries are expected to extend their recognition
to the newly born state.
Nor did the Arab Bloc remain idle. True promises, or threats,
the members of the Arab League completed their plans for a
full-scale invasion of Palestine in what has been described
as a Moslem "crusade" against the Jews. Tel Aviv was bombed
twice yesterday by Egyptian war planes. One of the enemy planes
was shot down by a Jewish fighter plane, and the pilot taken
prisoner, showing that this move against the civilian population
was not a surprise, and that the Jewish preparations include
anti-aircraft defences.
A black-out has been ordered for the whole of Jewish Palestine.
Tel Aviv itself having blacked out on Friday.
At the same time, the air was filled with reports of two
Egyptian columns on the move from the south towards Gaza and
Beer Sheba, and of intensified shelling from across the northern
border of Jewish settlements in North Eastern Galilee.
The Security Council met yesterday in a special session
to consider action on the invasion of Palestine by member
states of the U.N.
In the afternoon, Jerusalem was subjected to shelling from
the northwest.
Haganah forces throughout the country continued mopping
up, and Jewish and Jewish sources claimed most of Western
Galilee safe against attack. Naharayim, near Jist el Majamie,
inside Trans-Jordan, where the Jordan river works of the Palestine
Electric Corporation are, is claimed by the Arab Legion. The
battle for the Tel Aviv-Jerusalem Road at Bab el Wad is still
on, Haganah taking two villages - Abu Shusha and Kubab - between
Ramleh and Latrun.
Converging an Old City
In Jerusalem the "cease fire" observed on both sides for six
days was broken on Friday, although the more strategic buildings
in Princess Mary Avenue, the Russian Compound, and Jaffa Road
passed to the Jews without a shot being fired, as did the
David Building commanding the road to the German Colony and
Railway Station. By yesterday evening, Jewish forces were
approaching some of the gates of the Old City. The Police
Training School on Mt. Scopus and Sheikh Harrah are in Jewish
hands.
On Friday morning, the Truce Commission met at the French
Consulate and invited Jewish and Arab representatives to confer
with them. Jewish Agency delegates agreed that the "cease
fire" be extended in Jerusalem for eight days. Arab representatives
could not attend, they said, because of the firing in Julian's
Way, and a two-hour respite was arranged from 5 to 7 in the
evening. Whether they agreed or not, became academic as by
that time the battle for Jerusalem had been renewed.
To Jerusalem's tension was added the aggravation of electric
power failing in most parts of the city, as nearly all of
the Electric Corporation's lines had been shot down. This
meant, on top of the other heardships to a fuel-less city,
no broadcast news yesterday, when there were no newspapers.
For more than a week the city was also without piped water.
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