Irgun ( ; shorthand for
Ha'Irgun HaTzva'i
HaLe'umi BeEretz Yisra'el, , "National Military Organization
in the Land of Israel") was a
militant
Zionist group that operated in
the British mandate of Palestine between
1931 and 1948. It was an offshoot of the earlier and larger
Jewish paramilitary organization
Haganah (Hebrew: "The Defense", ההגנה). Since the
group originally broke from the Haganah it became known as the
Haganah Bet (Hebrew: literally "Defense 'B' " or "Second
Defense", ), or alternatively as Haganah Ha'leumit ( ) or
Ha'ma'amad ( ). Irgun members were absorbed into the
Israel Defence Forces at the start of
the
1948 Arab-Israeli war.
In
present-day Israel
, the Irgun
is commonly referred to as Etzel ( ), an acronym
of the Hebrew initials.
The Irgun policy was based on what was then called
Revisionist Zionism founded by
Ze'ev Jabotinsky. According to
Howard Sachar,
"The policy of the new
organization was based squarely on Jabotinsky's teachings: every
Jew had the right to enter Palestine; only active
retaliation would deter the Arabs; only Jewish
armed force would ensure the Jewish state".
Some of
the better-known attacks by the Irgun were the bombing of the
King David Hotel
in Jerusalem on 22 July 1946 and the Deir Yassin
massacre
(accomplished together with Lehi) on 9 April 1948.
In 1947 "the British army in Mandate Palestine banned the use of
the term 'terrorist' to refer to the Irgun zvai Leumi ... because
it implied that British forces had reason to be terrified," but
this did not stop others referring to it as a
terrorist organization, e.g. the
Anglo-American Committee of
Inquiry, several media sources, and a number of prominent world
and Jewish figures. Irgun attacks prompted a formal declaration
from the
World Zionist
Congress in 1946, which strongly condemned "the shedding of
innocent blood as a means of political warfare." The Israeli
government, in September 1948, acting in response to the
assassination of
Lord Moyne, dissolved
the Irgun and
Lehi groups as part of
the Prevention of Terrorism Ordinance.
The Irgun was a political predecessor to Israel's
right-wing Herut (or "Freedom") party, which led to today's
Likud party. Likud has led or been part of
most
Israeli governments since
1977.
Nature of the Movement

Ze'ev Jabotinsky, who formulated the
movement's ideology and was
Supreme Commander of the
Etzel
Members of the Irgun came mostly from
Beitar
and from the
Revisionist Party
both in Palestine and abroad. The Revisionist Movement made up a
popular backing for the underground organization.
Ze'ev Jabotinsky, founder of Revisionist
Zionism, was the commander of the organization until he died. He
formulated the general realm of operation, regarding
Restraint and the end thereof, and was the
inspiration for the organization overall. An additional major
source of idealogical inspiration was the poetry of
Uri Zvi Greenberg.
The symbol of the
organization, with the motto רק כך (Only Thus), alongside a hand
holding a rifle in the foreground of all of mandatory Palestine
(both sides of the Jordan
River
), symbolized the striving for Hebrew independence
over the entire land of Israel, to be achieved only by the power of
"Jewish weapons".
The number of members of the Irgun varied from a few hundred to a
few thousand. Most of its members were people who joined the
organization's command, under which they carried out various
operations and filled positions, largely in opposition to
British law. Most of them were "ordinary"
people, who held regular jobs, and only a few dozen worked full
time in the Irgun.
The Irgun disagreed with the policy of the
Yishuv and with the
World Zionist Organization, both
with regard to strategy and basic ideology and with regard to PR
and military tactics, such as use of armed force to accomplish the
Zionist ends, operations towards the Arabs during the riots, and
relations with the British mandatory government. Therefore the
Irgun tended to ignore the decisions made by the Zionist leadership
and the Yishuv's institutions. This fact caused the elected bodies
not to recognize the independent organization, and during most of
the time of its existence the organization was seen as
irresponsible, and its actions thus worthy of thwarting. Therefore
the Irgun accompanied its armed operations with public relations
campaigns, in order to convince the public of the Irgun's way and
the problems with the official political leadership of the Yishuv.
The Irgun put out numerous advertisements, an underground newspaper
and even ran the first independent Hebrew radio station -
Kol Zion HaLochemet.
Structure, command, insignia
As an underground armed organization, members did not normally call
it by its name, but rather used other names. In the first years of
its existence it was known primarily as "ההגנה הלאומית" (the
National Haganah), and also by names such as "Irgun Bet", "Haganah
Bet", the "Parallel Organization" and the "Rightwing Organization".
Later on it was most widely known as "המעמד" (the Stand). The
anthem adopted by the Irgun was "Anonymous Soldiers", written by
Avraham Stern who was at the time a
commander in the Irgun. Later on Stern defected from the Irgun and
founded
Lehi, and the song became the
anthem of the Lehi. The Irgun's new anthem then became the third
verse of the "Beitar Song", by Ze'ev Jabotinsky.
In August 1933 a "Supervisory Committee" for the Irgun was
established, which included representatives from most of the
Zionist political parties. The members of this committee were
Meir Grossman (of the Hebrew State
Party),
Rabbi Meir Bar Ilan (of the
Mizrachi Party, either
Immanuel Neumann or
Yehoshua Supersky (of the
General Zionists) and
Ze'ev Jabotinsky or
Eliyahu Ben Horin (of
Hatzohar). The committee was in charge of the Irgun
until 1937, when the group split yet again. From that point on, the
Irgun was under Jabotinsky's command. After his death ties were
formed between the Irgun and the
New Zionist Organization. These
ties were broken in 1944 when the Irgun declared war on the
British government.
Within the Irgun,
Avraham Tehomi was
the first to serve as "Head of the Headquarters" or "Chief
Commander". Alongside Tehomi served the "Headquarters". When the
armed group expanded, districts were laid out within the movement.
A local Irgun unit was called a "Branch". A "Brigade" in the Irgun
was made up of three sections. A section was made up of two groups,
at the head of each was a "Group Head", and a deputy. Later on
various newer units were established, who answered to a "Center"
or"Staff"). Ranks were put into use later on and were (in ascending
order) Deputy, Group Head, Sergeant (for a Section), Sergeant A
(Brigade), First Sergeant (Battalion); officer ranks were "Gundar"
(District of Unit Commander) and First Gundar (Senior Commander). A
rank of Major was awarded to the Irgun commander
Yaakov Meridor and a rank of Major General
(
Aluf) to
David
Raziel. Until his death in 1940, Jabotinsky was known as the
"Military Commander of the Etzel" or the "Supreme Commander".
The militant nature of the organization manifested itself in two
ways. First, was the execution of strict drill exercises, carrying
out of ceremonies at different times, and strict attention given to
discipline, formal ceremonies and military relationships between
the various ranks. Another way the military nature was apparent was
the organized training regime. The Irgun trained with handguns and
submachine guns, hand grenade throwing, and combined attacks on
targets. The Irgun put out professional publications on combat
doctrine, weaponry, leadership, drill exercises, etc. Among these
publications were the 240-page book "The Gun" by
David Raziel and Avraham Stern, and the
284-page book "The Compiled and Expanded Guide to Drill Exercises"
by Raziel. Up until the
Arab Revolt of
1936-1939 the Haganah also made use of these guidebooks
(afterwards the Haganah published its own military
literature).
Until
World War II the group armed itself by
weapons purchased in Europe, primarily
Italy
and Poland
, and
smuggled to Palestine. The Irgun also established workshops
that manufactured spare parts and attachments for the weapons. Also
manufactured were land mines and simple hand grenades. Another way
in which the Irgun armed itself was "Confiscations" - stealing
weapons from the
British police and
military.
Prior to World War II
Founding
The Irgun's first steps were in the aftermath of the
Riots of 1929.
In the Jerusalem
branch of the Haganah there were feelings of
disappointment and internal unrest towards the leadership of the
movements and the Histadrut (at that time
the organization running the Haganah). These feelings were a
result of the view that the Haganah was not adequately defending
Jewish interests in the region. Likewise, critics of the leadership
spoke out against alleged failures in the amount of weapons,
readiness of the movement and its policy of restraint and not
fighting back.
On April 10, 1931, commanders and equipment
managers announced that they refuse to return weapons to the
Haganah that had been issued to them earlier, prior to the Nebi Musa
holiday. These weapons were later returned
by the commander of the Jerusalem branch,
Avraham Tehomi, aka "Gideon". However, the
commanders who decided to rebel against the leadership of the
Haganah relayed a message regarding their resignations to the
Vaad Leumi, and thus this schism created
a new independent movement.
The leader of the new underground movement was
Avraham Tehomi, alongside other founding
members who were all senior commanders in the Haganah, members of
the Young Labor Party and of the Histadrut. Also among them was
Eliyahu Ben Horin, an activist in
the
Revisionist Party.
This group
was known as the "Odessan Gang", because they previously had been
members of the Haganah Ha'Atzmit of Jewish Odessa
. The
new movement was named
Irgun Tsvai Leumi, ("National
Military Organization") in order to emphasize its active nature in
contrast to the Haganah. Moreover, the organization was founded
with the desire to become a true military organization and not just
a
militia as the Haganah was at the
time.
In the autumn of that year the Jerusalem group merged with other
armed groups affiliated with
Beitar.
The Beitar
groups' center of activity was in Tel Aviv
, and they began their activity in 1928 with the
establishment of "Officers and Instructors School of
Beitar". Students at this institution had broken away from
the Haganah earlier, for political reasons, and the new group
called itself the "National Defense", הגנה הלאומית. During the
riots of 1929 Beitar youth participated in the defense of Tel Aviv
neighborhoods under the command of Yermiyahu Halperin, at the
behest of the Tel Aviv city hall. After the riots the Tel Avivian
group expanded, and was known as "The
Right
Wing Organization".
After the
Tel Aviv expansion another branch was established in Haifa
.
Towards
the end of 1932 the Haganah branch of Safed
also
defected and joined the Irgun, as well as many members of the
Maccabi sports
association. At that time the movement's underground
newsletter,
Ha'Metsudah (the Tower) also began
publication, expressing the active trend of the movement. The Irgun
also increased its numbers by expanding draft regiments of Beitar -
groups of volunteers, committed to two years of security and
pioneer activities.
These regiments were based in places that
from which stemmed new Irgun strongholds in the many places,
including the settlements of Yesod HaMa'ala
, Mishmar
HaYarden
, Rosh
Pina
, Metula
and Nahariya
in the north; in the center - Hadera
, Binyamina
, Herzliya
, Netanya
and Kfar
Sava
, and south of there - Rishon LeZion
, Rehovot
and Ness
Ziona
. Later on regiments were also active in the
Old City of
Jerusalem
("the Kotel Brigades") among others.
Primary
training centers were based in Ramat Gan
, Qastina
(by Kiryat Mal'akhi
of today) and other places.
Under Tehomi's command
In 1933 there were some signs of unrest, seen by the incitement of
the local Arab leadership to act against the authorities. The
strong British response put down the disturbances quickly. During
that time the Irgun operated in a similar manner to the Haganah and
was a guarding organization. The two organizations cooperated in
ways such as coordination of posts and even intelligence
sharing.
In protest against, and with the aim of ending
Jewish immigration to
Palestine, the
Great Arab Revolt of
1936-1939 broke out on April 19, 1936. The riots took the form
of attacks by Arab rioters ambushing main roads, bombing of roads
and settlements as well as property and agriculture vandalism. In
the beginning, the Irgun and the Haganah generally maintained a
policy of restraint, apart from a few instances. Some expressed
resentment at this policy, leading up internal unrest in the two
organizations. The Irgun tended to retaliate more often, and
sometimes Irgun members patrolled areas beyond their positions in
order to encounter attackers ahead of time. However, there were
differences of opinion regarding what to do in the Haganah, as
well. Due to the joining of many
Beitar Youth
members, Jabotinsky (founder of Beitar) had a great deal of
influence over Irgun policy. Nevertheless, Jabotinsky was of the
opinion that for moral reasons violent retaliation was not to be
undertaken.
During the first stage of the Revolt, from April 1936 until October
of that year, 80 Jews were killed, 369 were injured, 19 schools
were attacked, nine orphanages and three old-age homes. 380 attacks
on trains and buses were carried out, and approximately 4,000 acres
(16 km²) of agricultural land were destroyed.
These actions were
carried out by armed Palestinian Arab gangs who were joined by
Syrian
and Iraqi
reinforcements. The
Supreme Arab Committee, led by
Haj Amin al-Husayni, which
directed the riots , also declared a
general strike on labor and trade. In the
beginning of October 1936 gang activity declined due to the
intervention of the
British army.
In November 1936 the
Peel Commission
was sent to inquire regarding the breakout of the riots and propose
a solution to end the Revolt.
In early 1937 there were still some in the
Yishuv who felt the commission would
recommend a partition of the land west of the Jordan River
, thus creating a Jewish state on part of the
land. The Irgun leadership, as well as the "Supervisory
Committee" held similar beliefs, as did some members of the Haganah
and the
Jewish Agency. This belief
strengthened the policy of
restraint and
led to the position that there was no room for defense institutions
in the future Jewish state. Tehomi was quoted as saying: "We stand
before great events: a Jewish state and a Jewish army. There is a
need for a single military force". This position intensified the
differences of opinion regarding the policy of restraint, both
within the Irgun and within the political camp aligned with the
organization. The leadership committee of the Irgun supported a
merger with the Haganah. On April 24, 1937 a referendum was held
among Irgun members regarding its continued independent existence.
David Raziel and Avraham (Yair) Stern came out publicly in support
for the continued existence of the Irgun:
- The Irgun has been placed... before a decision to make,
whether to submit to the authority of the government and the
Jewish Agency or to prepare for a
double sacrifice and endangerment. Some of our friends do
not have appropriate willingness for this difficult position, and
have submitted to the Jewish Agency and has left the battle... all
of the attempts... to unite with the leftist organization have
failed, because the Left entered into negotiations not on the basis
of unification of forces, but the submission of one such force to
the other...
The first split
In April 1937 the Irgun split after the referendum. Approximately
1,500-2,000 people, about half of the Irgun's membership, including
the senior command staff, regional committee members, along with
most of the Irgun's weapons, returned to the Haganah, which at that
time was under the Jewish Agency's leadership. In their opinion,
the removal of the Haganah from the Jewish Agency's leadership to
the national institutions necessitated their return. Furthermore,
they no longer saw significant ideological differences between the
movements. Those who remained in the Irgun were primarily young
activists, mostly laypeople, who sided with the independent
existence of the Irgun. In fact, most of those who remained were
originally Beitar people.
Moshe
Rosenberg estimated that approximately 1,800 members remained.
In theory, the Irgun remained an organization not aligned with a
political party, but in reality the supervisory committee was
disbanded and the Irgun's continued ideological path was outlined
according to Ze'ev Jabotinsky's school of thought and his
decisions, until the movement eventually became Revisionist
Zionism's military arm. One of the major changes in policy by
Jabotinsky was the end of the policy of
restraint.
On April 27, 1937 the Irgun founded a new headquarters, staffed by
Moshe Rosenberg at the head,
Avraham
Stern as secretary,
David Raziel as
head of the Jerusalem branch,
Hanoch
Kalai as commander of Haifa and
Aharon Haichman as commander of Tel Aviv. On
the 20th of
Tammuz, (June 29)
the day of
Theodor Herzl's death, a
ceremony was held in honor of the reorganization of the underground
movement. For security purposes this ceremony was held at a
construction site in Tel Aviv.
Ze'ev Jabotinsky placed Col.
Robert
Bitker at the head of the Irgun.
Bitker had previously
served as Beitar commissioner in China
and had
military experience. A few months later, probably due to
total incompatibility with the position, Jabotinsky replaced Bitker
with Moshe Rosenberg. When the
Peel
Commission report was published a few months later, the
Revisionist camp decided not to accept the commission's
recommendations. Moreover, the organizations of Beitar,
Hatzohar and the Irgun began to increase their
efforts to bring Jews to the land of Israel, illegally. This
Aliyah was known as the עליית אף על פי "Af Al
Pi (Nevertheless) Aliyah". As opposed to this position, the Jewish
Agency began acting on behalf of the Zionist interest on the
political front, and continued the policy of restraint. From this
point onwards the differences between the Haganah and the Irgun
were much more obvious.
Illegal Aliyah
According to Jabotinsky's "Evacuation Plan", which called for
millions of
European Jews to be
brought to Palestine at once, the Irgun helped the
illegal immigration of European Jews to the land
of Israel. This was named by Jabotinsky the "National Sport". The
most significant part of this immigration prior to
World War II was carried out by the
Revisionist camp, largely because the
Yishuv institutions and the Jewish Agency
shied away from such an expensive project, as well as the belief
that Britain would in the future allow widespread Jewish
immigration.
The Irgun
joined forces with Hatzohar and Beitar in September 1937, when it assisted with the
Aliyah of a convoy of 54 Beitar members at Tantura Beach (near
Haifa
). The Irgun was responsible for discreetly
bringing the
Olim, or Jewish immigrants, to the
beaches, and dispersing them among the various Jewish settlements.
The Irgun also began participating in the organizing of the
immigration enterprise and undertook the process of accompanying
the ships. This began with the ship
Draga which arrived at
the coast of the land of Israel in September 1938. In August of the
same year, an agreement was made between Ari Jabotinsky (the son of
Ze'ev Jabotinsky), the Beitar representative and
Hillel Kook, the Irgun representative, to
coordinate the immigration (also known as
Haapala). This agreement was also made in the "Paris
Convention" in February 1939, at which also present were Ze'ev
Jabotinsky and David Raziel. Afterwards, the "Aliyah Center" was
founded, made up of representatives of Hatzohar, Beitar, and the
Irgun, thereby making the Irgun a full participant in the
organization and execution process.
The difficult conditions on the ships demanded a high level of
discipline. The people on board the ships were often split into
units, led by commanders. In addition to having a daily roll call
and the distribution of food and water (usually very little of
either), organized talks were held to provide information regarding
the actual arrival in Palestine. One of the largest ships was the
Sakaria, with 2,300 Olim, who at the time made up 0.5% of
the Jewish population in Palestine. The first vessel arrived on
April 13, 1937, and the last on February 13, 1940. All told, about
18,000 Jews reached Palestine with the help of the Revisionist
organizations and private initiatives of other Revisionists. Most
were not caught by the British.
End of restraint
Irgun members continued to defend settlements, but at the same time
began counter-attacks, thus ending the policy of restraint. These
attacks were intended to instill fear in the Arab side, in order to
cause the Arabs to wish for peace and quiet. In March 1938,
David Raziel wrote in the underground
newspaper "By the Sword" a constitutive article for the Irgun
overall, in which he coined the term
"Active
Defense":
- The actions of the Haganah alone will never be a true
victory. If the goal of the war is to break the will of
the enemy - and this cannot be attained without destroying his
spirit - clearly we cannot be satisfied with solely defensive
operations... Such a method of defense, that allows the
enemy to attack at will, to reorganize and attack again... and does
not intend to remove the enemy's ability to attack a second time -
is called passive defense, and ends in downfall and destruction...
whoever does not wish to be beaten has no choice but to
attack. The fighting side, that does not intend to oppress
but to save its liberty and honor, he too has only one way
available - the way of attack. Defensiveness by way of
offensiveness, in order to deprive the enemy the option of
attacking, is called active defense.
The first operations began around April 1936, and by the end of
World War II, more than 250 Arabs had been killed. The trend of
activities was an attempt to respond "
an eye for an eye" in the form of violent
operations against Arab violence, and often to match the form of
retaliation or its location to correspond to the attack that
provoked it. A number of examples:
- After
an Arab shooting at Carmel school in Tel Aviv, which resulted in
the death of a Jewish child, Irgun members attacked an Arab
neighborhood near Kerem
Hatemanim
in Tel Aviv,
killing one Arab man and injuring another.
- On
August 17, the Irgun responded to shootings by Arabs from the
Jaffa
-Jerusalem
train towards Jews that were waiting by the train
block on Herzl Street in Tel Aviv. The same day, when a
Jewish child was injured by the shooting, Irgun members attacked a
train on the same route, killing one Arab and injuring five.
During 1936, Irgun members carried out approximately ten
retaliatory operations.
Throughout 1937 the Irgun continued this line of operation.
- On
March 6, a Jew at Sabbath prayers at the Western Wall
was shot by a local Arab. A few hours later,
the Irgun shot at an Arab in the Jerusalem neighborhood of
Rechavia.
- On June 29, a band of Arabs attacked an Egged bus on the Jerusalem - Tel Aviv
road, killing one Jew. The following day, two Jews were also killed
near Karkur
. A few hours later, the Irgun carried out a
number of operations.
- An
Arab bus making its way from Lifta
was
attacked in Jerusalem.
- In two other locations in Jerusalem, Arabs were shot as
well.
- In Tel Aviv, a hand grenade was thrown at an Arab coffee shop
on Carmel St., injuring many of the patrons.
- Irgun members also injured an Arab on Reines St. in Tel
Aviv.
- On
September 5, the Irgun responded to the murder of a rabbi on his
way home from prayer in the Old City of Jerusalem
by throwing explosives at an Arab bus that had left
Lifta, injuring two female passengers and a British police
officer.
A more complete list can be found
here.
At that time, however, these acts were not yet a part of a
formulated policy of the Irgun. Not all of the aforementioned
operations received a commander's approval, and Jabotinsky was not
in favor of such actions at the time. Jabotinsky still hoped to
establish a Jewish force out in the open that would not have to
operate underground. However, the failure, in its eyes, of the
Peel Commission and the renewal of
violence on the part of the Arabs caused the Irgun to rethink its
official policy.
Increase in operations
14 November, 1937 was a watershed in Irgun activity. From that
date, the Irgun increased its reprisals.
Following an increase
in the number of attacks aimed at Jews, including the killing of
five kibbutz members near Kiryat Anavim
(today kibbutz Ma'ale HaHamisha
), the Irgun undertook a series of attacks in
various places in Jerusalem, killing five Arabs.
Operations were also undertaken in Haifa
(shooting at
the Arab-populated Wadi
Nisnas
neighborhood) and in Herzliya
. The date is known as the day the policy of
restraint (
Havlagah) ended, or as "Black
Sunday". This is when the organization fully changed its policy,
with the approval of Jabotinsky and Headquarters to the policy of
"active defense" in respect of Irgun actions.
The British responded with the arrest of Beitar and Hatzohar
members as suspected members of the Irgun.
Military courts were allowed to act under
"Time of Emergency Regulations" and even sentence people to death.
In this manner
Yehezkel Altman, a
guard in a Beitar battalion in the
Nahalat Yizchak neighborhood of Tel Aviv,
shot at an Arab bus, without his commanders' knowledge. Altman was
acting in response to a shooting at Jewish vehicles on the Tel
Aviv-Jerusalem road the day before. He turned himself in later and
was sentenced to death, a sentence which was later commuted to a
life sentence.
Despite the arrests, Irgun members continued fighting. Jabotinsky
lent his moral support to these activities. In a letter to Moshe
Rosenberg on 18 March 1938 he wrote:
- Tell them: from afar I collect and save, as precious
treasures, news items about your lives. I know of the
obstacles that have not impeded your spirit; and I know of your
actions as well. I am overjoyed that I have been blessed
with such students.
Although the Irgun continued activities such as these, following
Rosenberg's orders, they were greatly curtailed. Furthermore, in
fear of the British threat of the death sentence for anyone found
carrying a weapon, all operations were suspended for eight months.
However, opposition to this policy gradually increased.
In April,
1938, responding to the killing of six Jews, in which a woman was
raped and dismembered, Beitar members from the Rosh Pina
Brigade went on a reprisal mission, without the
consent of their commander, as described by historian Avi Shlaim:
- On 21 April 1938, after several weeks of planning, he and
two of his colleagues from the Irgun (Etzel) ambushed an Arab bus
at a bend on a mountain road near Safad. They had a
hand-grenade, a gun and a pistol. Their plan was to
destroy the engine so that the bus would fall off the side of the
road and all the passengers would be killed. When the bus
approached, they fired at it (not in the air, as Mailer has it) but
the grenade lobbed by Ben Yosef did not detonate. The bus
with its screaming and terrified passengers drove on.
Although the incident ended without casualties, the three were
caught, and one of them -
Shlomo
Ben-Yosef was sentenced to death. Demonstrations around the
country, as well as pressure from institutions and people such as
Dr. Chaim Weizmann and the
Chief Rabbi of
Mandatory Palestine,
Yitzhak HaLevi Herzog did not reduce
his sentence. In Shlomo Ben-Yosef's writings in Hebrew were later
found:
- I am going to die and I am not sorry at all.
Why? Because I am going to die for our country.
Shlomo Ben-Yosef.
On 29 June 1938 he was executed, and was the first of the
Olei Hagardom. The Irgun revered him after his
death and many regarded him as an example.
In light of this, and due to the anger of the Irgun leadership over
the decision to adopt a policy of restraint until that point,
Jabotinsky relieved Rosenberg of his post and replaced him with
David Raziel, who proved to be the most prominent Irgun commander
until
Menachem Begin. Jabotinsky
simultaneously instructed the Irgun to end its policy of restraint,
leading to armed offensive operations until the end of the Arab
Revolt in 1939. In this time, the Irgun mounted about 40 operations
against Arabs and Arab villages, for instance:
- After
a Jewish father and son were killed in the Old City of
Jerusalem
, on June 6, 1938, Irgun members threw explosives
from the roof of a nearby house, killing two Arabs and injuring
four.
- The Irgun planted land mines in a
number of Arab markets, primarily in places
identified by the Irgun as activity centers of armed Arab
gangs.
- Explosives detonated in the Arab souk in
Jerusalem on July 15, killed ten local Arabs.
- In similar circumstances, 70 Arabs were killed by a land mine planted in the Arab souk in Haifa.
This
action led the British Parliament
to discuss the disturbances in Palestine. On
23 February 1939 the
Secretary of State for the
Colonies,
Malcolm MacDonald
revealed the British intention to cancel the mandate and establish
a state that would preserve Arab rights. This caused a wave of
riots and attacks by Arabs against Jews. The Irgun responded four
days later with a series of attacks on Arab buses and other sites.
The British used military force against the Arab rioters and in the
latter stages of the revolt by the Arab community in Palestine, it
deteriorated into a series of internal gang wars.
During the same period
In reality, the armed operations against Arabs were the actions of
small groups, or even individual Irgun members. Most of the Irgun
were involved during this time with protection and defense of
settlements. By the late thirties, the Irgun comprised mainly
Beitar youth (from its branches or from its work brigades), Hazohar
members and the National Workers Union, youth belonging to the
Maccabi youth group, members of
the religious youth group "Alliance of the Hasmoneans" and students
from the national unions
Yavneh,
Yodfat and
Elal.
In certain places, including settlements in
Samaria
(now known as the northern West Bank
), the Sharon
and
southern Judea
, these were
the primary defensive forces. In some areas Irgun
forces cooperated with Haganah members, such as in the setting up
of Tel Tzur (now known as Even Yehuda
), a tower and
stockade Beitar settlement.
At the same time, the Irgun also established itself in Europe. The
Irgun built underground cells that participated in organizing
Aliyah convoys. The cells were made up almost entirely of Beitar
members, and their primary activity was military training in
preparation for emigration to Palestine. Ties formed with the
Polish authorities brought about courses in which Irgun commanders
were trained by Polish officers in advanced military issues such as
guerrilla warfare,
tactics and laying land mines.
Avraham Stern was notable among the cell
organizers in Europe. In 1937 the Polish authorities began to
deliver large amounts of weapons to the underground. The transfer
of handguns, rifles, explosives and ammunition stopped with the
outbreak of World War II.
Another field in which the Irgun operated
was the training of pilots, so they could serve in the Air Force in the future war for independence, in
the flight school in Lod
.
Towards the end of 1938 there was progress towards aligning the
ideologies of the Irgun and the Haganah. Many rid themselves of the
illusion that the land would be divided and a Jewish state would
soon exist. The Haganah founded פו"מ, a special operations unit,
(pronounced
poom), which carried out armed operations in
response to, and in order to prevent Arab violence. These
operations continued into 1939. Furthermore, the opposition within
the
Yishuv to illegal immigration
significantly decreased, and the Haganah began to bring Jews to
Palestine using rented ships, as the Irgun had in the past.
First operations against the British
The publishing of the
MacDonald
White Paper in May 1939 brought with it new edicts that were
intended to lead to a more equitable settlement between Jews and
Arabs. However, it was considered by some Jews to have an adverse
effect on the continued development of the Jewish community in
Palestine. Chief among these was the prohibition on selling land to
Jews, and the smaller quotas for Jewish immigration. The entire
Yishuv was furious at the contents of the White Paper. There were
demonstrations against the "Treacherous Paper", as it was
considered that it would preclude the establishment of a Jewish
homeland in Palestine.
The Irgun began sabotaging strategic infrastructure such as
electricity facilities, radio and telephone lines. It also started
publicizing its activity and its goals. This was done in street
announcements, newspapers, as well as the underground radio station
Kol Zion HaLochemet. The
British responded with numerous arrests of Beitar and
Hatzohar members, some of whom were mistreated to
obtain information about the Irgun. The Irgun warned that such
activity by the authorities would lead to a violent response. On
August 26, 1939 the Irgun published a
death sentence on
Ralph Krans, a British police officer who, as
head of the Jewish Department in the
Palestine Police, had
tortured a number of youths who were underground
members. Krans and another British officer in the secret police
were blown up by the Irgun when a hidden mine exploded.
The British increased their efforts against the Irgun. As a result
David Raziel, commander of the Irgun, was arrested on May 19. On
August 31 the British police arrested members meeting in the Irgun
headquarters. On the next day, September 1, 1939, World War II
broke out.
During World War II
Following the outbreak of war, Ze'ev Jabotinsky and the
New Zionist Organization voiced
their support for Britain and France. In mid-September 1939 Raziel
was moved from his place of detention in
Tzrifin. This, among other events, encouraged the
Irgun to announce a cessation of its activities against the British
so as not to hinder Britain's effort to fight "the Hebrew's
greatest enemy in the world - German
Nazism".
This announcement ended with the hope that after the war a Hebrew
state would be founded "within the historical borders of the
liberated homeland". After this announcement Irgun, Beitar and
Hatzohar members, including Raziel and the Irgun leadership, were
gradually released from detention. The Irgun did not rule out
joining the British army and the
Jewish
Brigade. Irgun members did enlist in various British units.
Irgun
members also assisted British forces with intelligence in Romania
, Bulgaria
, Morocco
and Tunisia
. An Irgun unit also operated in Syria
and Lebanon
. David Raziel later died during one of these
operations.
During the
Holocaust, Beitar members
revolted numerous times against the Nazis in
occupied Europe. The largest of these
revolts was the
Warsaw Ghetto
Uprising where an armed underground organization fought,
comprising Beitar, Hatzohar and Polish Irgun members, under the
political leadership of
David
Wdowiński, and known as
Żydowski Związek
Wojskowy (Jewish Military Union). There were instances of
Beitar members enlisted in the British military smuggling British
weapons to the Irgun.
From 1939
onwards, an Irgun delegation in the United States
worked for the creation of a Jewish army made up of
Jewish refugees and Jews from Palestine, to fight alongside the
Allied Forces. In July
1943 the "Emergency Committee to Save the Jewish People in Europe"
was formed, and worked until the end of the war to rescue the
Jews of Europe from the Nazis and to
garner public support for a Jewish state. However, it was not until
January 1944 that
US President Franklin Roosevelt established the
War Refugee Board, which achieved
some success in saving European Jews .
The second split

Avraham (Yair) Stern
Throughout this entire period the British continued enforcing the
MacDonald White Paper's
provisions, which included a ban on the sale of land, restrictions
on Jewish immigration and increased vigilance against illegal
immigration. Part of the reason why the British banned land sales
(to anyone) was the confused state of the post Ottoman land
registry; it was difficult to determine who actually owned the land
that was for sale.
Within the ranks of the Irgun this created much disappointment and
unrest, at the center of which was disagreement with the leadership
of the
New Zionist
Organization, David Raziel and the Irgun Headquarters. On June
18, 1939, Avraham (Yair) Stern and others of the leadership were
released from prison and a rift opened between them the Irgun and
Hatzohar leadership. The controversy centred on the issues of the
underground movement submitting to public political leadership and
fighting the British. On his release from prison Raziel resigned
from Headquarters. To his chagrin, independent operations of senior
members of the Irgun were carried out and some commanders even
doubted Raziel's loyalty.
In his place, Stern was elected to the leadership. Beitar and
Hatzohar members resented this appointment because it was seen as
undermining Jabotinsky's authority. In the past, Stern had founded
secret Irgun cells in Poland without Jabotinsky's knowledge, in
opposition to his wishes. Furthermore, Stern was in favor of
removing the Irgun from the authority of the New Zionist
Organization, whose leadership urged Raziel to return to the
command of the Irgun. He finally consented. Jabotinsky wrote to
Raziel and to Stern, and these letters were distributed to the
branches of the Irgun:
-
"...I call upon you: Let nothing disturb our
unity.
Listen to the commissioner (Raziel), whom I trust, and
promise me that you and Beitar, the greatest
of my life's achievements, will stand strong and united and allow
me to continue with the hope for victory in the war to realize our
old Maccabean dream..."
Stern was sent a telegram with an order to obey Raziel, who was
reappointed. However, these events did not prevent the splitting of
the organization. Suspicion and distrust were rampant among the
members. Out of the Irgun a new organization was created on July
17, 1940, which was first named "The National Military Organization
in Israel" (as opposed to the "National Military Organization in
the Land of Israel") and later on changed its name
to
Lehi, an acronym for
Lohamei
Herut Israel, "Fighters for the Freedom of Israel", (לח"י
- לוחמי חירות ישראל).
Jabotinsky died in New York
on August 4 1940, yet this did not prevent the Lehi
split.
The primary difference between the Irgun and the newly formed
organization was its intention to fight the British in Palestine,
regardless of their war against Germany. Later, additional
operational and ideological differences developed that contradicted
some of the Irgun's guiding principles. For example, the Lehi
supported a
population exchange
with local Arabs. The Irgun, on the other hand, acted according the
Revisionist school of thought that said "There he shall quench his
thirst with plenty and happiness, the son of Arab, son of Nazareth
(i.e. Christian) and my son."
Moreover, the Irgun's fight against the British was only intended
to expel them from the area, and the option of future diplomatic
ties with Britain was not discounted. The Lehi, however, declared
total war against
imperialism and the
British Empire. Unlike Irgun
fighters, Lehi fighters travelled with their weapons on them at all
times. One more striking difference was the fact that the Irgun
concentrated its operations against British centres of government
and its facilities in Palestine, and sometimes warned the British
about impending explosions. This contrasted with the Lehi's
struggle that concentrated more on attacks on people and the
assassination of political leaders,
military and police.
Towards a change of policy
| The Irgun's
Anthem |
| Tagar -Through all obstacles and enemiesWhether you go up or
downIn the flames of revoltCarry a flame to kindle - never mind!For
silence is filthWorthless is blood and soulFor the sake of the
hidden gloryTo die or to conquer the hill -Yodefet, Masada,
Beitar. |
|
The split damaged the Irgun both organizationally and from a morale
point of view. As their spiritual leader, Jabotinsky's death also
added to this feeling. Together, these factor brought about a mass
abandonment by members. The British took advantage of this weakness
to gather intelligence and arrest Irgun activists. The new Irgun
leadership, which included Meridor, Yerachmiel Ha'Levi, Moshe Segal
and others used the forced hiatus in activity to rebuild the
injured organization. This period was also marked by more
cooperation between the Irgun and the Jewish Agency, however
Ben Gurion's uncompromising demand
that Irgun accept the Agency's command foiled any further
cooperation.
In both the Irgun and the Haganah more voices were being heard
opposing any cooperation with the British.
Nevertheless, an
Irgun operation carried out in the service of Britain was aimed at
sabotaging pro-Nazi forces in Iraq
, including
the assassination of Haj Amin
al-Husayni. Among others, Raziel and
Yaakov Meridor participated.
On April 20, 1941,
during a Luftwaffe air raid on Habbaniya Airport near Baghdad
, David Raziel, commander of the Irgun, was killed
during the operation.
In late 1943 a joint Haganah - Irgun initiative was developed, to
form a single fighting body, unaligned with any political party, by
the name of עם לוחם (
Fighting Nation).
The new body's first
plan was to kidnap the British High Commissioner of Palestine,
Sir Harold MacMichael and deport
him to Cyprus
.
However, the Haganah leaked the planned operation and it was
thwarted before it got off the ground. Nevertheless, at this stage
the Irgun ceased its cooperation with the British. As
Eliyahu Lankin tells in his book:
- Immediately following the failure of Fighting Nation
practical discussions began in the Irgun Headquarters regarding
a declaration of war
The "Revolt"
In 1943
the Polish II Corps, commanded by
Władysław Anders, arrived
in Palestine from Iraq
. The
British insisted that no Jewish units of the army be created.
Eventually, many of the soldiers of Jewish origin that arrived with
the army were released and allowed to stay in Palestine. One of
them was
Menachem Begin, whose
arrival in Palestine created new-found expectations within the
Irgun and Beitar.
Begin had served as head of the Beitar
movement in Poland
, and was a
respected leader. Yaakov
Meridor, then the commander of the Irgun, raised the idea of
appointing Begin to the post. In late 1943, when Begin accepted the
position, a new leadership was formed. Meridor became Begin's
deputy, and other members of the board were Aryeh Ben Eliezer,
Eliyahu Lankin, and Shlomo Lev Ami.
On February 1, 1944 the Irgun put up posters all around the
country, proclaiming a revolt against the British mandatory
government. The posters began by saying that all of the
Zionist movements stood by the
Allied Forces and over 25,000 Jews
had enlisted in the British military. The hope to establish a
Jewish army had died. Throughout the war the Middle East Arabs had
favoured Germany's side. European Jewry was trapped and was being
destroyed, yet Britain, for its part, did not allow any rescue
missions. This part of the document ends with the following words:
- The White Paper is
still in effect. It is enforced, despite the betrayal of
the Arabs and the loyalty of the Jews; despite the mass enlisting
to the British Army; despite the ceasefire
and the quiet in The Land of Israel; despite the massacre of masses
of the Jewish people in Europe...
- The facts are simple and horrible as one. Over the
last four years of the war we have lost
millions of the best of our people; millions more are in danger of
eradication. And The Land of Israel is closed off and
quarantined because the British rule it, realizing the White Paper,
and strives for the destruction of our people's last
hope.
The Irgun then declared that, for its part, the ceasefire was over
and they were now at war with the British. It demanded the transfer
of rule to a Jewish government, to implement ten policies. Among
these were the mass evacuation of Jews from Europe, the signing of
treaties with any state that recognized the Jewish state's
sovereignty, including Britain, granting social justice to the
state's residents, and full equality to the Arab population. The
proclamation ended with:
- The God of Israel, God of Hosts, will be at our side.
There is no retreat. Liberty or death. ...the
fighting youth will not recoil in the face of sacrifices and
suffering, blood and torment. They will not surrender, so
long as our days of old are not renewed, so long as our nation is
not ensured a homeland, liberty, honor, bread, justice and
law.
The Irgun began this campaign rather weakly — the organization was
only about 1,000 strong, out of which only some 200 were fighters.
Weapons were also sparse. The Irgun underwent a reorganization and
was redivided in different brigades: Combat Corps - the Irgun's
primary fighting force; The Sea - the Irgun's special operations
unit; Delek (דלק - Gasoline) - intelligence; HATAM ( חת"מ -
Revolutionary Publicity Corps); and HAT (ח"ת - Planning Division).
The Irgun became more secretive and its commanders assumed new
identities and homes. Begin, for example, assumed a Rabbi's
identity ("Yisrael Sasover"), and was sometimes known as "Ben
Ze'ev" or "Dr. Kenigshopper".
Struggle against the British
The Irgun began a militant operation against the symbols of
government, in an attempt to harm the regime's operation as well as
its reputation. The Irgun made a rule for itself - no individual
terror and an attempt to avoid casualties; it is a matter of debate
as to whether Irgun met these rules. The first attack was on
February 12, 1944 at the government immigration offices, a symbol
of the immigration laws. The attacks went smoothly and ended with
no casualties—as they took place on a Saturday night, when the
buildings were empty—in the three largest cities: Jerusalem, Tel
Aviv, and Haifa. On February 27 the income tax offices were bombed.
Parts of the same cities were blown up, also on a Saturday night;
prior warnings were put up near the buildings.
On March 23 the
national headquarters building of the British police in the
Russian
Compound
in
Jerusalem was attacked, and part of it was blown up. These
attacks in the first few months were sharply condemned by the
organized leadership of the Yishuv and by the Jewish Agency, who
saw them as dangerous provocations.
At the same time the
Lehi also renewed
its attacks against the British.
The Irgun continued to attack police
stations and headquarters, and Tegart
Fort, a fortified police station (today the location of
Latrun
).
One
relatively complex operation was overtaking of the governmental
radio station in Ramallah
, on May 17, 1944.
One symbolic act by the Irgun happened before
Yom Kippur of 1944.
They plastered
notices around town, warning that no British officers should come
to the Western
Wall
on Yom Kippur, and for the first time since the
mandate began no British police officers were there to prevent the
Jews from the traditional Shofar blowing at
the end of the fast. After the fast that year the Irgun
attacked four police stations in Arab settlements. In order to
obtain weapons, the Irgun carried out "confiscation" operations -
they took over British armouries and smuggled stolen weapons to
their own hiding places. During this phase of activity the Irgun
also cut all of its official ties with the
New Zionist Organization, so as not
to tie their fate in the underground organization.
Begin wrote in his
memoirs,
The
Revolt:
- History and experience taught us that if we are able to
destroy the prestige of the British in Palestine, the regime will
break. Since we found the enslaving government's weak
point, we did not let go of it.
Underground exiles
In October 1944 the British began expelling hundreds of arrested
Irgun and Lehi members to detention camps in
Africa.
251 detainees from Latrun
were flown
on thirteen planes, on October 19 to a camp in Asmara
, Eritrea
. Eleven additional transports were made.
Throughout the period of their detention, the detainees often
initiated rebellions and hunger strikes. Many escape attempts were
made until July 1948 when the exiles were returned to Israel. While
there were numerous successful escapes from the camp itself, only
nine men actually made it back all the way. One noted success was
that of
Yaakov Meridor, who escaped
nine times before finally reaching Europe in April 1948. These
tribulations were the subject of his book
Long is the Path to
Freedom: Chronicles of one of the Exiles.
Hunting Season
On
November 6, 1944, Lord
Moyne, British Deputy Resident Minister of State in Cairo
was
assassinated by Lehi members Eliyahu
Hakim and Eliyahu
Bet-Zuri. This act raised concerns within the Yishuv
from the British regime's reaction to the underground's violent
acts against them. Therefore the Jewish Agency decided on starting
a
Hunting Season, known as the
saison, (from the
French "la saison de chasse").
During the Hunting Season people suspected of belonging to or
supporting the Irgun or the Lehi were removed from schools, work
places and the
Klalit HMO. Most of the people who
partook in these activities were members of the Haganah and the
Palmach. They carried out surveillance,
kidnapping, investigation of Irgun and Lehi members and either
turned them over to the British, or provided details regarding
their whereabouts. Among those turned over were members of the
Irgun headquarters - Yaakov Meridor, Shlomo Lev Ami, and Eliyahu
Lankin.
The Hunting Season managed to paralyze the Irgun's activity for a
few months, but not destroy the organization. The Irgun's
recuperation was noticeable when it began to renew its cooperation
with the Lehi in May 1945, when it sabotaged oil pipelines,
telephone lines and railroad bridges. All in all, over 1,000
members of the Irgun and Lehi were arrested and interred in British
camps during the
Saison. Eventually the Hunting Season
died out, and there was even talk of cooperation with the Haganah
leading to the formation of the
Jewish Resistance Movement.
The Jewish Resistance Movement
Towards the end of July 1945 the
Labour party in Britain was elected to
power. The Yishuv leadership had high hopes that this would change
the anti-Zionist policy that the British maintained at the time.
However,
these hopes were quickly dashed when the government limited Jewish
immigration, with the intention that the population of Palestine
west of the Jordan
River
would not be more than one third of the
total. This, along with the stepping up of arrests and their
pursuit of underground members and illegal immigration organizers
led to the formation of the
Jewish Resistance Movement.
This body consolidated the armed resistance to the British of the
Irgun, Lehi, and the Haganah. For ten months the Irgun and the Lehi
cooperated and they carried out nineteen attacks and defense
operations. The Haganah and the Palmach carried out ten such
operations. Furthermore, the Haganah assisted in landing 13,000
illegal immigrants.
Tension between the underground movements and the British increased
with the increase in operations. On April 23, 1945 an operation
undertaken by the Irgun in
Tegart Fort
went badly and gunfights broke out. One Irgun member was killed and
his body was later hanged on the fort's fence. Another fighter,
Yizchak Bilu, was killed as well in a
diversionary ploy - an explosive device fell out of his hand, and
he leapt onto it in order to save his comrades, who were also
carrying explosives. A third fighter,
Dov
Gruner, was caught. He stood trial and was sentenced to be
death by hanging, refusing to sign a pardon request.
In 1946, British relations with the Yishuv worsened, building up to
Operation Agatha of June 29. The
authorities ignored the
Anglo-American Committee of
Inquiry's recommendation to allow 100,000 Jews into Palestine
at once.
As a result of the discovery of documents
tying the Jewish Agency to the Jewish Resistance Movement, the
Irgun was asked to speed up the plans for the King David
Hotel bombing
of July 22. The hotel was where the
documents were located, the base for the British Secretariat, the
military command and a branch of the
Criminal Investigation
Division of the police. The Irgun later said that a warning
sent out ahead of time was never taken seriously.
Further struggle against the British
The King David Hotel bombing and the arrest of Jewish Agency and
other Yishuv leaders as part of
Operation Agatha caused the Haganah to
cease their armed activity against the British. Yishuv and Jewish
Agency leaders were released from prison at
Tegart Fort. From then until the end of the
British mandate, resistance activities were led by the Irgun and
Lehi. In early September 1946 the Irgun renewed its attacks against
civil structures, railroads, communication lines and bridges. One
operation was the attack on the train station in Jerusalem, in
which
Meir Feinstein was arrested and
later committed suicide awaiting execution. According to the Irgun
these sort of armed attacks were legitimate, since the trains
primarily served the British, for redeployment of their forces. For
a while the British stopped train traffic at night. The Irgun also
publicized leaflets, in three languages, not to use specific trains
in danger of being attacked. The Irgun also re-established many
representative offices internationally, and by 1948 operated in 23
states. In these countries the Irgun sometimes acted against the
local British representatives or led public relations campaigns
against Britain.
On October 31, 1946, in response to the
British barring entry of Jews from Palestine, the Irgun blew up the
British embassy in Rome
.
In December 1946 a sentence of 18 years and 18 beatings was handed
down to a young Irgun member. The Irgun made good on a threat they
made and after the detainee was beaten, Irgun members kidnapped
British officers and beat them in public. The operation, known as
the "
Night of the Beatings"
brought an end to British punitive beatings. The British, taking
these acts seriously, moved many British families in Palestine into
the confines of military bases, and some moved home.
On February 14 1947,
Ernest Bevin
announced that the Jews and Arabs would not be able to agree on any
British proposed solution for the land, and therefore the issue
must be brought to the
United Nations
(UN) for a final decision. The Yishuv thought of the idea to
transfer the issue to the UN as a British attempt to save time
until a UN inquiry commission would be established, and its ideas
discussed, all the while the Yishuv would weaken.
Foundation for Immigration B increased
the number of ships which, in fact, saved the lives of
European Jews.
The British still strictly enforced the
policy of limited Jewish immigration and illegal immigrants were
placed in detention camps in Cyprus
, which
increased the anger of the Jewish community towards the mandate
government.
The Irgun stepped up its activity and from February 19 until March
3 it attacked 18 British military camps, convoy routes, vehicles,
and other facilities. The most notable of these attacks was the use
of a car bomb to destroy the Goldschmidt House Officers Club in
Jerusalem, which was in a heavily guarded compound. Seventeen
officers were killed in the attack. As a result, a
curfew was imposed over much of the country, enforced
by approximately 20,000 British soldiers.
Some of the British press supported a British exit from Palestine.
During the martial conditions imposed by the British, the Lehi and
the Irgun carried out 68 armed attacks, many against military
targets, including
Schneller
Orphanage in Jerusalem, by breaking through the outer
fortifications. This attack, which succeeded in overcoming the many
British security measures, created a media uproar, and the curfew
was cancelled four days later.
The Acre Prison break
On April 16, 1947 Dov Gruner, Yehiel Drezner, Eliezer Kashani, and
Mordechai El'kachi were hanged, while singing
Hatikvah. On April 21
Meir Feinstein and Lehi member
Moshe Barazani blew themselves up, using an
improvised explosive
device (IED), hours before their scheduled hanging.
And on
May 4 one of the Irgun's largest operations took place - the raid
of the prison in the citadel in Acre
.
The operation was carried out by 23 men, commanded by
Dov Cohen - AKA "Shimshon", along with the help of
the Irgun and
Lehi prisoners inside the
prison. The raid allowed 41 underground members to escape, although
some were caught outside of the prison, and some were killed in the
escape. Along with the underground movement members, other
criminals - including Arabs - also escaped. Three of the attackers
- Meir Nakar, Avshalom Haviv, and Yaakov Weiss - were caught and
sentenced to death.
The Sergeants affair
After the
death sentences of the three were confirmed, the Irgun tried to
save them by kidnapping hostages — British
sergeants Clifford Martin and Mervyn Paice — in the streets of
Netanya
. British forces closed off and combed the
area in search of the two, but did not find them. On July 29, 1947,
in the afternoon, Meir Nakar, Avshalom Haviv, and Yaakov Weiss were
executed. Approximately thirteen hours later the hostages were
hanged in retaliation by the Irgun and their bodies, booby-trapped
with an explosive, afterwards strung up from trees in woodlands
south of Netanya. This action caused an outcry in Britain and was
condemned both there and by leaders of the Yishuv.
This episode has been given as a major influence on the British
decision to terminate the Mandate and leave Palestine. The
United Nations
Special Committee on Palestine was also influenced by this and
other actions. At the same time another incident was developing -
the events of the ship
Exodus
1947. The 4,500 Holocaust survivors on board were not
allowed to enter Palestine. UNSCOP also covered the events. Some of
its members were even present at Haifa port when the putative
immigrants were forcefully removed from their ship (later found to
have been rigged with an IED by some of its passengers) onto the
deportation ships, and later commented that this strong image
helped them press for an immediate solution for Jewish immigration
and the question of Palestine.
Two weeks later, the House of Commons convened for a special debate
on events in Palestine, and concluded that the British soldiers
must be withdrawn as soon as possible.
The 1948 Palestine War
UNSCOP's
conclusion was a unanimous decision to end the British mandate and
majority opinion to divide the area west of the Jordan River
between a Jewish state and an Arab state.
During the UN's deliberations regarding the committee's
recommendations the Irgun avoided initiating any attacks, so as not
to influence the UN negatively on the idea of a Jewish state. On
November 29 the
UN General
Assembly voted in favor of ending the mandate and
establishing two states on the land.
That very same day the Irgun and the Lehi renewed their attacks on
British targets. Then next day the local Arabs began attacking the
Jewish community, thus beginning the first stage of the
Israeli War of Independence.
The first
attacks on Jews were in Jewish neighborhoods of Jerusalem
, in and around Jaffa
, Bat Yam
, Holon
, and
Ha'Tikvah neighborhood in Tel Aviv
.
In the autumn of 1947 the Irgun membership was approximately 4,000
people.
The goal of the organization at that point
was the conquest of the land between the Jordan River and the
Mediterranean Sea
for the sake of the future Jewish state and
preventing the Arab Legion from
destroying the Jewish community. The Irgun became
almost an overt organization, establishing military bases in
Ramat
Gan
and Petah
Tikva
. Additionally it recruited openly, thus
significantly increasing in size. During the war the Irgun fought
alongside the Lehi and the Haganah in the front against the Arab
attacks. At first the Haganah maintained a defensive policy, as it
had until then, but after the
Convoy of
35 incident it completely abandoned its policy of restraint:
"Distinguishing between individuals is longer possible, for now -
it is a war, and the even the innocent shall not be
absolved."
The Irgun also began carrying out reprisal missions, as it had
under David Raziel's command. At the same time though, it published
announcements calling on the Arabs to lay down their weapons and
maintain a ceasefire:
- The National Military Organization has warned you, if the
murderous attacks on Jewish civilians shall continue, its soldiers
will penetrate your centers of activity and plague you.
You have not heeded the warning. You continued to harm
our brothers and murder them in wild cruelty. Therefore
soldiers of the National Military Organization will go on the
attack, as we have warned you.
- ...However even in these frenzied time, when Arab and
Jewish blood is spilled at the British enslaver, we hereby call
upon you... to stop the attacks and create peace between us.
We do not want a war with you. We are certain that
neither do you want a war with us...
However the mutual attacks continued.
The Irgun attacked
the Arab villages of Tira
near
Haifa
, Yehudiya
('Abassiya) in the center, and Shuafat
by Jerusalem. The Irgun also
attacked in the Wadi Rushmiya
neighborhood in Haifa and Abu Kabir in
Jaffa
. On December 29 Irgun units arrived by boat
to the Jaffa shore and a gunfight between them and Arab gangs
ensued. The
following day seven Arabs
were killed, and dozens injured, near the refineries in Haifa.
In
response, Arab workers attacked Jews in the area
, killing 41. This sparked a Haganah
response in
Balad al-Sheykh.
The Irgun's goal in the fighting was to move the battles from
Jewish populated areas to Arab populated areas.
On January 1, 1948
the Irgun attacked again in Jaffa, its men entering the city
dressed as British; later in the month it attacked in Beit Nabala
, a base for many Arab fighters. On 5 January
1948 the Irgun detonated a lorry bomb outside Jaffa's Ottoman built
Town Hall, killing 14 and injuring 19.
In Jerusalem, two
days later, Irgun members in a stolen police van rolled a barrel
bomb into a large group of civilians who were waiting for a bus by
the Jaffa
Gate
, killing around sixteen. In the pursuit that
followed three of the attackers were killed and two taken
prisoner.
In
February the Irgun attacked traffic near Yehudiya ('Abassiya),
Yazur, and Ramle
.
Irgun
fighters participated in fights against Arab militants in Ramle and
Qalqilyah
. On 29 February the Irgun blew up the Cairo
to Haifa train shortly after it left Rehovot
Railway Station
killing 29 British soldiers. The Irgun
announcement said the bombing was in retaliation for the bombing of
Ben Yehuda
Street
, Jerusalem, a week earlier. An identical
attack, on 31 March, killed forty people and injured 60 'when the
Haifa-Cairo express train was blown up by electrically-detonated
mines near the Jewish colony of Benyamina'.
In March the Irgun
attacked the village of Qaqun (near Tulkarem
), which had many Arab militants among its
residents. On 6 April 1948, the Irgun raided the
British Army camp at Pardes
Hanna
killing six British soldiers and their commanding
officer.
The
Deir Yassin
massacre
was carried out in a village west of Jerusalem that
had signed a non-belligerency pact with its Jewish neighbors and
the Haganah, and repeatedly had barred entry to foreign
irregulars. On 9 April approximately 120 Irgun and
Lehi members began an operation to capture the
village. During the operation Irgun members shot at fleeing
individuals and families. A Haganah report writes:
- The conquest of the village was carried out with great
cruelty. Whole families - women, old people, children -
were killed. ... Some of the prisoners moved to
places of detention, including women and children, were murdered
viciously by their captors.
The operation resulted in five Irgun members dead and 40 injured
and 100 to 120 dead villagers.
Some say that this incident was an event that accelerated the Arab
exodus from Palestine. Four days later, on April 13, the Arabs
launched a strike on a medical convoy traveling to
Hadassah Hospital. Around
77 doctors, nurses, and other Jewish civilians were
massacred.
The Irgun cooperated with the Haganah in the conquest of Haifa. At
the regional commander's request, on April 21 the Irgun took over
an Arab post above Hadar Ha'Carmel as well as the Arab neighborhood
of Wadi Nisnas, adjacent to the Lower City.
The Irgun
acted independently in the conquest of Jaffa
(part of the
proposed Arab State according to the UN Partition Plan). On April 25 Irgun
units, about 600 strong, left the Irgun base in Ramat Gan
towards Arab Jaffa. Difficult battles
ensued, and the Irgun faced resistance from the Arabs as well as
the British.
Under the command of Amichai "Gidi" Paglin, the Irgun's chief
operations officer, the Irgun captured the neighborhood of
Manshiya, which threatened the city of Tel Aviv
. Afterwards the force continued to the sea,
towards the area of the port, and using mortars, shelled the
southern neighborhoods. In his report concerning the fall of Jaffa
the local Arab military commander, Michel Issa, writes: 'Continuous
shelling with mortars of the city by Jews for four days, beginning
25 April, […] caused inhabitants of city, unaccustomed to such
bombardment, to panic and flee.' According to Morris the shelling
was done by the Irgun. Their objective was 'to prevent constant
military traffic in the city, to break the spirit of the enemy
troops [and] to cause chaos among the civilian population in order
to create a mass flight'. High Commissioner Cunningham wrote a few
days later 'It should be made clear that IZL attack with mortars
was indiscriminate and designed to create panic among the civilian
inhabitants'. These actions caused many Arab residents to flee the
city, and 30 Irgun members were killed in the flight. The British
demanded the evacuation of the newly conquered city, however the
Irgun had previously agreed with the Haganah that British pressure
would not lead to withdrawal from Jaffa and that custody of
captured areas would be turned over to the Haganah. The city
ultimately fell on May 13 after Haganah forces entered the city and
took control of the rest of the city, from the south - part of the
Hametz Operation which included the conquest of a number
of villages in the area. The battles in Jaffa were a great victory
for the Irgun. This operation was the largest in the history of the
organization, which took place in highly built up area that had
many militants in shooting positions. During the battles explosives
were used in order to break into homes and continue forging a way
though them. Furthermore, this was the first occasion in which the
Irgun had directly fought British forces, reinforced with armor and
heavy weaponry. The city began these battles with a population
estimated at 55,000, which shrank to some 4,100 Arab residents by
the end of major hostilities. Since the Irgun captured the
neighborhood of Manshiya on its own, causing the flight of many of
Jaffa's residents, the Irgun took credit for the conquest of
Jaffa.
Integration with the IDF and the Altalena Affair
On May
14, 1948 the
establishment of the State of
Israel
was proclaimed. The declaration of
independence was followed by the establishment of the
Israel Defense Forces (IDF), and the
process of absorbing all military organizations into the IDF
started. On June 1, an agreement had been signed Between
Menachem Begin and
Yisrael Galili for the absorption of the
Irgun into the IDF. One of the clauses stated that the Irgun had to
stop smuggling arms. Meanwhile in France, Irgun representatives
purchased a ship, renamed
Altalena
(a pseudonym of
Ze'ev Jabotinsky),
and weapons. The ship sailed on June 11 and arrived to the Israeli
shore on June 20 in violation of the four-week ceasefire agreement
in the ongoing war with the neighbouring arab states and the
United
Nations Security Council Resolution 50.
When the ship arrived, the Israeli government, headed by
Ben Gurion was adamant in its demand that the
Irgun surrender and hand over all of the weapons. Ben Gurion said:
We must decide whether to hand over power to Begin or to order
him to cease his activities. If he does not do so, we will
open fire! Otherwise, we must decide to disperse our own
army.
There
were two confrontations between the newly formed IDF and the Irgun:
when Altalena reached Kfar Vitkin
in the late afternoon of Sunday, June 20 many Irgun
militants, including Begin, waited on the shore. A clash
with the
Alexandroni Brigade,
commanded by Dan Even (Epstein), occurred. Fighting ensued and
there were a number of casualties on both sides. The clash ended in
a ceasefire and the transfer of the weapons on shore to the local
IDF commander, and with the Ship, now reinforced with (local) Irgun
members, including Begin, sailing to Tel Aviv, where the Irgun had
more supporters.Many Irgun members, who joined the IDF earlier that
month, left their bases and concentrated on the Tel Aviv beach. A
confrontation between them and the IDF units started. In response,
Ben-Gurion ordered
Yigael Yadin (acting
Chief of Staff) to concentrate large forces on the Tel Aviv beach
and to take the ship by force. Heavy guns were transferred to the
area and at four in the afternoon, Ben-Gurion ordered the shelling
of the
Altalena. One of the shells hit the ship, which
began to burn.Sixteen Irgun fighters were killed in the
confrontation with the army (all but three were veteran members and
not newcomers in the ship); six were killed in the Kfar Vitkin area
and ten on Tel Aviv beach. Three IDF soldiers were killed: two at
Kfar Vitkin and one in Tel Aviv.
After the shelling of the
Altalena, more than 200 Irgun
fighters were arrested. Most of them were freed several weeks
later. The Irgun militants were fully integrated with the IDF and
not kept in separate units.
The
initial agreement for the integration of the Irgun into the IDF did
not include Jerusalem
, which was under siege.
The Irgun operated an armed group known as the
Jerusalem
Battalion, numbering around 400 fighters. Following the
assassination of UN Envoy for Peace
Folke Bernadotte by the
LEHI in September 1948, this separate unit collapsed
and integrated into the IDF.
Criticism
Leaders within the mainstream
Jewish
Agency,
Haganah,
Histadrut, as well as British authorities,
routinely condemned Irgun operations as
terrorist and branded it an illegal organization
as a result of the group's attacks on
civilian targets.
However, privately at least the Haganah kept a dialogue with the
dissident groups.
In 1948,
The New York
Times published a letter signed by a number of prominent
Jewish figures including
Hannah
Arendt,
Albert Einstein,
Sidney Hook, and
Rabbi Jessurun
Cardozo, which described Irgun as a "a terrorist,
right-wing,
chauvinist
organization in Palestine". The letter went on to state that Irgun
and the Stern gang "inaugurated a reign of terror in the Palestine
Jewish community. Teachers were beaten up for speaking against
them, adults were shot for not letting their children join them. By
gangster methods, beatings, window-smashing, and widespread
robberies, the terrorists intimidated the population and exacted a
heavy tribute."
Soon after World War II, Winston Churchill said "we should never
have stopped immigration before the war", but that the Irgun were
"the vilest
gangsters" and that he would
"never forgive the Irgun terrorists."
A US Military Intelligence report, dated January 1948, described
Irgun recruiting tactics amongst
Displaced Persons (DP) in the camps across
Germany:
'Irgun ... seems to be concentrating on the DP police
force.
This is an old technique in Eastern Europe and in all
police states.
By controlling the police, a small, unscrupulous group
of determined people can impose its will on a peaceful and
inarticulate majority; it is done by threats, intimidation, by
violence and if need be bloodshed ... they have embarked upon a
course of violence within the camps.'
Clare Hollingworth, the Daily
Telegraph and Scotsman correspondent in Jerusalem during 1948 wrote
several outspoken reports after spending several weeks in West
Jerusalem:
'Irgun is in fact rapidly becoming the 'SS' of the new
state. There is also a strong 'Gestapo' - but no-one knows who is
in it.'
In 2006,
Simon McDonald, the British Ambassador in Tel Aviv at the time, and
John Jenkins, the Consul-General in Jerusalem at the time, wrote in
response to a pro-Irgun commemoration of the King David
Hotel bombing
:
"We do not think that it is right for an act of
terrorism, which led to the loss of many lives, to be
commemorated." They also called for the removal of plaques at the
site which blame the deaths on "ignored warning
calls."
The plaques read:
"For reasons known only to the British, the hotel was
not evacuated,” but McDonald and Jenkins asserted that no such
warning calls were made, adding that even if they had, "this does
not absolve those who planted the bomb from responsibility for the
deaths."
Ha'aretz columnist and Israeli historian,
Tom
Segev, wrote of the Irgun: "In the second half of 1940, a few
members of the Irgun Zvai Leumi (National Military Organization) --
the anti-British terrorist group sponsored by the Revisionists and
known by its acronym Etzel, and to the British simply as the Irgun
-- made contact with representatives of Fascist Italy, offering to
cooperate against the British."
Alan Dershowitz wrote in his book
The Case for Israel
that "[Removal of Arabs] certainly seems to have been the policy of
the Irgun".
References
- Jacob
Shavit, Jabotinsky and the Revisionist Movement
1925-948 pg 97 Routledge 1988 ISBN 978-0-7146-3325-1
- Howard
Sachar: ''A
History of Israel: From the Rise of Zionism to Our Time,
pps 265-266
- Ray C. Rist, The Democratic Imagination: Dialogues on the
Work of Irving Louis Horowitz (Transaction Publishers, 1994 ISBN
1560001747, 9781560001744) p.141 citing Wilson, 1949:13.
- W. Khalidi, 1971, 'From Haven to Conquest', 598; updated 1987
to From Haven to Conquest: Readings in Zionism and the
Palestine Problem Until 1948, Institute for Palestine
Studies, ISBN 978-0887281556
- No 33 of 5708-1948 - 23 Sep 1948
- Raziel was arrested by the British on May 19, 1939 and was
replaced by Hanoch
Kalai[1]. On August 31, 1939 Kalai was arrested and
Benyamin
Zeroni[2] took his place until Raziel's release and return
to the leadership on October 20.
- http://www.betar.org.il/music/songs/hayalim.htm ,
http://www.betar.org.il/music/songs/musicfiles/Khaialim_Almonim.mp3
- Yosef
Kister, The Etzel, (Hebrew) pp. 38
- "Tagar u'Magen (Jabotinsky and the Etzel)" , Jabtotinsky
Publishing, pp. 28
- "The Birth of an Underground Organization", Yehuda Lapidot, pp.
62
- Irgun Zeva'i Le'umi—“The National Military
Organization” (Etzel, I.Z.L.)
- See Chaim Lazar, Matsada shel Varsha (Tel Aviv: Machon
Jabotinsky, 1963); and, David Wdowiński (1963). And we are not
saved. New York: Philosophical Library. pp. 222. ISBN
0802224865. Note: Chariton and Lazar were never co-authors of
Wdowiński's memoir. Wdowiński is considered the "single
author."
- The Split Within The Irgun
- http://www.csuohio.edu/tagar/betar.htm
-
http://www.palmach.org.il/show_item.asp?levelId=38612&itemId=5199&itemType=0
- Reflections on the assassination of Sheikh Yassin |
From Occupied Palestine
- Menachem Begin Biography
- Menachem Begin - Biography
- The Revolt Is Proclaimed
- Chapter Eight: The Struggle for the Establishment
of the State of Israel
- http://www.daat.ac.il/daat/history/hayom/2a-2.htm
- The 'Hunting Season'
- Besiege / Yehuda Lapidut - THE HUNTING SEASON
- The Gallows
- Jabotinsky Institute Archives (k-4 1/11/5)
- Menachem Begin, The Revolt. 1951, pp. 221
- J. Bowyer Bell, Terror out of Zion (New York: St.
Martin’s Press, 1977). pp.181
- The Raid On The Jerusalem Officers Club
- Eye for an Eye for an Eye, Time Magazine. Aug. 11,
1947
- Netanel Lorech, Events of the War of Independence, Massada
Publishing, 1958. pp. 85
- Petition of Our Arab Neighbors: Announcement in
Arabic to the Arab Rioters
- ^ The Scotsman newspaper, 6th January 1948; Walid Khalidi
states that 25 civilians killed. 'Before their diaspora', 1984.
p.316, picture p.325; Benny Morris, 'The Birth of the Palestinian
refugee problem, 1947-1949', Cambridge University Press, 197. ISBN
0 521 33028 9. Attributes attack to 'LHI', doesn't number dead and
gives date as 4th January. p. 46
- Larry Collins/Dominique Lapierre, 'O Jerusalem'.History Book
Club/ Weidenfeld and Nicolson. London. 1972. Page 135: 'two
fifty-gallon oil drums packed tight with old nails, bits of scrap
iron, hinges, rusty metal filings. At their center was a core of
TNT...'
- Collins/Lapierre. Page 138: 17 killed. Dov Joseph, 'The
Faithful City - The siege of Jerusalem, 1948'. Simon and Schuster,
New York, 1960. Library of Congree Number: 60-10976. page 56: 14
killed and 40 wounded.The Scotsman, 8 January 1948: 16 killed, 41
injured.
- Collins/Lapierre name one of the survivors as Uri Cohen
- The
Scotsman March 1st, 1948.
- The
Scotsman, 1 April, 1948. Quotes Jewish sources attributing the
attack to the Stern
Gang.
- The
Scotsman, 7 April, 1948. 8 April: Reports Yaakov Meridor
commanded the operation. The attackers were disguised as 'British
police'. A quantity of guns stolen.
- B. Morris, 2004, 'The Birth of the Palestinian refugee problem
revisited', p. 237
- Jon Kimche, 'Seven Fallen Pillars - The Middle East,
1915-1950'. Secker and Warburg, London. 1950. page 217: 'Dir
Yassin(sic) was one of the few Arab villages whose inhabitants had
refused permission for foreign Arab volunteers to use it as a
base...'
- quoted by B. Morris, 2004, 'The Birth of the Palestinian
refugee problem revisited', p. 237
- B. Morris, 2004, 'The Birth of the Palestinian refugee problem
revisited', p. 238
- BBC News | PROFILES | Menachem Begin
- The Conquest Of Jaffa
- W. Khalidi, 1998, 'Selected Documents on the 1948 Palestine
War', J. Palestine Studies 27(3), p. 60-105
- Morris, 2004, 'The Birth ... Revisited', p. 213
- Stephen Green, 'Taking sides - America's secret relations with
a militant Israel 1948/1967'. Faber and Faber, London. 1984. page
49. Quoting weekly intelligence report 87 from the Office of the
Director of Intelligence (Germany), dated 10 January, 1948. Copy in
publications file, Office of the Assistant Chief of Staff, G-2,
Record Group 319, National Archives.
Further reading
- J. Bowyer Bell, Terror Out of Zion: Irgun
Zvai Leumi, Lehi, and the Palestine Underground, 1929-1949,
(Avon, 1977), ISBN 0-380-39396-4
- Menachem Begin, The
Revolt - Memoirs of the leader of the Irgun, Dell Books, (New
York, NY, 1978)
- Uri Avnery, Terrorism: the
infantile disease of the Hebrew revolution, self-published
booklet, 1945.
- Lossin, Yigal. Pillar of Fire: The Rebirth of Israel
trans. Zvi Ofer, Shikmona Publishing Ltd., 1983.
The Irgun in Fiction
External links
- Prof. Yehuda Lapidot, Irgun
website, history of Irgun
- History of Irgun by an American Jewish
Organization
- Encyclopedia Britannica Entry on Irgun
- Letter of prominent Jews to New York Times,
December 4, 1948, warning of dangers of Irgun
- British Security Service files on Jewish terrorist
activities, The National Archives
, released through Freedom of information
legislation in March 2006.
- The Iron Wall: Zionist Revisionism from Jabotinsky
to Shamir, by Lenni
Brenner
- 1952 Assassination attempt against German Chancellor
Konrad Adenauer by Irgun under Menachem Begin
- Arie Perliger and Leonard Weinberg, Jewish Self Defense and
Terrorist Groups Prior to the Establishment of the State of Israel:
Roots and Traditions. Totalitarian Movements & Political
Religions, Vol. 4, No. 3 (2003) 91-118. Online version
See also