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Monday, October 08, 2007

The truth about Dir Yassin

One of the lies the 'Palestinians' like to tell about the 1948 war is about a 'massacre' at a village called Dir Yassin. Dir Yassin stood where the Jewish neighborhood of Har Nof stands today on the northwestern outskirts of Jerusalem (in fact, for many years, there were still a couple of abandoned huts standing on the mountainside at the top end of Katzenellenbogen Street). What happened at Dir Yassin? Here's the official 'Palestinian' version:
Early in the morning of Friday, April 9, 1948, commandos of the Irgun, headed by Menachem Begin, and the Stern Gang attacked Deir Yassin, a village with about 750 Palestinian residents. It was several weeks before the end of the British Mandate. The village lay outside of the area that the United Nations recommended be included in a future Jewish State. Deir Yassin had a peaceful reputation and was even said by a Jewish newspaper to have driven out some Arab militants. But it was located on high ground in the corridor between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem and one plan, kept secret until years afterwards, called for it to be destroyed and the residents evacuated to make way for a small airfield that would supply the beleaguered Jewish residents of Jerusalem.

By noon over 100 people, half of them women and children, had been systematically murdered. Four commandos died at the hands of resisting Palestinians using old Mausers and muskets. Twenty-five male villagers were loaded into trucks, paraded through the Zakhron Yosef quarter in Jerusalem, and then taken to a stone quarry along the road between Givat Shaul and Deir Yassin and shot to death. The remaining residents were driven to Arab East Jerusalem.

That evening the Irgunists and the Sternists escorted a party of foreign correspondents to a house at Givat Shaul, a nearby Jewish settlement founded in 1906. Over tea and cookies they amplified the details of the operation and justified it, saying Deir Yassin had become a concentration point for Arabs, including Syrians and Iraqis, planning to attack the western suburbs of Jerusalem. They said that 25 members of the Haganah militia had reinforced the attack and claimed that an Arabic-speaking Jew had warned the villagers over a loudspeaker from an armored car. This was duly reported in The New York Times on April 10.

A final body count of 254 was reported by The New York Times on April 13, a day after they were finally buried. By then the leaders of the Haganah had distanced themselves from having participated in the attack and issued a statement denouncing the dissidents of Irgun and the Stern Gang, just as they had after the attack on the King David Hotel in July 1946. A 1987 study undertaken by Birzeit University's Center for Research and Documentation of Palestinian Society found "the numbers of those killed does not exceed 120".

The Haganah leaders admitted that the massacre "disgraced the cause of Jewish fighters and dishonored Jewish arms and the Jewish flag." They played down the fact that their militia had reinforced the terrorists' attack, even though they did not participate in the barbarism and looting during the subsequent "mopping up" operations.

They also played down the fact that, in Begin's words, "Deir Yassin was captured with the knowledge of the Haganah and with the approval of its commander" as a part of its "plan for establishing an airfield."
I wouldn't believe anything the Haganah said about the Irgun - this happened about six weeks before the Haganah fired on the Alatalena and the rivalry between them was already well in place. And if there had really been a massacre, why would they not have killed all the men rather than transferring some of them to 'East Jerusalem'?

But what really happened at Dir Yassin? This video ought to give you a better idea. The end will surprise you. (Hat Tip: NY Nana)



Yes, like everything else about 'Palestine' the Dir Yassin 'massacre' was just another Arab deception.

1 Comments:

At 2:51 AM, Blogger What is "Occupation" said...

video not working

 

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