The Jewish Resistance Movement
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article does not cite any references or sources. (May 2008) Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. |
The Jewish Resistance Movement (Hebrew: תנועת המרי העברי, Tnu'at HaMeri HaIvri, literally Hebrew Rebellion Movement), sometimes called United Resistance Movement (URM), was an umbrella group for militant Jewish underground movements in the British Mandate of Palestine. The group existed between the years 1945 and 1946, and coordinated armed attacks against the British military.
The group was founded after World War II, disappointed in British policies towards the movement. The Zionist Movement had high hopes for the new Labour administration in Britain, newly elected after war. Labour members had promised Zionist activists that if elected they would support a Jewish state in Palestine.[citation needed] However, despite their rise to power, they did not change British policy towards the Jews in Palestine and continued to abide by the edicts put forth in the White Paper of 1939.
- The Experience of the War - The disasters the Jews suffered during the Holocaust made the disputes between the movements seem petty, pushing them to unite their struggles. It had also hardened the Jews and made them more willing to resort to violence.
- The Advantage of Unity - The leadership of the Yishuv understood that cooperation of all of the different streams would be have a more powerful impact on the British and international opinion.
Negotiations began for the formation of the movement in August of 1945, at the behest of the Haganah leaders; Moshe Sneh and Israel Galili. At the end of October of the same year an agreement was signed forming the "Jewish Resistance Movement". The leadership of the new movement included four representatives: Two from the Haganah (Sneh and Galili), a representative from the Irgun (Menachem Begin) and a representative from Lehi (Nathan Yellin Mor).
In order to coordinate the activities of the groups a civilian committee known as "Committee X" was made up of six members, representatives of the various political stream, (including Levi Eshkol). The operations board, who approved operations plans, was made up of Yitzhak Sadeh (of the Haganah), Eitan Livni (of the Irgun) and Ya'akov Eliav (of the Lehi).
During the movement's existence, eleven major terrorist operations were carried out, eight of them by the Palmach and Haganah, and three by the Irgun and Lehi, as well as many smaller operations. Notable among these were the release of 200 members of Aliyah Bet from the detention camp in Atlit, bombing of railroads and train stations in Night of the Trains, attacks on British police stations, bombing of dozens of bridges around the country in the night of the bridges and bombing of the King David Hotel in Jerusalem.
In August of 1946, because of Operation Agatha and the King David Hotel bombing, that shocked the public because of the death of many innocent civilians, Chaim Weizmann, president of the WZO appealed to the movement to cease all further terrorist activity until a decision would be reached by the Jewish Agency. The Jewish Agency accepted Weizmann's recommendation to cease activities, a decision reluctantly accepted by the Haganah, but not by the Irgun and the Lehi. The JRM was dismantled and each of the founding groups continued operating according to their own policy.