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By one estimate, ten percent of the adult male Palestinian Arab population between 20 and 60 was killed, wounded, imprisoned or exiled. [28] Estimates of the number of Palestinian Jews killed are up to several hundred. [29] The Arab revolt in Mandatory Palestine was unsuccessful, and its consequences affected the outcome of the 1948 Palestine ...
1933 Palestine riots in Haifa [10] October 27–28, 1933 4 4 Palestinian rioters killed, 1 policeman stabbed, 3 Palestinian rioters wounded, 5 Jewish civilians injured by rioters, 4 of them seriously. Jaffa riots (April 1936) April 19–20, 1936 21 9 Jews killed, 40 Jews wounded (11 critically) in Arab attack in Jaffa. Police killed two attackers.
In response, Israeli police raided the mosque in riot gear, injuring 50 people [1] and arresting at least 400. [ 3 ] In the aftermath of the clashes, Palestinian militant groups [ 4 ] fired rockets into Israel from the Gaza Strip and Lebanon – acts broadly construed as a response to the events at Al-Aqsa.
On Friday evening, hundreds of Arab Israelis in Umm al-Fahm organized demonstrations to protest the Israeli incursion, some of which escalated into riots. [32] The same day, a Palestinian teenager stabbed and wounded a man in Haifa. The girl later admitted that she had done it in response to the storming of the mosque.
This page is subject to the extended confirmed restriction related to the Arab-Israeli conflict. 1929 Arab riots in Palestine Part of the intercommunal conflict in Mandatory Palestine During the 1929 Palestine riots, Jewish families at Jaffa Gate fleeing from the Old City of Jerusalem Location British Mandate of Palestine (Safed, Hebron, Jerusalem, Jaffa) Coordinates 31°46′36″N 35°14 ...
An Arab motorist was pulled from his car and severely beaten in the street. The incident was caught live by an Israeli news crew. [150] [151] As of 13 May, communal violence including "riots, stabbings, arson, attempted home invasions and shootings" was reported from Beersheba, Rahat, Ramla, Lod, Nasiriyah, Tiberias, Jerusalem, Haifa and Acre ...
In 1918, Weizmann toured Palestine as head of the Zionist Commission and met with Arab and Palestinian–Arab leaders, including the future mufti al-Husseini. He preferred to negotiate a political solution primarily with the British, and sometimes with non-Palestinian Arabs, but he opposed negotiating with the Palestinians themselves. [60]
The 1933 Palestine riots (Hebrew: מאורעות תרצ"ד, Me'oraot Tartsad) were a series of violent riots in Mandatory Palestine, as part of the intercommunal conflict in Mandatory Palestine. The riots erupted on 13 October 1933 when the police broke up a banned demonstration organized by the Arab Executive Committee. [ 1 ]