Haifa Oil Refinery massacre
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The Haifa Oil Refinery Massacre of 39 Jewish workers occurred on December 30, 1947 at the oil refinery complex in Haifa, during a period of skirmishes between Jews and Arabs in Palestine following the 1947 UN Partition Plan, although the Haifa oil refinery was well known for the peace in which Jew and Arab worked together. The massacre started when two bombs hurled into a crowd of Arab workers from a passing vehicle by Etzel (Irgun) militants, exploded killing 6 workers and wounding 42. The enraged Arab workers of the oil refinery stormed the complex armed with tools and metal pieces and killed 39 Jewish workers and wounded 49. Although the Arab constabulary were accused of complicity,[1] the Arab Legion forces were officially noted as having escorted 30-40 Jewish workers out of the Refinery during the peak of the killing. The British forces only arrived 90 minutes after the riot had started. It was reported by the Jewish Agency among others, that during the riot some Arab workers had helped their Jewish coworkers hide or escape. However, the massacre was a major blow to the efforts of Jews and Arabs in Haifa to maintain good relations.
The Haganah immediately retaliated with raids on the villages of Balad al-Shaykh and Hawsha, in which many of the Arab refinery workers lived. Their orders were to kill 'maximum adult males'. They fired into and blew up houses, and pulled out adult males and shot them. In some cases women and children were also killed when, according to Haganah accounts, Arabs returned fire from the houses. Haganah estimates of the number of Arabs killed varied from 21 to 70. Two Haganah militants were also killed.[1]
[edit] External links
- mideastweb.org
- Palestine Post December 31, 1947 front page and continuation
[edit] References
- ^ Benny Morris, The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisted, p101.
- 'The British Withdrawal From Palestine: Possible Advance Of Date By Six Weeks, 17 Killed In Attack On Arab Village', The Times, Friday, January 2, 1948; pg. 4; Issue 50958; col A.