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Lehi (militant group)

Lehi (Hebrew pronunciation: [ˈleχi]; Hebrew: לח"י – לוחמי חרות ישראל Lohamei Herut Israel – Lehi, "Fighters for the Freedom of Israel – Lehi", sometimes abbreviated "LHI"), often known pejoratively as the Stern Gang,[10][11][12][13] was a Zionist paramilitary militant organization founded by Avraham ("Yair") Stern in Mandatory Palestine.[14][15][16] Its avowed aim was to evict the British authorities from Palestine by use of violence, allowing unrestricted immigration of Jews and the formation of a Jewish state. It was initially called the National Military Organization in Israel,[17] upon being founded in August 1940, but was renamed Lehi one month later.[18] The group referred to its members as terrorists[19] and admitted to having carried out terrorist attacks.[14][20][21]

Lehi
לח"י‎
The hand represents the Lehi salute, with only two raised fingers on the right hand to represent the "If I forget thee / O Jerusalem...may my right hand forget its skill" (Ps. 137:5) pledge. The acronym "Lehi" is written below the hand.[1]
Also known asStern Gang
LeaderAvraham Stern[a]
FoundationAugust 1940; 83 years ago (August 1940)
Dissolved28 May 1948; 75 years ago (28 May 1948)
Split fromIrgun
HeadquartersYishuv, Mandatory Palestine
NewspaperHamaas (weekly)[b]
Ideology
Political positionSyncretic[9]
Notable attacksKilling of Lord Moyne
Cairo–Haifa train bombings
Deir Yassin massacre
Killing of Folke Bernadotte
SizeFewer than 300 members
Opponents British Empire
Battles and warsIntercommunal conflict in Mandatory Palestine
Jewish Revolt in Palestine
1947–48 Palestine Civil War
1948 Palestine war
Flag

Lehi split from the Irgun militant group in 1940 in order to continue fighting the British during World War II. It initially sought an alliance with Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany.[22] Believing that Nazi Germany was a lesser enemy of the Jews than Britain, Lehi twice attempted to form an alliance with the Nazis, proposing a Jewish state based on "nationalist and totalitarian principles, and linked to the German Reich by an alliance".[22][23] After Stern's death in 1942, the new leadership of Lehi began to move towards support for Joseph Stalin's Soviet Union[17] and the ideology of National Bolshevism, which was considered an amalgam of both right and left.[24][22] Regarding themselves as "revolutionary Socialists", the new Lehi developed a highly original ideology combining an "almost mystical" belief in Greater Israel with support for the Arab liberation struggle.[17] This sophisticated ideology failed to gain public support and Lehi fared poorly in the first Israeli elections.[25]

In April of 1948, Lehi and the Irgun were jointly responsible for the massacre in Deir Yassin of at least 107 Palestinian Arab villagers, including women and children. Lehi assassinated Lord Moyne, British Minister Resident in the Middle East, and made many other attacks on the British in Palestine.[26] On 29 May 1948, the government of Israel, having inducted its activist members into the Israel Defense Forces, formally disbanded Lehi, though some of its members carried out one more terrorist act, the assassination of Folke Bernadotte some months later,[27] an act condemned by Bernadotte's replacement as mediator, Ralph Bunche.[28] After the assassination, the new Israeli government declared Lehi a terrorist organization, arresting some 200 members and convicting some of the leaders.[29] Just before the first Israeli elections in January 1949, a general amnesty to Lehi members was granted by the government.[29] In 1980, Israel instituted a military decoration, an "award for activity in the struggle for the establishment of Israel", the Lehi ribbon.[30] Former Lehi leader Yitzhak Shamir became Prime Minister of Israel in 1983.

Founding of Lehi

 
Avraham Stern

Lehi was created in August 1940 by Avraham Stern.[18] Stern had been a member of the Irgun (Irgun Tsvai Leumi – "National Military Organization") high command. Zeev Jabotinsky, then the Irgun's supreme commander, had decided that diplomacy and working with Britain would best serve the Zionist cause. World War II was in progress, and Britain was fighting Nazi Germany. The Irgun suspended its underground military activities against the British for the duration of the war.

Stern argued that the time for Zionist diplomacy was over and that it was time for an armed struggle against the British. Like other Zionists, he objected to the White Paper of 1939, which restricted both Jewish immigration and Jewish land purchases in Palestine. For Stern, "no difference existed between Hitler and Chamberlain, between Dachau or Buchenwald and sealing the gates of Eretz Israel."[31]

Stern wanted to open Palestine to all Jewish refugees from Europe and considered this to be the most important issue of the day. Britain would not allow this. Therefore, he concluded, the Yishuv (Jews of Palestine) should fight the British rather than support them in the war. When the Irgun made a truce with the British, Stern left the Irgun to form his own group, which he called Irgun Tsvai Leumi B'Yisrael ("National Military Organization in Israel"), later Lohamei Herut Israel ("Fighters for the Freedom of Israel"). In September 1940, the organization was officially named "Lehi", the Hebrew acronym of the latter name.[18]

Stern and his followers believed that dying for the "foreign occupier" who was obstructing the creation of the Jewish State was useless. They differentiated between "enemies of the Jewish people" (the British) and "Jew haters" (the Nazis), believing that the former needed to be defeated and the latter manipulated.[32]

In 1940, the idea of the Final Solution was still "unthinkable", and Stern believed that Hitler wanted to make Germany judenrein through emigration, as opposed to extermination.[31][33] In December 1940, Lehi contacted Germany with a proposal to aid German conquest in the Middle East in return for recognition of a Jewish state open to unlimited immigration.[31]

Goals and ideology

 
Lehi commemoration in Petah Tikva. Half-clenched fist, in reference to Psalms 137:5.[34]

Lehi had three main goals:

  • To bring together all those interested in liberation (that is, those willing to join in active fighting against the British).
  • To appear before the world as the only active Jewish military organization.
  • To take over Eretz Yisrael (the Land of Israel) by armed force.[35]

Lehi believed in its early years that its goals would be achieved by finding a strong international ally that would expel the British from Palestine, in return for Jewish military help; this would require the creation of a broad and organised military force "demonstrating its desire for freedom through military operations."[36]

Lehi also referred to themselves as 'terrorists' and may have been one of the last organizations to do so.[19]

An article titled "Terror" in the Lehi underground newspaper He Khazit (The Front) argued as follows:

Neither Jewish ethics nor Jewish tradition can disqualify terrorism as a means of combat. We are very far from having any moral qualms as far as our national war goes. We have before us the command of the Torah, whose morality surpasses that of any other body of laws in the world: "Ye shall blot them out to the last man."

But first and foremost, terrorism is for us a part of the political battle being conducted under the present circumstances, and it has a great part to play: speaking in a clear voice to the whole world, as well as to our wretched brethren outside this land, it proclaims our war against the occupier.

We are particularly far from this sort of hesitation in regard to an enemy whose moral perversion is admitted by all.[21]

The article described the goals of terror:

  • It demonstrates ... against the true terrorist who hides behind his piles of papers and the laws he has legislated.
  • It is not directed against people, it is directed against representatives. Therefore it is effective.
  • If it also shakes the Yishuv from their complacency, good and well.[21]

Yitzhak Shamir, one of the three leaders of Lehi after Avraham Stern's assassination, argued for the legitimacy of Lehi's actions:

There are those who say that to kill Martin[c] is terrorism, but to attack an army camp is guerrilla warfare and to bomb civilians is professional warfare. But I think it is the same from the moral point of view. Is it better to drop an atomic bomb on a city than to kill a handful of persons? I don't think so. But nobody says that President Truman was a terrorist. All the men we went for individually – Wilkin, Martin, MacMichael and others – were personally interested in succeeding in the fight against us.

So it was more efficient and more moral to go for selected targets. In any case, it was the only way we could operate, because we were so small. For us it was not a question of the professional honour of a soldier, it was the question of an idea, an aim that had to be achieved. We were aiming at a political goal. There are many examples of what we did to be found in the BibleGideon and Samson, for instance. This had an influence on our thinking. And we also learned from the history of other peoples who fought for their freedom – the Russian and Irish revolutionaries, Giuseppe Garibaldi and Josip Broz Tito.[37]

Relationship with fascism and socialism

 
The 18 Principles of Rebirth, the ideology of Lehi as laid out by Avraham Stern, notes the need to "solve the problem" of the "alien population".[38]

Unlike the left-wing Haganah and right-wing Irgun, Lehi members were not a homogeneous collective with a single political, religious, or economic ideology. They were a combination of militants united by the goal of liberating the land of Israel from British rule. Most Lehi leaders defined their organization as an anti-imperialist movement and stated that their opposition to British colonial rule in Palestine was not based on a particular policy but rather on the presence of a foreign power over the homeland of the Jewish people.[39]

Avraham Stern defined the British Mandate as "foreign rule" regardless of British policies and took a radical position against such imperialism even if it were to be benevolent.[39] In a pamphlet entitled 18 Principles of Rebirth, Stern noted the need to "solve the problem" of the "alien population" and called for the 'conquest' of Palestine. It also emphasized the need to gather the Jewish Diaspora into a new sovereign state, revive the Hebrew language as a spoken language, and build a Third Temple as a symbol of the 'new era'.[38]

In the early years of the state of Israel, Lehi veterans could be found supporting nearly all political parties and some Lehi leaders founded a left-wing political party called the Fighters' List with Natan Yellin-Mor as its head. The party took part in the elections in January 1949 and won a single parliamentary seat. A number of Lehi veterans established the Semitic Action movement in 1956 which sought the creation of a regional federation encompassing Israel and its Arab neighbours[40][41] on the basis of an anti-colonialist alliance with other indigenous inhabitants of the Middle East.[42]

Some writers have stated that Lehi's true goals were the creation of a totalitarian state.[43] Perliger and Weinberg write that the organisation's ideology placed "its world view in the quasi-fascist radical Right, which is characterised by xenophobia, a national egotism that completely subordinates the individual to the needs of the nation, anti-liberalism, total denial of democracy and a highly centralised government."[44] Perliger and Weinberg state that most Lehi members were admirers of the Italian Fascist movement.[36] According to Kaplan and Penslar, Lehi's ideology was a mix of fascist and communist thought combined with racism and universalism.[45]

Others counter these claims. They note that when Lehi founder Avraham Stern went to study in fascist Italy, he refused to join the Gruppo Universitario Fascista for foreign students, even though members got large reductions in tuition.[46][verification needed]

Political racism

According to Yaacov Shavit, professor at the Department of Jewish History, Tel Aviv University, articles in Lehi publications contained references to a Jewish "master race", contrasting the Jews with Arabs who were seen as a "nation of slaves".[47] Sasha Polakow-Suransky writes that "Lehi was also unabashedly racist towards Arabs. Their publications described Jews as a master race and Arabs as a slave race." Lehi advocated mass expulsion of all Arabs from Palestine and Transjordan,[48] or even their physical annihilation.[49]

In contrast, a number of Lehi veterans, including co-leader Nathan Yellin-Mor, went on to establish the Semitic Action movement which sought the creation of a regional federation encompassing Israel and its Arab neighbours[40][41] on the basis of an anti-colonialist alliance with other indigenous inhabitants of the Middle East.[42] Yaakov Yardaur, another former Lehi militant, was a strong advocate for equal rights for Arab citizens of Israel.[50]

Evolution, tactics and organization

Many Lehi combatants had received military training. Some had attended the Military Engineers School in Civitavecchia, in Fascist Italy.[51] Others received military training from instructors of the Polish Armed Forces in 1938–1939. This training was conducted in Trochenbrod (Zofiówka) in Wołyń Voivodeship, Podębin near Łódź, and the forests around Andrychów. They were taught how to use explosives. One of them reported later: "Poles treated terrorism as a science. We have mastered mathematical principles of demolishing constructions made of concrete, iron, wood, bricks and dirt."[51]

The group was initially unsuccessful. Early attempts to raise funds through criminal activities, including a bank robbery in Tel Aviv in 1940 and another robbery on 9 January 1942 in which Jewish passers-by were killed, brought about the temporary collapse of the group. An attempt to assassinate the head of the British secret police in Lod in which three police personnel were killed, two Jewish and one British, elicited a severe response from the British and Jewish establishments who collaborated against Lehi.[52]

 
Wanted Poster of the Palestine Police Force offering rewards for the capture of Stern Gang members: Jaacov Levstein (Eliav), Yitzhak Yezernitzky (Shamir), and Natan Friedman-Yelin

Stern's group was seen as a terrorist organisation by the British authorities, who instructed the Defence Security Office (the colonial branch of MI5) to track down its leaders. In 1942, Stern, after he was arrested, was shot dead in disputed circumstances by Inspector Geoffrey J. Morton of the CID.[53] The arrest of several other members led momentarily to the group's eclipse, until it was revived after the September 1942 escape of two of its leaders, Yitzhak Shamir and Eliyahu Giladi, aided by two other escapees Natan Yellin-Mor (Friedman) and Israel Eldad (Sheib). (Giladi was later killed by Lehi under circumstances that remain mysterious.)[52] Shamir's codename was "Michael", a reference to one of Shamir's heroes, Michael Collins. Lehi was guided by spiritual and philosophical leaders such as Uri Zvi Greenberg and Israel Eldad. After the killing of Giladi, the organization was led by a triumvirate of Eldad, Shamir, and Yellin-Mor.

Lehi adopted a non-socialist platform of anti-imperialist ideology. It viewed the continued British rule of Palestine as a violation of the Mandate's provision generally, and its restrictions on Jewish immigration to be an intolerable breach of international law. However they also targeted Jews whom they regarded as traitors, and during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War they joined in operations with the Haganah and Irgun against Arab targets, for example Deir Yassin.

According to a compilation by Nachman Ben-Yehuda, Lehi was responsible for 42 assassinations, more than twice as many as the Irgun and Haganah combined during the same period. Of those Lehi assassinations that Ben-Yehuda classified as political, more than half the victims were Jews.[54]

Lehi also rejected the authority of the Jewish Agency for Israel and related organizations, operating entirely on its own throughout nearly all of its existence.

Lehi prisoners captured by the British generally refused to employ lawyers in their defence. The defendants would conduct their own defence, and would deny the right of the military court to try them, saying that in accordance with the Hague Convention they should be accorded the status of prisoners of war. For the same reason, Lehi prisoners refused to plead for amnesty, even when it was clear that this would have spared them the death penalty.[55] Moshe Barazani, a Lehi member, and Meir Feinstein, an Irgun member, took their own lives in prison with a grenade smuggled inside an orange so the British could not hang them.[56]

Activities and operations during World War II

Wartime contacts with Italy and Nazi Germany

Italy

In mid-1940, Stern became convinced that the Italians were interested in the establishment of a fascist Jewish state in Palestine.[57] He conducted negotiations, he thought, with the Italians via an intermediary Moshe Rotstein, and drew up a document that became known as the "Jerusalem Agreement".[58][59] In exchange for Italy's recognition of, and aid in obtaining, Jewish sovereignty over Palestine, Stern promised that Zionism would come under the aegis of Italian fascism, with Haifa as its base, and the Old City of Jerusalem under Vatican control, except for the Jewish quarter.[60] In Heller's words, Stern's proposal would "turn the 'Kingdom of Israel' into a satellite of the Axis powers."[61]

However, the "intermediary" Rotstein was in fact an agent of the Irgun, conducting a sting operation under the direction of the Irgun intelligence leader in Haifa, Israel Pritzker, in cooperation with the British.[62] Secret British documents about the affair were uncovered by historian Eldad Harouvi (now director of the Palmach Archives) and confirmed by former Irgun intelligence officer Yitzhak Berman.[62] When Rotstein's role later became clear, Lehi sentenced him to death and assigned Yaacov Eliav to kill him, but the assassination never took place.[59][63] However, Pritzker was killed by Lehi in 1943.[59]

Nazi Germany

 
German cover letter from 11 January 1941 attached to a description of an offer for an alliance with Nazi Germany attributed to Lehi.

Late in 1940, Lehi, having identified a common interest between the intentions of the new German order and Jewish national aspirations, proposed forming an alliance in World War II with Nazi Germany.[22] The organization offered cooperation in the following terms: Lehi would rebel against the British, while Germany would recognize an independent Jewish state in Palestine/Eretz Israel, and all Jews leaving their homes in Europe, by their own will or because of government injunctions, could enter Palestine with no restriction of numbers.[32] Late in 1940, Lehi representative Naftali Lubenchik went to Beirut to meet German official Werner Otto von Hentig. The Lehi documents outlined that its rule would be authoritarian and indicated similarities between the organization and Nazis.[32] Israel Eldad, one of the leading members of Lehi, wrote about Hitler "it is not Hitler who is the hater of the kingdom of Israel and the return to Zion, it is not Hitler who subjects us to the cruel fate of falling a second and a third time into Hitler's hands, but the British."[64]

Stern also proposed recruiting 40,000 Jews from occupied Europe to invade Palestine with German support to oust the British.[22] On 11 January 1941, Vice Admiral Ralf von der Marwitz, the German naval attaché in Turkey, filed a report (the "Ankara document") conveying an offer by Lehi to "actively take part in the war on Germany's side" in return for German support for "the establishment of the historic Jewish state on a national and totalitarian basis, bound by a treaty with the German Reich."[58][65][66]

According to Yellin-Mor:

Lubenchik did not take along any written memorandum for the German representatives. Had there been a need for one, he would have formulated it on the spot, since he was familiar with the episode of the Italian "intermediary" and with the numerous drafts connected with it. Apparently one of von Hentig's secretaries noted down the essence of the proposal in his own words.[67]

According to Joseph Heller, "The memorandum arising from their conversation is an entirely authentic document, on which the stamp of the 'IZL in Israel' is clearly embossed."[68] Von der Marwitz delivered the offer, classified as secret, to the German Ambassador in Turkey and on 21 January 1941 it was sent to Berlin. There was never any response.[69] A second attempt to contact the Nazis was made at the end of 1941, but it was even less successful.[70] The emissary Yellin-Mor was arrested in Syria before he could carry out his mission.[71]

This proposed alliance with Nazi Germany cost Lehi and Stern much support.[72] The Stern Gang also had links with, and support from, the Vichy France Sûreté's Lebanese offices.[73] Even as the full scale of Nazi atrocities became more evident in 1943, Lehi refused to accept Hitler as the main foe (as opposed to Great Britain).[74]

Assassination of Lord Moyne

On 6 November 1944, Lehi assassinated Lord Moyne, the British Minister Resident in the Middle East, in Cairo. Moyne was the highest ranking British official in the region. Yitzhak Shamir claimed later that Moyne was assassinated because of his support for a Middle Eastern Arab Federation and anti-Semitic lectures in which Arabs were held to be racially superior to Jews.[75] The assassination rocked the British government, and outraged Winston Churchill, the British Prime Minister. The two assassins, Eliyahu Bet-Zuri and Eliyahu Hakim were captured and used their trial as a platform to make public their political propaganda. They were both found guilty and executed. In 1975, their bodies were returned to Israel, with Egypt exchanging them for 20 Arab prisoners, and given a state funeral.[76][77] In 1982, postage stamps were issued for 20 Olei Hagardom, including Bet-Zouri and Hakim, in a souvenir sheet called "Martyrs of the struggle for Israel's independence."[78][79]

Post war terrorist campaign and insurgency

As a group that never had more than a few hundred members, Lehi relied on audacious but small-scale operations to drive its message home. They adopted the tactics of groups such as the Socialist Revolutionaries and the Combat Organization of the Polish Socialist Party in Czarist Russia,[80] and the Irish Republican Army. To this end, Lehi conducted small-scale operations such as individual assassinations of British officials (notable targets included Lord Moyne, CID detectives, and Jewish "collaborators"), and random shootings against soldiers and police officers.[81] Another strategy, adopted in 1946, was to send bombs in the mail to British politicians. Other actions included sabotaging infrastructure targets: bridges, railroads, telephone and telegraph lines, and oil refineries, as well as the use of vehicle bombs against British military, police, and administrative targets. Lehi financed its operations from private donations, extortion, and bank robbery. Its campaign of violence lasted from 1944 to 1948. Initially conducted together with the Irgun, it included a six-month suspension to avoid being targeted by the Haganah during the Hunting Season, and later operated jointly with the Haganah and Irgun under the Jewish Resistance Movement. After the Jewish Resistance Movement was dissolved, it operated independently as part of the general Jewish insurgency in Palestine.[citation needed]

Tel Aviv car park raid

On 25 April 1946, a Lehi unit attacked a car park in Tel Aviv occupied by the British 6th Airborne Division. Under a barrage of heavy covering fire, Lehi fighters broke into the car park, shot soldiers they encountered at close range, stole rifles from arms racks, laid mines to cover the retreat, and withdrew. Seven soldiers were killed in the attack, which caused widespread outrage among the British security forces in Palestine. It resulted in retaliatory anti-Jewish violence by British troops and a punitive curfew imposed on Tel Aviv's roads and the closure of places of entertainment in the city by the British Army.[81]

British police station in Haifa

On 12 January 1947, Lehi members drove a truckload of explosives into a British police station in Haifa, killing four and injuring 140, in what has been called 'the world's first true truck bomb'.[82]

Operations in Europe

 
Betty Knouth, Tel Aviv, 24 August 1948

Following the bombing of the British embassy in Rome, in October 1946, a series of operations against targets in the United Kingdom were launched. On 7 March 1947, Lehi's only successful operation in Britain was carried out when a Lehi bomb severely damaged the British Colonial Club, a London recreational facility for soldiers and students from Britain's colonies in Africa and the West Indies.[83] On 15 April 1947 a bomb consisting of twenty-four sticks of explosives was planted in the Colonial Office, Whitehall. It failed to explode due to a fault in the timer. Five weeks later, on 22 May, five alleged Lehi members were arrested in Paris with bomb making material including explosives of the same type as found in London. On 2 June, two Lehi members, Betty Knouth and Yaakov Levstein, were arrested crossing from Belgium to France. Envelopes addressed to British officials, with detonators, batteries and a time fuse were found in one of Knouth's suitcases. Knouth was sentenced to a year in prison, Levstein to eight months. The British Security Services identified Knouth as the person who planted the bomb in the Colonial Office. Shortly after their arrest, 21 letter bombs addressed to senior British figures were intercepted. The letters had been posted in Italy. The intended recipients included Bevin, Attlee, Churchill and Eden.[84] Knouth aka Gilberte/Elizabeth Lazarus. Levstein was travelling as Jacob Elias; his fingerprints connected him to the deaths of several Palestine Policemen as well as an attempt on the life of the British High Commissioner. In 1973, Margaret Truman wrote that letter bombs were also posted to her father, U.S. President Harry S. Truman, in 1947.[85] Former Lehi leader Yellin-Mor admitted that letter bombs had been sent to British targets but denied that any had been sent to Truman.[85][86]

Death threat against Hugh Trevor-Roper

Shortly after the 1947 publication of The Last Days of Hitler, Lehi issued a death threat against the author, Hugh Trevor-Roper, for his portrayal of Hitler, feeling that Trevor-Roper had attempted to exonerate the German populace from responsibility.[87]

Cairo-Haifa train bombings

During the lead-up to the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, Lehi mined the Cairo–Haifa train several times. On 29 February 1948, Lehi mined the train north of Rehovot, killing 28 British soldiers and wounding 35. On 31 March, Lehi mined the train near Binyamina, killing 40 civilians and wounding 60.

Attempted Nablus terror attack

Shlomo Sand writes that as a method of applying pressure on Arab villagers to abandon their settlements, Lehi planned a terror attack on Nablus and its Arab city headquarters; Lehi fighter Elisha Ibzov (Avraham Cohen) was captured with a truck filled with explosives on his way to the city. Lehi fighters in return abducted four adult villagers and youth from al-Sheikh Muwannis with no connection to Ibzov's capture and threatened to kill them. As rumours spread that they were already murdered, panic set out in the villagers and the settlement became increasingly abandoned, despite the eventual release of the hostages[88]

Deir Yassin massacre

One of the most widely known acts of Lehi was the attack on the Palestinian-Arab village of Deir Yassin.

In the months before the British evacuation from Palestine, the Arab League-sponsored Arab Liberation Army (ALA) occupied several strategic points along the road between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, cutting off supplies to the Jewish part of Jerusalem. One of these points was Deir Yassin. By March 1948, the road was cut off and Jewish Jerusalem was under siege. The Haganah launched Operation Nachshon to break the siege.

On 6 April, the Haganah attacked al-Qastal, a village two kilometres north of Deir Yassin, also overlooking the Jerusalem-Tel Aviv road.[89]

Then on 9 April 1948, about 120 Lehi and Irgun fighters, acting in cooperation with the Haganah, attacked and captured Deir Yassin. The attack was at night, the fighting was confused, and many civilian inhabitants of the village were killed.[90] This action had great consequences for the war, and remains a cause célèbre for Palestinians ever since.

Exactly what happened has never been established clearly. The Arab League reported a great massacre: 254 killed, with rape and lurid mutilations. Israeli investigations claimed the actual number of dead was between 100 and 120, and there were no mass rapes, but most of the dead were civilians and admitted some were killed deliberately. Lehi and Irgun both denied an organized massacre. Accounts by Lehi veterans such as Ezra Yakhin note that many of the attackers were killed or wounded, assert that Arabs fired from every building and that Iraqi and Syrian soldiers were among the dead, and even that some Arab fighters dressed as women.[91]

However, Jewish authorities, including Haganah, the Chief Rabbinate, the Jewish Agency, and David Ben-Gurion, also condemned the attack, lending credence to the charge of massacre.[92] The Jewish Agency even sent a letter of condemnation, apology, and condolence to King Abdullah I of Jordan.[93]

 
Female Lehi fighters in 1948

Both the Arab reports and Jewish responses had hidden motives: the Arab leaders wanted to encourage Palestinian Arabs to fight rather than surrender, to discredit the Zionists with international opinion, and to increase popular support in their countries for an invasion of Palestine. The Jewish leaders wanted to discredit Irgun and Lehi.

Ironically, the Arab reports backfired in one respect: frightened Palestinian Arabs did not surrender, but did not fight either – they fled, allowing Israel to gain much territory with little fighting and also without absorbing many Arabs.[94]

Lehi similarly interpreted events at Deir Yassin as turning the tide of war in favour of the Jews. Lehi leader Israel Eldad later wrote in his memoirs from the underground period that "without Deir Yassin the State of Israel could never have been established".[95][96]

The Deir Yassin story did not much sway international opinion.[citation needed] It did increase, not only support but pressure on Arab governments to intervene. Abdullah of Jordan was now compelled to join the invasion of Palestine after Israel's declaration of independence on 14 May.[citation needed]

Assassination of Count Folke Bernadotte

 
UN mediator Count Folke Bernadotte was assassinated by Lehi in Jerusalem in 1948.

Although Lehi had stopped operating nationally after May 1948, the group continued to function in Jerusalem. On 17 September 1948, Lehi assassinated UN mediator Count Folke Bernadotte. The assassination was directed by Yehoshua Zettler and carried out by a four-man team led by Meshulam Makover. The fatal shots were fired by Yehoshua Cohen. The Security Council described the assassination as a "cowardly act which appears to have been committed by a criminal group of terrorists".[97]

Three days after the assassination, the Israeli government passed the Ordinance to Prevent Terrorism and declared Lehi to be a terrorist organization.[98][99] Many Lehi members were arrested, including leaders Nathan Yellin-Mor and Matityahu Shmulevitz who were arrested on 29 September.[98] Eldad and Shamir managed to escape arrest.[98] Yellin-Mor and Schmulevitz were charged with leadership of a terrorist organization and on 10 February 1949 were sentenced to 8 years and 5 years imprisonment, respectively.[100][101][102] However the State (Temporary) Council soon announced a general amnesty for Lehi members and they were released.[100][103]

The Lehi trial and the Fighters' Party

 
Declaration of Lehi as a terrorist organization, September 20, 1948[104]

Between 5 December 1948 and 25 January 1949, Yellin-Mor and Shmuelevitz were tried in a military court on terrorism charges.[105] The prosecution accused them of the murder of Bernadotte, though they were not specifically charged with it.[105] Senior officers of the IDF, including Yisrael Galili and David Shaltiel, told the court that Lehi had hindered, rather than assisted the fight against the British and the Arabs.[105]

While the trial was in progress, some of the Lehi leadership founded a USSR-leaning political party called the Fighters' List with Yellin-Mor as its leader.[106] The party took part in the elections in January 1949 with Yellin-Mor and Shmuelevitz heading the list.[106] The trial verdict was handed down on 10 February, soon after the Fighters' List had won one seat with only 1.2% of the vote.[106] Yellin-Mor was sentenced to 8 years and Shmuelevitz to 5 years imprisonment, but the court agreed to remit the sentences if the prisoners agreed to a list of conditions.[106] The Provisional State Council then authorised their pardon.[106] The party disbanded after several years and did not contest the 1951 elections.[107]

In 1956, some Lehi veterans established the Semitic Action movement, which sought the creation of a regional federation encompassing Israel and its Arab neighbours[40][41] on the basis of an anti-colonialist alliance with other indigenous inhabitants of the Middle East.[42]

Not all Lehi alumni gave up political violence after independence: former members were involved in the activities of the Kingdom of Israel militant group, the 1957 assassination of Rudolf Kastner, and likely the 1952 attempted assassination of David-Zvi Pinkas.[108][109][110][111]

Publications

Lehi produced a range of publications containing unabashedly racist literature referring to Jews as a "master race" and Arabs as a "slave race".[47][48] Prominent publication included Hamaas, a weekly publication,[112] as well as the monthly He Khazit,[21] daily Mivrak, and BaMahteret.

Service ribbon

 
The Lehi ribbon

In 1980, Israel instituted the Lehi ribbon, red, black, grey, pale blue and white, which is awarded to former members of the Lehi underground who wished to carry it, "for military service towards the establishment of the State of Israel".[30]

"Unknown Soldiers" anthem

The words and music of a song "Unknown Soldiers" (also translated "Anonymous Soldiers") were written by Avraham Stern in 1932 during the early days of the Irgun. It became the Irgun's anthem until the split with Lehi in 1940, after which it became the Lehi anthem.[113][114]

Prominent members of Lehi

 
Geulah Cohen, announcer of the Lehi underground radio station (1948)

A number of Lehi's members went on to play important roles in Israel's public life.

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ After Stern's murder in February 1942,[2] Nathan Yellin-Mor became a member of the Lehi's guiding triumvirate, with Israel Eldad as chief of Lehi's propaganda and Yitzhak Shamir[3] as chief of operations.
  2. ^ Hamaas was a weekly publication of the Lehi, an armed Zionist militant group in Mandatory Palestine.[4][5] Other publications by the Lehi included the daily Mivrak, the monthly HeHahzit, and BaMahteret.
  3. ^ A British police sergeant, T.G. Martin, who had identified and arrested Shamir, was assassinated near his Haifa home.

Citations

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 18 May 2020. Retrieved 12 September 2019.
  2. ^ Nachman Ben-Yehuda. The Masada Myth: Collective Memory and Mythmaking in Israel. Madison: Wisconsin University Press, 1995. pp. 322.
  3. ^ "Yitzhak Shamir, Israel's modest, hardline ex-PM, dies at 96". The Times of Israel.
  4. ^ Khalidi, 1971, p. 606.
  5. ^ Cmd. 6873.
  6. ^ Shapira, Anita (1999). Land and Power: The Zionist Resort to Force, 1881–1948. Stanford University Press. p. 347. ISBN 0804737762.
  7. ^ The Stern Gang: Ideology, Politics and Terror, 1940–1949 Joseph Heller page 114 "Above all, in the summer of 1943 Lehi had still not broken free from the doctrine of persecutor and enemy'. Even after the extent of the Holocaust was revealed, Lehi refused to depict Hitler rather than England as the main foe."
  8. ^ Heller, Joseph (1995). "The Zionist Right and National Liberation: From Jabotinsky to Avraham Stern". In Wistrich, Robert S.; Ohana, David (eds.). The Shaping of Israeli Identity: Myth, Memory, and Trauma. Routledge. p. 88. ISBN 978-0-714-64641-1.
  9. ^ Sasson Sofer. Zionism and the Foundations of Israeli Diplomacy. Cambridge University Press, 2007. pp. 254. "Lehi's leader Stern stated that he incorporated elements of both the left and the right."
  10. ^ "This group was known to its friends as LEHI and to its enemies as the Stern Gang." Blumberg, Arnold. History of Israel, Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishing Group, Incorporated, 1998. p 106.
  11. ^ "calling themselves Lohamei Herut Yisrael (LHI) or, less generously, the Stern Gang." Lozowick, Yaacov. Right to Exist : A Moral Defense of Israel's Wars. Westminster, MD: Doubleday Publishing, 2003. p 78.
  12. ^ "It ended in a split with Stern leading his own group out of the Irgun. This was known pejoratively by the British as "the Stern Gang' – later as Lehi" Shindler, Colin. Triumph of Military Zionism : Nationalism and the Origins of the Israeli Right. London, GBR: I.B. Tauris & Company, Limited, 2005. p 218.
  13. ^ "Known by their Hebrew acronym as LEHI they were more familiar, not to say notorious, to the rest of the world as the Stern Gang – a ferociously effective and murderous terrorist group fighting to end British rule in Palestine and establish a Jewish state." Cesarani, David. Major Faran's Hat: Murder, Scandal and Britain's War Against Jewish Terrorism, 1945–1948. London. Vintage Books. 2010. p 01.
  14. ^ a b Arie Perliger, William L. Eubank, Middle Eastern Terrorism, 2006 p. 37: "Lehi viewed acts of terrorism as legitimate tools in the realization of the vision of the Jewish nation and a necessary condition for national liberation."
  15. ^ . The Washington Post. 16 August 1995. pp. D5. Archived from the original (Free Preview; full article requires payment.) on 18 March 2009. Retrieved 18 November 2008. The [AMIKAM] Stern Gang – known in Hebrew as Lehi, an acronym for Israel Freedom Fighters – was the most militant of the pre-state underground groups.
  16. ^ . Oxford Dictionaries. Archived from the original on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
  17. ^ a b c Laqueur, Walter (2003) [1972]. "Jabotinsky and Revisionism". A History of Zionism (Google Book Search) (3rd ed.). London: Tauris Parke Paperbacks. p. 377. ISBN 978-1-86064-932-5. OCLC 249640859. Retrieved 18 November 2008.
  18. ^ a b c Nachman Ben-Yehuda. The Masada Myth: Collective Memory and Mythmaking in Israel. Madison: Wisconsin University Press, 1995. pp. 322.
  19. ^ a b Calder Walton (2008). "British Intelligence and the Mandate of Palestine: Threats to British national security immediately after the Second World War". Intelligence and National Security. 23 (4): 435–462. doi:10.1080/02684520802293049. S2CID 154775965.
  20. ^ Jean E. Rosenfeld, Terrorism, Identity, and Legitimacy: The Four Waves Theory and Political Violence, 2010 p. 161 n. 7: 'Lehi ... was the last group to identify itself as a terrorist one'
  21. ^ a b c d He Khazit (underground publication of Lehi), Issue 2, August 1943. No author is stated, as was usual for this publication. Translated from original. For a discussion of this article, see Heller, p. 115
  22. ^ a b c d e Sasson Sofer. Zionism and the Foundations of Israeli Diplomacy. Cambridge University Press, 2007. pp. 253–254.
  23. ^ Leslie Stein,The Hope Fulfilled: The Rise of Modern Israel, Greenwood Publishing Group 2003 pp. 237–238.
  24. ^ Robert S. Wistrich, David Ohana. The Shaping of Israeli Identity: Myth, Memory, and Trauma, Issue 3. London; Portland, Oregon: Frank Cass & Co. Ltd., 1995. pp. 88.
  25. ^ Joseph Heller. The Stern Gang: Ideology, Politics, and Terror, 1940–1949. pp. 8.
  26. ^ Ami Pedahzur, The Israeli Response to Jewish Extremism and Violence: Defending Democracy, Manchester University Press, Manchester and New York 2002 p. 77
  27. ^ Gabriel Ben-Dor and Ami Pedahzur, 'Jewish Self-Defence and Terrorist Groups Prior to the Establishment of the State of Israel: Roots and Traditions,' in Ami Pedahzur, Leonard Weinberg (eds.), Religious Fundamentalism and Political Extremism, Frank Cass, 2004 pp. 94–120, pp. 115–116: 'one final terrorist act...'
  28. ^ Ralph Bunche report on assassination of UN mediator 7 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine 27 September 1948, "notorious terrorists long known as the Stern group"
  29. ^ a b Ami Pedahzur, Arie Perliger Jewish Terrorism in Israel, Columbia University Press, 2011 p. 28.
  30. ^ a b "Awards for military service towards the establishment of the State of Israel". Israeli Ministry of Defense. from the original on 17 April 2006. Retrieved 17 September 2018. The ribbon is awarded to: All those who were members of the LEHI underground for a term of six months or more, in the period dating from 1940 up until the establishment of the State of Israel ... Presentation of the ribbon began in 1980.
  31. ^ a b c Colin Shindler (1995). The Land beyond Promise: Israel, Likud and the Zionist dream. I.B. Tauris. p. 22. ISBN 978-1-86064-774-1.
  32. ^ a b c The Jews: A Contrary People Yehuda Bauer pp. 77–78
  33. ^ Colin Shindler, The Land Beyond Promise: Israel, Likud and the Zionist Dream, I.B. Tauris, 2002, p. 25: 'Stern perceived Hitler as the latest in a long line of anti-Semites who could be won over if the common interest was identified. In Palestine at that time, Stern was not alone in regarding Hitler as a persecutor and not an exterminator. The dream of attaining a Jewish state dominated Zionist thinking and the very idea of the Final Solution was unthinkable in 1940. Stern believed that Hitler wanted Germany to be judenrein through emigration'.
  34. ^ Ben-Ami, Eliezer “Yehezkel”. "How was the Lehi symbol born?". Freedom Fighters of Israel Heritage Association (FFI-LEHI).
  35. ^ Heller, p. 112, quoted in Perliger and Weinberg, 2003, pp. 106–107.
  36. ^ a b Perliger and Weinberg, 2003, p. 107.
  37. ^ Bethell Nicholas, The Palestine Triangle: The Struggle between British, Jews, and the Arabs, 1935–48 (1979), p. 278
  38. ^ a b Amichal, p. 316, a copy on the web exists here
  39. ^ a b Israel Eldad, The First Tithe, p. 84
  40. ^ a b c Diamond, James S. (1990). "We Are Not One: A Post-Zionist Perspective". Tikkun. 5 (2): 107.
  41. ^ a b c Hattis Rolef, Susan. "Yellin-Mor (Friedman), Nathan". Encyclopaedia Judaica.
  42. ^ a b c Beinin, Joel (1998). The Dispersion of Egyptian Jewry: Culture, Politics, and the Formation of a Modern Diaspora. University of California Press. p. 166
  43. ^ Heller, 1995, p. 70.
  44. ^ Perliger and Weinberg, 2003, p. 108.
  45. ^ The Origins of Israel, 1882–1948: A Documentary History, by Eran Kaplan, Derek J. Penslar (2011) p. 274 state that "Lehi's ideology was a strange brew of fascism and communism, racism and universalism"
  46. ^ Amichal, 77
  47. ^ a b Jabotinsky and the Revisionist Movement 1925–1948. Yaacov Shavit, Routledge; 1st ed., 1988) p. 231 "Articles in contemporary Lehi publications talked about the Jewish nation as a heroic people, even a 'master race' (in contrast to the Arabs, who were considered a nation of slaves)"
  48. ^ a b Sasha Polakow-Suransky, "The Unspoken Alliance: Israel's Secret Relationship with Apartheid South Africa", p. 107
  49. ^ "Religious Fundamentalism and Political Extremism", edited by Leonard Weinberg, Ami Pedahzur, p. 112, Routledge, 2008
  50. ^ "Yaredor (Lederman), Dr. Yaacov – "Rashdal"". Freedom Fighters of Israel Heritage Association. Retrieved 18 February 2024.
  51. ^ a b (in Polish) Jakub Mielnik: Jak polacy stworzyli Izrael 7 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine, Focus.pl Historia, 5 May 2008
  52. ^ a b Perliger and Weinberg, 2003, p. 109.
  53. ^ Boyer Bell, 1996, p. 71.
  54. ^ N. Ben-Yehuda, Political Assassinations by Jews (State University of New York, 1993), p. 397.
  55. ^ The Stern Gang: Ideology, Politics and Terror, 1940–1949, Joseph Halper, Routledge p. 129
  56. ^ Masada Myth: Collective Memory and Mythmaking in Israel, Nachman Ben-Yehuda, University of Wisconsin Press, p. 143
  57. ^ Heller, 1995, p. 86.
  58. ^ a b Heller, 1995, p. 86
  59. ^ a b c Nachman Ben-Yehuda (2012). Political Assassinations by Jews: A Rhetorical Device for Justice. SUNY Press. pp. 147–150, 185–188. ISBN 978-0791496374.
  60. ^ Heller, 1995 p. 86
  61. ^ Heller, 1995, pp. 78–79.
  62. ^ a b Yossi Melman (3 June 2011). "Undermining the underground". Haaretz.
  63. ^ Yaacov Eliav (1984). Wanted. Shengold Publishers. pp. 144–145.
  64. ^ "Political Theologies in the Holy Land: Israeli Messianism and its Critics", David Ohana
  65. ^ David Yisraeli, The Palestine Problem in German Politics, 1889–1945, Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel, 1974. Verified web copies: German English. Also see Otto von Hentig, Mein Leben (Goettingen, 1962) pp. 338–339
  66. ^ Lenni Brenner, Zionism in the Age of the Dictators 2004, p. 234
  67. ^ Natan Yellin-Mor, manuscript in English quoted by Lenni Brenner, 51 Documents (Barricade Books, 2002) p. 308.
  68. ^ Heller (1985) p. 85
  69. ^ A Meeting in Beirut, Habib Canaan, Haaretz (musaf), 27 March 1970
  70. ^ Heller 1995, p. 91.
  71. ^ Heller, 1995, p. 91
  72. ^ "Stern Gang" The Oxford Companion to World War II. Ed. I. C. B. Dear and M. R. D. Foot. Oxford University Press, 2001.
  73. ^ James Barr, A Line in the Sand: Britain, France and the struggle that shaped the Middle East, Simon and Schuster, 2011 p. 255
  74. ^ The Stern Gang: Ideology, Politics and Terror, 1940–1949 Joseph Heller p. 114 "Above all, in the summer of 1943 Lehi had still not broken free from the doctrine of persecutor and enemy'. Even after the extent of the Holocaust was revealed, Lehi refused to depict Hitler rather than England as the main foe."
  75. ^ Yitzhak Shamir, 'Why the Lehi Assassinated Lord Moyne', Nation, 32/119 (1995) pp. 333–337 (Hebrew) cited in Perliger and Weinberg, 2003, p. 111.
  76. ^ Israel honours British minister's assassins, The Times, 26 June 1975, p. 1.
  77. ^ "Israel Will Exchange 20 Jailed Terrorists for Remains of Sternists Hanged in Cairo in 1945". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 20 March 2015. Retrieved 12 April 2024.
  78. ^ . Archived from the original on 18 April 2012. Retrieved 1 August 2007.
  79. ^ . Archived from the original on 18 April 2012. Retrieved 1 August 2007.
  80. ^ Iviansky 1986, 72–73.
  81. ^ a b Bell, Bowyer J.: Terror out of Zion (1976)
  82. ^ Law, Randall David (2009). Terrorism: A History. Cambridge MA: Polity Press. p. 186.
  83. ^ Cesarani, David: Major Farran's Hat: The Untold Story of the Struggle to Establish the Jewish State (2009)
  84. ^ Andrew, Christopher (2009) The Defence of the Realm. The Authorized History of MI5. Allen Lane. ISBN 978-0-7139-9885-6. p. 922. Note 39. pp. 355–359.
  85. ^ a b Nachman Ben-Yehuda (2012). Political Assassinations by Jews: A Rhetorical Device for Justice. SUNY Press. p. 331. ISBN 978-0791496374.
  86. ^ Ira Smith and Joe Alex Morris, Dear Mr President, Julian Messner Inc. New York 1947 p. 230 writes that "the same kind of terrorist letters" which Lehi claimed responsibility for sending to British politicians had been detected in mail to the White House:
  87. ^ Rosenbaum, Ron. Explaining Hitler: The Search for the Origins of His Evil. p. 63.
  88. ^ Sand, Shlomo The Invention of the Land of Israel: From Holy Land to Homeland p. 268
  89. ^ Silver 1984, p. 91.
  90. ^ Yoav Gelber, Palestine 1948, Appendix II 27 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  91. ^ Ezra Yakhin (1992), Elnakam, pp. 261–272.
  92. ^ Yoav Gelber (2006), Palestine 1948, p. 317.
  93. ^ Benny Morris (2003), The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited, p. 239.
  94. ^ Benny Morris (2003), The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited, p. 239. "the most important immediate effect of the atrocity and the media campaign that followed it was how one started to report the fear felt in Palestinian Arab towns and villages, and, later, the panicked fleeing from them."
  95. ^ Israel Eldad (1950), The First Tithe, pp. 334–335.
  96. ^ Heller, 1995, p. 209.
  97. ^ UNSC . Archived from the original on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 30 November 2013. resolution 57 (18 September 1948).
  98. ^ a b c Sprinzak, p. 45
  99. ^ Ami Pedahzur, The Israeli Response to Jewish Terrorism and Violence: Defending Democracy, Manchester University Press, Manchester and New York 2002 p. 77
  100. ^ a b Sprinzak, p. 47
  101. ^ Heller, p. 265.
  102. ^ "LHY leaders get 8,5 years", Palestine Post, 11 February 1949.
  103. ^ Heller, p. 267.
  104. ^ "For the purposes of Regulation 8 of the Emergency Regulations – Prevention of Terrorism – 5748-1948, the Provisional Government has decided to declare that the group of people known as 'Freedom Fighters of Israel' and the members of the so-called 'Homeland Front' are terrorist organizations. By order of the provisional administration. Ze'ev Sharaf (Government Secretary)."
  105. ^ a b c Heller (1995), pp. 261–266
  106. ^ a b c d e Heller (1995), pp. 265–267
  107. ^ Heller (1995), pp. 279–284
  108. ^ Baram, Daphna (10 September 2009). "Amos Keinan: Controversial Israeli journalist, writer and artist". The Independent. Retrieved 8 November 2009.
  109. ^ Melman, Yossi (13 August 2009). "Time bomb". Haaretz. Retrieved 8 September 2009.
  110. ^ Segev, Tom; Arlen Neal Weinstein (1998). 1949: The First Israelis. Macmillan. pp. 230–231. ISBN 0-02-929180-1.
  111. ^ Pedahzur, Ami, and Arie Perliger (2009). Jewish Terrorism in Israel. Columbia University Press. pp. 31–33
  112. ^ Khalidi, Walid. (1971). From Haven to Conquest: Readings in Zionism and the Palestine Problem Until 1948. Institute of Palestine Studies. p. 606. ISBN 0-88728-155-9.
  113. ^ Zev Golan (2011). Stern: The Man and his Gang. Yair Publishing. pp. 18–19, 81.
  114. ^ s:Unknown soldiers (song)
  115. ^ Melman, Yossi (13 August 2009). "Inside Intel / Time Bomb". Haaretz.
  116. ^ Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, December 1986, "Portrait of a Mideast Terrorist"

Bibliography

  • (in Hebrew) Amichal Yevin, Ada (1986). In purple: the life of Yair-Abraham Stern. Tel Aviv: Hadar Publishing House.
  • Bell, J. Bowyer (1977). Terror Out of Zion: Irgun Zvai Leumi, Lehi, and the Palestine Underground, 1929–1949. Avon. ISBN 0-380-39396-4
  • Ben-Yehuda, Nachman (1998). "Political Violence: Political Assassinations as a Quest for Justice." In Robert R. Friedmann (Ed.). Crime and Criminal Justice in Israel: Assessing The Knowledge base Toward The Twenty-first Century (pp. 139–184). SUNY Press. ISBN 0-7914-3713-2.
  • Golan, Zev (2003). Free Jerusalem: Heroes, Heroines and Rogues Who Created the State of Israel. Devora. ISBN 1-930143-54-0
  • Golan, Zev (2011). Stern: The Man and His Gang. Yair. ISBN 978-965-91724-0-5
  • Heller, J. (1995). The Stern Gang. Frank Cass. ISBN 0-7146-4558-3
  • Hyams, Edward (1975) Terrorists and Terrorism ISBN 978-046-00786-3-4
  • Iviansky, Z. (1986) "Lechi's Share in the Struggle for Israel's Liberation," in: Ely Tavin and Yonah Alexander (Ed.).Terrorists or Freedom Fighters, Fairfax, Va.: HERO Books.
  • Katz, E. (1987). "LECHI: Fighters for the freedom of Israel", Tel Aviv: Yair Publishers
  • Lustick, Ian S. (1994). "Terrorism in the Arab–Israeli Conflict: Targets and Audiences." In Crenshaw, Martha (ed). Terrorism in Context (pp. 514–552). University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press. ISBN 0-271-01015-0
  • Marton, K. (1994). A Death in Jerusalem. Pantheon. ISBN 0-679-42083-5 — Bernadotte assassination
  • Munson, Henry (2005). "Religion and violence". Religion. 35 (4): 223–246. doi:10.1016/j.religion.2005.10.006. S2CID 170838550.
  • Perliger, Arie; Weinberg, Leonard (2003). "Jewish Self-Defence and Terrorist Groups Prior to the Establishment of the State of Israel: Roots and Traditions". Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions. 4 (3): 91–118. doi:10.1080/14690760412331326250. S2CID 143575192.
  • Ehud Sprinzak (1999). Brother against Brother. The Free Press. ISBN 0-684-85344-2.

External links

  • British wanted poster from 1940s

lehi, militant, group, lehi, hebrew, pronunciation, ˈleχi, hebrew, לח, לוחמי, חרות, ישראל, lohamei, herut, israel, lehi, fighters, freedom, israel, lehi, sometimes, abbreviated, often, known, pejoratively, stern, gang, zionist, paramilitary, militant, organiza. Lehi Hebrew pronunciation ˈlexi Hebrew לח י לוחמי חרות ישראל Lohamei Herut Israel Lehi Fighters for the Freedom of Israel Lehi sometimes abbreviated LHI often known pejoratively as the Stern Gang 10 11 12 13 was a Zionist paramilitary militant organization founded by Avraham Yair Stern in Mandatory Palestine 14 15 16 Its avowed aim was to evict the British authorities from Palestine by use of violence allowing unrestricted immigration of Jews and the formation of a Jewish state It was initially called the National Military Organization in Israel 17 upon being founded in August 1940 but was renamed Lehi one month later 18 The group referred to its members as terrorists 19 and admitted to having carried out terrorist attacks 14 20 21 Lehiלח י The hand represents the Lehi salute with only two raised fingers on the right hand to represent the If I forget thee O Jerusalem may my right hand forget its skill Ps 137 5 pledge The acronym Lehi is written below the hand 1 Also known asStern GangLeaderAvraham Stern a FoundationAugust 1940 83 years ago August 1940 Dissolved28 May 1948 75 years ago 28 May 1948 Split fromIrgunHeadquartersYishuv Mandatory PalestineNewspaperHamaas weekly b IdeologyRevisionist ZionismAnti imperialism 6 Anti British sentiment 7 From 1944 National Bolshevism 8 Political positionSyncretic 9 Notable attacksKilling of Lord MoyneCairo Haifa train bombingsDeir Yassin massacreKilling of Folke BernadotteSizeFewer than 300 membersOpponentsBritish EmpireBattles and warsIntercommunal conflict in Mandatory PalestineJewish Revolt in Palestine1947 48 Palestine Civil War1948 Palestine warFlagSucceeded byFighters ListSemitic Action Lehi split from the Irgun militant group in 1940 in order to continue fighting the British during World War II It initially sought an alliance with Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany 22 Believing that Nazi Germany was a lesser enemy of the Jews than Britain Lehi twice attempted to form an alliance with the Nazis proposing a Jewish state based on nationalist and totalitarian principles and linked to the German Reich by an alliance 22 23 After Stern s death in 1942 the new leadership of Lehi began to move towards support for Joseph Stalin s Soviet Union 17 and the ideology of National Bolshevism which was considered an amalgam of both right and left 24 22 Regarding themselves as revolutionary Socialists the new Lehi developed a highly original ideology combining an almost mystical belief in Greater Israel with support for the Arab liberation struggle 17 This sophisticated ideology failed to gain public support and Lehi fared poorly in the first Israeli elections 25 In April of 1948 Lehi and the Irgun were jointly responsible for the massacre in Deir Yassin of at least 107 Palestinian Arab villagers including women and children Lehi assassinated Lord Moyne British Minister Resident in the Middle East and made many other attacks on the British in Palestine 26 On 29 May 1948 the government of Israel having inducted its activist members into the Israel Defense Forces formally disbanded Lehi though some of its members carried out one more terrorist act the assassination of Folke Bernadotte some months later 27 an act condemned by Bernadotte s replacement as mediator Ralph Bunche 28 After the assassination the new Israeli government declared Lehi a terrorist organization arresting some 200 members and convicting some of the leaders 29 Just before the first Israeli elections in January 1949 a general amnesty to Lehi members was granted by the government 29 In 1980 Israel instituted a military decoration an award for activity in the struggle for the establishment of Israel the Lehi ribbon 30 Former Lehi leader Yitzhak Shamir became Prime Minister of Israel in 1983 Contents 1 Founding of Lehi 2 Goals and ideology 2 1 Relationship with fascism and socialism 2 2 Political racism 3 Evolution tactics and organization 4 Activities and operations during World War II 4 1 Wartime contacts with Italy and Nazi Germany 4 1 1 Italy 4 1 2 Nazi Germany 4 2 Assassination of Lord Moyne 5 Post war terrorist campaign and insurgency 5 1 Tel Aviv car park raid 5 2 British police station in Haifa 5 3 Operations in Europe 5 4 Death threat against Hugh Trevor Roper 5 5 Cairo Haifa train bombings 5 6 Attempted Nablus terror attack 5 7 Deir Yassin massacre 5 8 Assassination of Count Folke Bernadotte 5 9 The Lehi trial and the Fighters Party 6 Publications 7 Service ribbon 8 Unknown Soldiers anthem 9 Prominent members of Lehi 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksFounding of Lehi nbsp Avraham Stern Lehi was created in August 1940 by Avraham Stern 18 Stern had been a member of the Irgun Irgun Tsvai Leumi National Military Organization high command Zeev Jabotinsky then the Irgun s supreme commander had decided that diplomacy and working with Britain would best serve the Zionist cause World War II was in progress and Britain was fighting Nazi Germany The Irgun suspended its underground military activities against the British for the duration of the war Stern argued that the time for Zionist diplomacy was over and that it was time for an armed struggle against the British Like other Zionists he objected to the White Paper of 1939 which restricted both Jewish immigration and Jewish land purchases in Palestine For Stern no difference existed between Hitler and Chamberlain between Dachau or Buchenwald and sealing the gates of Eretz Israel 31 Stern wanted to open Palestine to all Jewish refugees from Europe and considered this to be the most important issue of the day Britain would not allow this Therefore he concluded the Yishuv Jews of Palestine should fight the British rather than support them in the war When the Irgun made a truce with the British Stern left the Irgun to form his own group which he called Irgun Tsvai Leumi B Yisrael National Military Organization in Israel later Lohamei Herut Israel Fighters for the Freedom of Israel In September 1940 the organization was officially named Lehi the Hebrew acronym of the latter name 18 Stern and his followers believed that dying for the foreign occupier who was obstructing the creation of the Jewish State was useless They differentiated between enemies of the Jewish people the British and Jew haters the Nazis believing that the former needed to be defeated and the latter manipulated 32 In 1940 the idea of the Final Solution was still unthinkable and Stern believed that Hitler wanted to make Germany judenrein through emigration as opposed to extermination 31 33 In December 1940 Lehi contacted Germany with a proposal to aid German conquest in the Middle East in return for recognition of a Jewish state open to unlimited immigration 31 Goals and ideology nbsp Lehi commemoration in Petah Tikva Half clenched fist in reference to Psalms 137 5 34 Lehi had three main goals To bring together all those interested in liberation that is those willing to join in active fighting against the British To appear before the world as the only active Jewish military organization To take over Eretz Yisrael the Land of Israel by armed force 35 Lehi believed in its early years that its goals would be achieved by finding a strong international ally that would expel the British from Palestine in return for Jewish military help this would require the creation of a broad and organised military force demonstrating its desire for freedom through military operations 36 Lehi also referred to themselves as terrorists and may have been one of the last organizations to do so 19 An article titled Terror in the Lehi underground newspaper He Khazit The Front argued as follows Neither Jewish ethics nor Jewish tradition can disqualify terrorism as a means of combat We are very far from having any moral qualms as far as our national war goes We have before us the command of the Torah whose morality surpasses that of any other body of laws in the world Ye shall blot them out to the last man But first and foremost terrorism is for us a part of the political battle being conducted under the present circumstances and it has a great part to play speaking in a clear voice to the whole world as well as to our wretched brethren outside this land it proclaims our war against the occupier We are particularly far from this sort of hesitation in regard to an enemy whose moral perversion is admitted by all 21 The article described the goals of terror It demonstrates against the true terrorist who hides behind his piles of papers and the laws he has legislated It is not directed against people it is directed against representatives Therefore it is effective If it also shakes the Yishuv from their complacency good and well 21 Yitzhak Shamir one of the three leaders of Lehi after Avraham Stern s assassination argued for the legitimacy of Lehi s actions There are those who say that to kill Martin c is terrorism but to attack an army camp is guerrilla warfare and to bomb civilians is professional warfare But I think it is the same from the moral point of view Is it better to drop an atomic bomb on a city than to kill a handful of persons I don t think so But nobody says that President Truman was a terrorist All the men we went for individually Wilkin Martin MacMichael and others were personally interested in succeeding in the fight against us So it was more efficient and more moral to go for selected targets In any case it was the only way we could operate because we were so small For us it was not a question of the professional honour of a soldier it was the question of an idea an aim that had to be achieved We were aiming at a political goal There are many examples of what we did to be found in the Bible Gideon and Samson for instance This had an influence on our thinking And we also learned from the history of other peoples who fought for their freedom the Russian and Irish revolutionaries Giuseppe Garibaldi and Josip Broz Tito 37 Relationship with fascism and socialism nbsp The 18 Principles of Rebirth the ideology of Lehi as laid out by Avraham Stern notes the need to solve the problem of the alien population 38 Unlike the left wing Haganah and right wing Irgun Lehi members were not a homogeneous collective with a single political religious or economic ideology They were a combination of militants united by the goal of liberating the land of Israel from British rule Most Lehi leaders defined their organization as an anti imperialist movement and stated that their opposition to British colonial rule in Palestine was not based on a particular policy but rather on the presence of a foreign power over the homeland of the Jewish people 39 Avraham Stern defined the British Mandate as foreign rule regardless of British policies and took a radical position against such imperialism even if it were to be benevolent 39 In a pamphlet entitled 18 Principles of Rebirth Stern noted the need to solve the problem of the alien population and called for the conquest of Palestine It also emphasized the need to gather the Jewish Diaspora into a new sovereign state revive the Hebrew language as a spoken language and build a Third Temple as a symbol of the new era 38 In the early years of the state of Israel Lehi veterans could be found supporting nearly all political parties and some Lehi leaders founded a left wing political party called the Fighters List with Natan Yellin Mor as its head The party took part in the elections in January 1949 and won a single parliamentary seat A number of Lehi veterans established the Semitic Action movement in 1956 which sought the creation of a regional federation encompassing Israel and its Arab neighbours 40 41 on the basis of an anti colonialist alliance with other indigenous inhabitants of the Middle East 42 Some writers have stated that Lehi s true goals were the creation of a totalitarian state 43 Perliger and Weinberg write that the organisation s ideology placed its world view in the quasi fascist radical Right which is characterised by xenophobia a national egotism that completely subordinates the individual to the needs of the nation anti liberalism total denial of democracy and a highly centralised government 44 Perliger and Weinberg state that most Lehi members were admirers of the Italian Fascist movement 36 According to Kaplan and Penslar Lehi s ideology was a mix of fascist and communist thought combined with racism and universalism 45 Others counter these claims They note that when Lehi founder Avraham Stern went to study in fascist Italy he refused to join the Gruppo Universitario Fascista for foreign students even though members got large reductions in tuition 46 verification needed Political racism According to Yaacov Shavit professor at the Department of Jewish History Tel Aviv University articles in Lehi publications contained references to a Jewish master race contrasting the Jews with Arabs who were seen as a nation of slaves 47 Sasha Polakow Suransky writes that Lehi was also unabashedly racist towards Arabs Their publications described Jews as a master race and Arabs as a slave race Lehi advocated mass expulsion of all Arabs from Palestine and Transjordan 48 or even their physical annihilation 49 In contrast a number of Lehi veterans including co leader Nathan Yellin Mor went on to establish the Semitic Action movement which sought the creation of a regional federation encompassing Israel and its Arab neighbours 40 41 on the basis of an anti colonialist alliance with other indigenous inhabitants of the Middle East 42 Yaakov Yardaur another former Lehi militant was a strong advocate for equal rights for Arab citizens of Israel 50 Evolution tactics and organizationMany Lehi combatants had received military training Some had attended the Military Engineers School in Civitavecchia in Fascist Italy 51 Others received military training from instructors of the Polish Armed Forces in 1938 1939 This training was conducted in Trochenbrod Zofiowka in Wolyn Voivodeship Podebin near Lodz and the forests around Andrychow They were taught how to use explosives One of them reported later Poles treated terrorism as a science We have mastered mathematical principles of demolishing constructions made of concrete iron wood bricks and dirt 51 The group was initially unsuccessful Early attempts to raise funds through criminal activities including a bank robbery in Tel Aviv in 1940 and another robbery on 9 January 1942 in which Jewish passers by were killed brought about the temporary collapse of the group An attempt to assassinate the head of the British secret police in Lod in which three police personnel were killed two Jewish and one British elicited a severe response from the British and Jewish establishments who collaborated against Lehi 52 nbsp Wanted Poster of the Palestine Police Force offering rewards for the capture of Stern Gang members Jaacov Levstein Eliav Yitzhak Yezernitzky Shamir and Natan Friedman Yelin Stern s group was seen as a terrorist organisation by the British authorities who instructed the Defence Security Office the colonial branch of MI5 to track down its leaders In 1942 Stern after he was arrested was shot dead in disputed circumstances by Inspector Geoffrey J Morton of the CID 53 The arrest of several other members led momentarily to the group s eclipse until it was revived after the September 1942 escape of two of its leaders Yitzhak Shamir and Eliyahu Giladi aided by two other escapees Natan Yellin Mor Friedman and Israel Eldad Sheib Giladi was later killed by Lehi under circumstances that remain mysterious 52 Shamir s codename was Michael a reference to one of Shamir s heroes Michael Collins Lehi was guided by spiritual and philosophical leaders such as Uri Zvi Greenberg and Israel Eldad After the killing of Giladi the organization was led by a triumvirate of Eldad Shamir and Yellin Mor Lehi adopted a non socialist platform of anti imperialist ideology It viewed the continued British rule of Palestine as a violation of the Mandate s provision generally and its restrictions on Jewish immigration to be an intolerable breach of international law However they also targeted Jews whom they regarded as traitors and during the 1948 Arab Israeli War they joined in operations with the Haganah and Irgun against Arab targets for example Deir Yassin According to a compilation by Nachman Ben Yehuda Lehi was responsible for 42 assassinations more than twice as many as the Irgun and Haganah combined during the same period Of those Lehi assassinations that Ben Yehuda classified as political more than half the victims were Jews 54 Lehi also rejected the authority of the Jewish Agency for Israel and related organizations operating entirely on its own throughout nearly all of its existence Lehi prisoners captured by the British generally refused to employ lawyers in their defence The defendants would conduct their own defence and would deny the right of the military court to try them saying that in accordance with the Hague Convention they should be accorded the status of prisoners of war For the same reason Lehi prisoners refused to plead for amnesty even when it was clear that this would have spared them the death penalty 55 Moshe Barazani a Lehi member and Meir Feinstein an Irgun member took their own lives in prison with a grenade smuggled inside an orange so the British could not hang them 56 Activities and operations during World War IIWartime contacts with Italy and Nazi Germany Italy In mid 1940 Stern became convinced that the Italians were interested in the establishment of a fascist Jewish state in Palestine 57 He conducted negotiations he thought with the Italians via an intermediary Moshe Rotstein and drew up a document that became known as the Jerusalem Agreement 58 59 In exchange for Italy s recognition of and aid in obtaining Jewish sovereignty over Palestine Stern promised that Zionism would come under the aegis of Italian fascism with Haifa as its base and the Old City of Jerusalem under Vatican control except for the Jewish quarter 60 In Heller s words Stern s proposal would turn the Kingdom of Israel into a satellite of the Axis powers 61 However the intermediary Rotstein was in fact an agent of the Irgun conducting a sting operation under the direction of the Irgun intelligence leader in Haifa Israel Pritzker in cooperation with the British 62 Secret British documents about the affair were uncovered by historian Eldad Harouvi now director of the Palmach Archives and confirmed by former Irgun intelligence officer Yitzhak Berman 62 When Rotstein s role later became clear Lehi sentenced him to death and assigned Yaacov Eliav to kill him but the assassination never took place 59 63 However Pritzker was killed by Lehi in 1943 59 Nazi Germany nbsp German cover letter from 11 January 1941 attached to a description of an offer for an alliance with Nazi Germany attributed to Lehi Late in 1940 Lehi having identified a common interest between the intentions of the new German order and Jewish national aspirations proposed forming an alliance in World War II with Nazi Germany 22 The organization offered cooperation in the following terms Lehi would rebel against the British while Germany would recognize an independent Jewish state in Palestine Eretz Israel and all Jews leaving their homes in Europe by their own will or because of government injunctions could enter Palestine with no restriction of numbers 32 Late in 1940 Lehi representative Naftali Lubenchik went to Beirut to meet German official Werner Otto von Hentig The Lehi documents outlined that its rule would be authoritarian and indicated similarities between the organization and Nazis 32 Israel Eldad one of the leading members of Lehi wrote about Hitler it is not Hitler who is the hater of the kingdom of Israel and the return to Zion it is not Hitler who subjects us to the cruel fate of falling a second and a third time into Hitler s hands but the British 64 Stern also proposed recruiting 40 000 Jews from occupied Europe to invade Palestine with German support to oust the British 22 On 11 January 1941 Vice Admiral Ralf von der Marwitz the German naval attache in Turkey filed a report the Ankara document conveying an offer by Lehi to actively take part in the war on Germany s side in return for German support for the establishment of the historic Jewish state on a national and totalitarian basis bound by a treaty with the German Reich 58 65 66 According to Yellin Mor Lubenchik did not take along any written memorandum for the German representatives Had there been a need for one he would have formulated it on the spot since he was familiar with the episode of the Italian intermediary and with the numerous drafts connected with it Apparently one of von Hentig s secretaries noted down the essence of the proposal in his own words 67 According to Joseph Heller The memorandum arising from their conversation is an entirely authentic document on which the stamp of the IZL in Israel is clearly embossed 68 Von der Marwitz delivered the offer classified as secret to the German Ambassador in Turkey and on 21 January 1941 it was sent to Berlin There was never any response 69 A second attempt to contact the Nazis was made at the end of 1941 but it was even less successful 70 The emissary Yellin Mor was arrested in Syria before he could carry out his mission 71 This proposed alliance with Nazi Germany cost Lehi and Stern much support 72 The Stern Gang also had links with and support from the Vichy France Surete s Lebanese offices 73 Even as the full scale of Nazi atrocities became more evident in 1943 Lehi refused to accept Hitler as the main foe as opposed to Great Britain 74 Assassination of Lord Moyne Further information Walter Guinness 1st Baron Moyne Assassination On 6 November 1944 Lehi assassinated Lord Moyne the British Minister Resident in the Middle East in Cairo Moyne was the highest ranking British official in the region Yitzhak Shamir claimed later that Moyne was assassinated because of his support for a Middle Eastern Arab Federation and anti Semitic lectures in which Arabs were held to be racially superior to Jews 75 The assassination rocked the British government and outraged Winston Churchill the British Prime Minister The two assassins Eliyahu Bet Zuri and Eliyahu Hakim were captured and used their trial as a platform to make public their political propaganda They were both found guilty and executed In 1975 their bodies were returned to Israel with Egypt exchanging them for 20 Arab prisoners and given a state funeral 76 77 In 1982 postage stamps were issued for 20 Olei Hagardom including Bet Zouri and Hakim in a souvenir sheet called Martyrs of the struggle for Israel s independence 78 79 Post war terrorist campaign and insurgencyAs a group that never had more than a few hundred members Lehi relied on audacious but small scale operations to drive its message home They adopted the tactics of groups such as the Socialist Revolutionaries and the Combat Organization of the Polish Socialist Party in Czarist Russia 80 and the Irish Republican Army To this end Lehi conducted small scale operations such as individual assassinations of British officials notable targets included Lord Moyne CID detectives and Jewish collaborators and random shootings against soldiers and police officers 81 Another strategy adopted in 1946 was to send bombs in the mail to British politicians Other actions included sabotaging infrastructure targets bridges railroads telephone and telegraph lines and oil refineries as well as the use of vehicle bombs against British military police and administrative targets Lehi financed its operations from private donations extortion and bank robbery Its campaign of violence lasted from 1944 to 1948 Initially conducted together with the Irgun it included a six month suspension to avoid being targeted by the Haganah during the Hunting Season and later operated jointly with the Haganah and Irgun under the Jewish Resistance Movement After the Jewish Resistance Movement was dissolved it operated independently as part of the general Jewish insurgency in Palestine citation needed Tel Aviv car park raid On 25 April 1946 a Lehi unit attacked a car park in Tel Aviv occupied by the British 6th Airborne Division Under a barrage of heavy covering fire Lehi fighters broke into the car park shot soldiers they encountered at close range stole rifles from arms racks laid mines to cover the retreat and withdrew Seven soldiers were killed in the attack which caused widespread outrage among the British security forces in Palestine It resulted in retaliatory anti Jewish violence by British troops and a punitive curfew imposed on Tel Aviv s roads and the closure of places of entertainment in the city by the British Army 81 British police station in Haifa On 12 January 1947 Lehi members drove a truckload of explosives into a British police station in Haifa killing four and injuring 140 in what has been called the world s first true truck bomb 82 Operations in Europe nbsp Betty Knouth Tel Aviv 24 August 1948 Following the bombing of the British embassy in Rome in October 1946 a series of operations against targets in the United Kingdom were launched On 7 March 1947 Lehi s only successful operation in Britain was carried out when a Lehi bomb severely damaged the British Colonial Club a London recreational facility for soldiers and students from Britain s colonies in Africa and the West Indies 83 On 15 April 1947 a bomb consisting of twenty four sticks of explosives was planted in the Colonial Office Whitehall It failed to explode due to a fault in the timer Five weeks later on 22 May five alleged Lehi members were arrested in Paris with bomb making material including explosives of the same type as found in London On 2 June two Lehi members Betty Knouth and Yaakov Levstein were arrested crossing from Belgium to France Envelopes addressed to British officials with detonators batteries and a time fuse were found in one of Knouth s suitcases Knouth was sentenced to a year in prison Levstein to eight months The British Security Services identified Knouth as the person who planted the bomb in the Colonial Office Shortly after their arrest 21 letter bombs addressed to senior British figures were intercepted The letters had been posted in Italy The intended recipients included Bevin Attlee Churchill and Eden 84 Knouth aka Gilberte Elizabeth Lazarus Levstein was travelling as Jacob Elias his fingerprints connected him to the deaths of several Palestine Policemen as well as an attempt on the life of the British High Commissioner In 1973 Margaret Truman wrote that letter bombs were also posted to her father U S President Harry S Truman in 1947 85 Former Lehi leader Yellin Mor admitted that letter bombs had been sent to British targets but denied that any had been sent to Truman 85 86 Death threat against Hugh Trevor Roper Shortly after the 1947 publication of The Last Days of Hitler Lehi issued a death threat against the author Hugh Trevor Roper for his portrayal of Hitler feeling that Trevor Roper had attempted to exonerate the German populace from responsibility 87 Cairo Haifa train bombings Main article Cairo Haifa train bombings 1948 During the lead up to the 1948 Arab Israeli War Lehi mined the Cairo Haifa train several times On 29 February 1948 Lehi mined the train north of Rehovot killing 28 British soldiers and wounding 35 On 31 March Lehi mined the train near Binyamina killing 40 civilians and wounding 60 Attempted Nablus terror attack Shlomo Sand writes that as a method of applying pressure on Arab villagers to abandon their settlements Lehi planned a terror attack on Nablus and its Arab city headquarters Lehi fighter Elisha Ibzov Avraham Cohen was captured with a truck filled with explosives on his way to the city Lehi fighters in return abducted four adult villagers and youth from al Sheikh Muwannis with no connection to Ibzov s capture and threatened to kill them As rumours spread that they were already murdered panic set out in the villagers and the settlement became increasingly abandoned despite the eventual release of the hostages 88 Deir Yassin massacre Main article Deir Yassin massacre One of the most widely known acts of Lehi was the attack on the Palestinian Arab village of Deir Yassin In the months before the British evacuation from Palestine the Arab League sponsored Arab Liberation Army ALA occupied several strategic points along the road between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv cutting off supplies to the Jewish part of Jerusalem One of these points was Deir Yassin By March 1948 the road was cut off and Jewish Jerusalem was under siege The Haganah launched Operation Nachshon to break the siege On 6 April the Haganah attacked al Qastal a village two kilometres north of Deir Yassin also overlooking the Jerusalem Tel Aviv road 89 Then on 9 April 1948 about 120 Lehi and Irgun fighters acting in cooperation with the Haganah attacked and captured Deir Yassin The attack was at night the fighting was confused and many civilian inhabitants of the village were killed 90 This action had great consequences for the war and remains a cause celebre for Palestinians ever since Exactly what happened has never been established clearly The Arab League reported a great massacre 254 killed with rape and lurid mutilations Israeli investigations claimed the actual number of dead was between 100 and 120 and there were no mass rapes but most of the dead were civilians and admitted some were killed deliberately Lehi and Irgun both denied an organized massacre Accounts by Lehi veterans such as Ezra Yakhin note that many of the attackers were killed or wounded assert that Arabs fired from every building and that Iraqi and Syrian soldiers were among the dead and even that some Arab fighters dressed as women 91 However Jewish authorities including Haganah the Chief Rabbinate the Jewish Agency and David Ben Gurion also condemned the attack lending credence to the charge of massacre 92 The Jewish Agency even sent a letter of condemnation apology and condolence to King Abdullah I of Jordan 93 nbsp Female Lehi fighters in 1948 Both the Arab reports and Jewish responses had hidden motives the Arab leaders wanted to encourage Palestinian Arabs to fight rather than surrender to discredit the Zionists with international opinion and to increase popular support in their countries for an invasion of Palestine The Jewish leaders wanted to discredit Irgun and Lehi Ironically the Arab reports backfired in one respect frightened Palestinian Arabs did not surrender but did not fight either they fled allowing Israel to gain much territory with little fighting and also without absorbing many Arabs 94 Lehi similarly interpreted events at Deir Yassin as turning the tide of war in favour of the Jews Lehi leader Israel Eldad later wrote in his memoirs from the underground period that without Deir Yassin the State of Israel could never have been established 95 96 The Deir Yassin story did not much sway international opinion citation needed It did increase not only support but pressure on Arab governments to intervene Abdullah of Jordan was now compelled to join the invasion of Palestine after Israel s declaration of independence on 14 May citation needed Assassination of Count Folke Bernadotte nbsp UN mediator Count Folke Bernadotte was assassinated by Lehi in Jerusalem in 1948 Further information Folke Bernadotte Assassination Although Lehi had stopped operating nationally after May 1948 the group continued to function in Jerusalem On 17 September 1948 Lehi assassinated UN mediator Count Folke Bernadotte The assassination was directed by Yehoshua Zettler and carried out by a four man team led by Meshulam Makover The fatal shots were fired by Yehoshua Cohen The Security Council described the assassination as a cowardly act which appears to have been committed by a criminal group of terrorists 97 Three days after the assassination the Israeli government passed the Ordinance to Prevent Terrorism and declared Lehi to be a terrorist organization 98 99 Many Lehi members were arrested including leaders Nathan Yellin Mor and Matityahu Shmulevitz who were arrested on 29 September 98 Eldad and Shamir managed to escape arrest 98 Yellin Mor and Schmulevitz were charged with leadership of a terrorist organization and on 10 February 1949 were sentenced to 8 years and 5 years imprisonment respectively 100 101 102 However the State Temporary Council soon announced a general amnesty for Lehi members and they were released 100 103 The Lehi trial and the Fighters Party nbsp Declaration of Lehi as a terrorist organization September 20 1948 104 Between 5 December 1948 and 25 January 1949 Yellin Mor and Shmuelevitz were tried in a military court on terrorism charges 105 The prosecution accused them of the murder of Bernadotte though they were not specifically charged with it 105 Senior officers of the IDF including Yisrael Galili and David Shaltiel told the court that Lehi had hindered rather than assisted the fight against the British and the Arabs 105 While the trial was in progress some of the Lehi leadership founded a USSR leaning political party called the Fighters List with Yellin Mor as its leader 106 The party took part in the elections in January 1949 with Yellin Mor and Shmuelevitz heading the list 106 The trial verdict was handed down on 10 February soon after the Fighters List had won one seat with only 1 2 of the vote 106 Yellin Mor was sentenced to 8 years and Shmuelevitz to 5 years imprisonment but the court agreed to remit the sentences if the prisoners agreed to a list of conditions 106 The Provisional State Council then authorised their pardon 106 The party disbanded after several years and did not contest the 1951 elections 107 In 1956 some Lehi veterans established the Semitic Action movement which sought the creation of a regional federation encompassing Israel and its Arab neighbours 40 41 on the basis of an anti colonialist alliance with other indigenous inhabitants of the Middle East 42 Not all Lehi alumni gave up political violence after independence former members were involved in the activities of the Kingdom of Israel militant group the 1957 assassination of Rudolf Kastner and likely the 1952 attempted assassination of David Zvi Pinkas 108 109 110 111 PublicationsLehi produced a range of publications containing unabashedly racist literature referring to Jews as a master race and Arabs as a slave race 47 48 Prominent publication included Hamaas a weekly publication 112 as well as the monthly He Khazit 21 daily Mivrak and BaMahteret Service ribbon nbsp The Lehi ribbon In 1980 Israel instituted the Lehi ribbon red black grey pale blue and white which is awarded to former members of the Lehi underground who wished to carry it for military service towards the establishment of the State of Israel 30 Unknown Soldiers anthemThe words and music of a song Unknown Soldiers also translated Anonymous Soldiers were written by Avraham Stern in 1932 during the early days of the Irgun It became the Irgun s anthem until the split with Lehi in 1940 after which it became the Lehi anthem 113 114 Prominent members of Lehi nbsp Geulah Cohen announcer of the Lehi underground radio station 1948 A number of Lehi s members went on to play important roles in Israel s public life Shaltiel Ben Yair explosives expert organised together with Amos Kenan the assassination attempt against the Transportation Minister in 1952 115 Eliyahu Bet Zuri executed in 1945 for his part in the assassination of Lord Moyne Geula Cohen member of the Knesset Israel Eldad leader in the Israeli national camp Boaz Evron left wing journalist Maxim Ghilan Israeli journalist author and peace activist Eliyahu Giladi killed in 1943 by his Lehi comrades for arguing in favour of committing acts considered too extreme even by them Uri Zvi Greenberg Israeli poet and journalist Eliyahu Hakim executed in 1945 for assassinating Lord Moyne Amos Kenan writer Baruch Korff Orthodox rabbi Yitzhak Shamir Israeli prime minister 1983 1984 and 1986 1992 Avraham Stern leader and ideologist Shimon Tzabar author painter mycologist and anti Zionist activist Yaakov Yardaur lawyer and advocate for equal rights for the Arab citizens of Israel Natan Yellin Mor member of the Knesset 1949 1951 leftist advocate of peace with Arabs 116 See alsoList of Lehi operations List of Lehi members Jewish insurgency in Palestine Roy Farran letter bomb incidentReferencesNotes After Stern s murder in February 1942 2 Nathan Yellin Mor became a member of the Lehi s guiding triumvirate with Israel Eldad as chief of Lehi s propaganda and Yitzhak Shamir 3 as chief of operations Hamaas was a weekly publication of the Lehi an armed Zionist militant group in Mandatory Palestine 4 5 Other publications by the Lehi included the daily Mivrak the monthly HeHahzit and BaMahteret A British police sergeant T G Martin who had identified and arrested Shamir was assassinated near his Haifa home Citations סמל לח י Archived from the original on 18 May 2020 Retrieved 12 September 2019 Nachman Ben Yehuda The Masada Myth Collective Memory and Mythmaking in Israel Madison Wisconsin University Press 1995 pp 322 Yitzhak Shamir Israel s modest hardline ex PM dies at 96 The Times of Israel Khalidi 1971 p 606 Cmd 6873 Shapira Anita 1999 Land and Power The Zionist Resort to Force 1881 1948 Stanford University Press p 347 ISBN 0804737762 The Stern Gang Ideology Politics and Terror 1940 1949 Joseph Heller page 114 Above all in the summer of 1943 Lehi had still not broken free from the doctrine of persecutor and enemy Even after the extent of the Holocaust was revealed Lehi refused to depict Hitler rather than England as the main foe Heller Joseph 1995 The Zionist Right and National Liberation From Jabotinsky to Avraham Stern In Wistrich Robert S Ohana David eds The Shaping of Israeli Identity Myth Memory and Trauma Routledge p 88 ISBN 978 0 714 64641 1 Sasson Sofer Zionism and the Foundations of Israeli Diplomacy Cambridge University Press 2007 pp 254 Lehi s leader Stern stated that he incorporated elements of both the left and the right This group was known to its friends as LEHI and to its enemies as the Stern Gang Blumberg Arnold History of Israel Westport CT Greenwood Publishing Group Incorporated 1998 p 106 calling themselves Lohamei Herut Yisrael LHI or less generously the Stern Gang Lozowick Yaacov Right to Exist A Moral Defense of Israel s Wars Westminster MD Doubleday Publishing 2003 p 78 It ended in a split with Stern leading his own group out of the Irgun This was known pejoratively by the British as the Stern Gang later as Lehi Shindler Colin Triumph of Military Zionism Nationalism and the Origins of the Israeli Right London GBR I B Tauris amp Company Limited 2005 p 218 Known by their Hebrew acronym as LEHI they were more familiar not to say notorious to the rest of the world as the Stern Gang a ferociously effective and murderous terrorist group fighting to end British rule in Palestine and establish a Jewish state Cesarani David Major Faran s Hat Murder Scandal and Britain s War Against Jewish Terrorism 1945 1948 London Vintage Books 2010 p 01 a b Arie Perliger William L Eubank Middle Eastern Terrorism 2006 p 37 Lehi viewed acts of terrorism as legitimate tools in the realization of the vision of the Jewish nation and a necessary condition for national liberation Eliahu Amikam Stern Gang Leader The Washington Post 16 August 1995 pp D5 Archived from the original Free Preview full article requires payment on 18 March 2009 Retrieved 18 November 2008 The AMIKAM Stern Gang known in Hebrew as Lehi an acronym for Israel Freedom Fighters was the most militant of the pre state underground groups Definition of Stern Gang in English Oxford Dictionaries Archived from the original on 3 December 2013 Retrieved 30 November 2013 a b c Laqueur Walter 2003 1972 Jabotinsky and Revisionism A History of Zionism Google Book Search 3rd ed London Tauris Parke Paperbacks p 377 ISBN 978 1 86064 932 5 OCLC 249640859 Retrieved 18 November 2008 a b c Nachman Ben Yehuda The Masada Myth Collective Memory and Mythmaking in Israel Madison Wisconsin University Press 1995 pp 322 a b Calder Walton 2008 British Intelligence and the Mandate of Palestine Threats to British national security immediately after the Second World War Intelligence and National Security 23 4 435 462 doi 10 1080 02684520802293049 S2CID 154775965 Jean E Rosenfeld Terrorism Identity and Legitimacy The Four Waves Theory and Political Violence 2010 p 161 n 7 Lehi was the last group to identify itself as a terrorist one a b c d He Khazit underground publication of Lehi Issue 2 August 1943 No author is stated as was usual for this publication Translated from original For a discussion of this article see Heller p 115 a b c d e Sasson Sofer Zionism and the Foundations of Israeli Diplomacy Cambridge University Press 2007 pp 253 254 Leslie Stein The Hope Fulfilled The Rise of Modern Israel Greenwood Publishing Group 2003 pp 237 238 Robert S Wistrich David Ohana The Shaping of Israeli Identity Myth Memory and Trauma Issue 3 London Portland Oregon Frank Cass amp Co Ltd 1995 pp 88 Joseph Heller The Stern Gang Ideology Politics and Terror 1940 1949 pp 8 Ami Pedahzur The Israeli Response to Jewish Extremism and Violence Defending Democracy Manchester University Press Manchester and New York 2002 p 77 Gabriel Ben Dor and Ami Pedahzur Jewish Self Defence and Terrorist Groups Prior to the Establishment of the State of Israel Roots and Traditions in Ami Pedahzur Leonard Weinberg eds Religious Fundamentalism and Political Extremism Frank Cass 2004 pp 94 120 pp 115 116 one final terrorist act Ralph Bunche report on assassination of UN mediator Archived 7 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine 27 September 1948 notorious terrorists long known as the Stern group a b Ami Pedahzur Arie Perliger Jewish Terrorism in Israel Columbia University Press 2011 p 28 a b Awards for military service towards the establishment of the State of Israel Israeli Ministry of Defense Archived from the original on 17 April 2006 Retrieved 17 September 2018 The ribbon is awarded to All those who were members of the LEHI underground for a term of six months or more in the period dating from 1940 up until the establishment of the State of Israel Presentation of the ribbon began in 1980 a b c Colin Shindler 1995 The Land beyond Promise Israel Likud and the Zionist dream I B Tauris p 22 ISBN 978 1 86064 774 1 a b c The Jews A Contrary People Yehuda Bauer pp 77 78 Colin Shindler The Land Beyond Promise Israel Likud and the Zionist Dream I B Tauris 2002 p 25 Stern perceived Hitler as the latest in a long line of anti Semites who could be won over if the common interest was identified In Palestine at that time Stern was not alone in regarding Hitler as a persecutor and not an exterminator The dream of attaining a Jewish state dominated Zionist thinking and the very idea of the Final Solution was unthinkable in 1940 Stern believed that Hitler wanted Germany to be judenrein through emigration Ben Ami Eliezer Yehezkel How was the Lehi symbol born Freedom Fighters of Israel Heritage Association FFI LEHI Heller p 112 quoted in Perliger and Weinberg 2003 pp 106 107 a b Perliger and Weinberg 2003 p 107 Bethell Nicholas The Palestine Triangle The Struggle between British Jews and the Arabs 1935 48 1979 p 278 a b Amichal p 316 a copy on the web exists here a b Israel Eldad The First Tithe p 84 a b c Diamond James S 1990 We Are Not One A Post Zionist Perspective Tikkun 5 2 107 a b c Hattis Rolef Susan Yellin Mor Friedman Nathan Encyclopaedia Judaica a b c Beinin Joel 1998 The Dispersion of Egyptian Jewry Culture Politics and the Formation of a Modern Diaspora University of California Press p 166 Heller 1995 p 70 Perliger and Weinberg 2003 p 108 The Origins of Israel 1882 1948 A Documentary History by Eran Kaplan Derek J Penslar 2011 p 274 state that Lehi s ideology was a strange brew of fascism and communism racism and universalism Amichal 77 a b Jabotinsky and the Revisionist Movement 1925 1948 Yaacov Shavit Routledge 1st ed 1988 p 231 Articles in contemporary Lehi publications talked about the Jewish nation as a heroic people even a master race in contrast to the Arabs who were considered a nation of slaves a b Sasha Polakow Suransky The Unspoken Alliance Israel s Secret Relationship with Apartheid South Africa p 107 Religious Fundamentalism and Political Extremism edited by Leonard Weinberg Ami Pedahzur p 112 Routledge 2008 Yaredor Lederman Dr Yaacov Rashdal Freedom Fighters of Israel Heritage Association Retrieved 18 February 2024 a b in Polish Jakub Mielnik Jak polacy stworzyli Izrael Archived 7 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine Focus pl Historia 5 May 2008 a b Perliger and Weinberg 2003 p 109 Boyer Bell 1996 p 71 N Ben Yehuda Political Assassinations by Jews State University of New York 1993 p 397 The Stern Gang Ideology Politics and Terror 1940 1949 Joseph Halper Routledge p 129 Masada Myth Collective Memory and Mythmaking in Israel Nachman Ben Yehuda University of Wisconsin Press p 143 Heller 1995 p 86 a b Heller 1995 p 86 a b c Nachman Ben Yehuda 2012 Political Assassinations by Jews A Rhetorical Device for Justice SUNY Press pp 147 150 185 188 ISBN 978 0791496374 Heller 1995 p 86 Heller 1995 pp 78 79 a b Yossi Melman 3 June 2011 Undermining the underground Haaretz Yaacov Eliav 1984 Wanted Shengold Publishers pp 144 145 Political Theologies in the Holy Land Israeli Messianism and its Critics David Ohana David Yisraeli The Palestine Problem in German Politics 1889 1945 Bar Ilan University Ramat Gan Israel 1974 Verified web copies German English Also see Otto von Hentig Mein Leben Goettingen 1962 pp 338 339 Lenni Brenner Zionism in the Age of the Dictators 2004 p 234 Natan Yellin Mor manuscript in English quoted by Lenni Brenner 51 Documents Barricade Books 2002 p 308 Heller 1985 p 85 A Meeting in Beirut Habib Canaan Haaretz musaf 27 March 1970 Heller 1995 p 91 Heller 1995 p 91 Stern Gang The Oxford Companion to World War II Ed I C B Dear and M R D Foot Oxford University Press 2001 James Barr A Line in the Sand Britain France and the struggle that shaped the Middle East Simon and Schuster 2011 p 255 The Stern Gang Ideology Politics and Terror 1940 1949 Joseph Heller p 114 Above all in the summer of 1943 Lehi had still not broken free from the doctrine of persecutor and enemy Even after the extent of the Holocaust was revealed Lehi refused to depict Hitler rather than England as the main foe Yitzhak Shamir Why the Lehi Assassinated Lord Moyne Nation 32 119 1995 pp 333 337 Hebrew cited in Perliger and Weinberg 2003 p 111 Israel honours British minister s assassins The Times 26 June 1975 p 1 Israel Will Exchange 20 Jailed Terrorists for Remains of Sternists Hanged in Cairo in 1945 Jewish Telegraphic Agency 20 March 2015 Retrieved 12 April 2024 הרוגי מלכות גליונית זכרון התאחדות בולאי ישראל Archived from the original on 18 April 2012 Retrieved 1 August 2007 detailed Archived from the original on 18 April 2012 Retrieved 1 August 2007 Iviansky 1986 72 73 a b Bell Bowyer J Terror out of Zion 1976 Law Randall David 2009 Terrorism A History Cambridge MA Polity Press p 186 Cesarani David Major Farran s Hat The Untold Story of the Struggle to Establish the Jewish State 2009 Andrew Christopher 2009 The Defence of the Realm The Authorized History of MI5 Allen Lane ISBN 978 0 7139 9885 6 p 922 Note 39 pp 355 359 a b Nachman Ben Yehuda 2012 Political Assassinations by Jews A Rhetorical Device for Justice SUNY Press p 331 ISBN 978 0791496374 Ira Smith and Joe Alex Morris Dear Mr President Julian Messner Inc New York 1947 p 230 writes that the same kind of terrorist letters which Lehi claimed responsibility for sending to British politicians had been detected in mail to the White House Rosenbaum Ron Explaining Hitler The Search for the Origins of His Evil p 63 Sand Shlomo The Invention of the Land of Israel From Holy Land to Homeland p 268 Silver 1984 p 91 Yoav Gelber Palestine 1948 Appendix II Archived 27 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine Ezra Yakhin 1992 Elnakam pp 261 272 Yoav Gelber 2006 Palestine 1948 p 317 Benny Morris 2003 The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited p 239 Benny Morris 2003 The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited p 239 the most important immediate effect of the atrocity and the media campaign that followed it was how one started to report the fear felt in Palestinian Arab towns and villages and later the panicked fleeing from them Israel Eldad 1950 The First Tithe pp 334 335 Heller 1995 p 209 UNSC S RES 57 1948 of 18 September 1948 Archived from the original on 3 December 2013 Retrieved 30 November 2013 resolution 57 18 September 1948 a b c Sprinzak p 45 Ami Pedahzur The Israeli Response to Jewish Terrorism and Violence Defending Democracy Manchester University Press Manchester and New York 2002 p 77 a b Sprinzak p 47 Heller p 265 LHY leaders get 8 5 years Palestine Post 11 February 1949 Heller p 267 For the purposes of Regulation 8 of the Emergency Regulations Prevention of Terrorism 5748 1948 the Provisional Government has decided to declare that the group of people known as Freedom Fighters of Israel and the members of the so called Homeland Front are terrorist organizations By order of the provisional administration Ze ev Sharaf Government Secretary a b c Heller 1995 pp 261 266 a b c d e Heller 1995 pp 265 267 Heller 1995 pp 279 284 Baram Daphna 10 September 2009 Amos Keinan Controversial Israeli journalist writer and artist The Independent Retrieved 8 November 2009 Melman Yossi 13 August 2009 Time bomb Haaretz Retrieved 8 September 2009 Segev Tom Arlen Neal Weinstein 1998 1949 The First Israelis Macmillan pp 230 231 ISBN 0 02 929180 1 Pedahzur Ami and Arie Perliger 2009 Jewish Terrorism in Israel Columbia University Press pp 31 33 Khalidi Walid 1971 From Haven to Conquest Readings in Zionism and the Palestine Problem Until 1948 Institute of Palestine Studies p 606 ISBN 0 88728 155 9 Zev Golan 2011 Stern The Man and his Gang Yair Publishing pp 18 19 81 s Unknown soldiers song Melman Yossi 13 August 2009 Inside Intel Time Bomb Haaretz Washington Report on Middle East Affairs December 1986 Portrait of a Mideast Terrorist Bibliography in Hebrew Amichal Yevin Ada 1986 In purple the life of Yair Abraham Stern Tel Aviv Hadar Publishing House Bell J Bowyer 1977 Terror Out of Zion Irgun Zvai Leumi Lehi and the Palestine Underground 1929 1949 Avon ISBN 0 380 39396 4 Ben Yehuda Nachman 1998 Political Violence Political Assassinations as a Quest for Justice In Robert R Friedmann Ed Crime and Criminal Justice in Israel Assessing The Knowledge base Toward The Twenty first Century pp 139 184 SUNY Press ISBN 0 7914 3713 2 Golan Zev 2003 Free Jerusalem Heroes Heroines and Rogues Who Created the State of Israel Devora ISBN 1 930143 54 0 Golan Zev 2011 Stern The Man and His Gang Yair ISBN 978 965 91724 0 5 Heller J 1995 The Stern Gang Frank Cass ISBN 0 7146 4558 3 Hyams Edward 1975 Terrorists and Terrorism ISBN 978 046 00786 3 4 Iviansky Z 1986 Lechi s Share in the Struggle for Israel s Liberation in Ely Tavin and Yonah Alexander Ed Terrorists or Freedom Fighters Fairfax Va HERO Books Katz E 1987 LECHI Fighters for the freedom of Israel Tel Aviv Yair Publishers Lustick Ian S 1994 Terrorism in the Arab Israeli Conflict Targets and Audiences In Crenshaw Martha ed Terrorism in Context pp 514 552 University Park PA Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 0 271 01015 0 Marton K 1994 A Death in Jerusalem Pantheon ISBN 0 679 42083 5 Bernadotte assassination Munson Henry 2005 Religion and violence Religion 35 4 223 246 doi 10 1016 j religion 2005 10 006 S2CID 170838550 Perliger Arie Weinberg Leonard 2003 Jewish Self Defence and Terrorist Groups Prior to the Establishment of the State of Israel Roots and Traditions Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions 4 3 91 118 doi 10 1080 14690760412331326250 S2CID 143575192 Ehud Sprinzak 1999 Brother against Brother The Free Press ISBN 0 684 85344 2 External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lehi group British wanted poster from 1940s Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lehi militant group amp oldid 1224852392, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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