Remember Hevron 77 Years Later
By
Shelomo Alfassa /August 13, 2006
In
yet another solemn day of mourning sorrowfully integrated into
the Jewish calendar, we remember August 13, 2006 as the day
77 years ago that rampaging Arab mobs went on the offensive
against Jewish civilians in Hevron and throughout the holy land.
On this day, Arabs, under direction of their Islamic religious
leaders (muftis), initiated attacks against the Jews
with a most savage zeal. Arabs not only murdered Jews, but they
utilized ghastly methods of torture, including rape, castration
and limb amputations. They wielded axes, knives, and other weapons
upon a community that was defenseless. They assailed Jews throughout
the holy land, from Hevron to Safed, killing 67 and maiming
and torturing hundreds.
Scores
of Jews were murdered during this gory rampage. In Hevron, the
Islamic murderers killed Hakham Hanokh Hasson, the chief Sephardic
rabbi, and his entire family. The prominent Hakham, Yosef Castel,
locked himself in his home, but Arab mobs broke in-murdering
him and his family-then setting the home ablaze.
The
last Sephardic rabbi in Hevron, subsequent to the 1929 pogroms,
was Hakham Meir Franco, who had lost his son-in-law in the murderous
frenzy. Shortly after the massacre, Hakham Franco, with a number
of other rabbis, produced a small brochure in Ladino (Judeo-Spanish),
the language of the community. It was an appeal to fellow Sephardic
Jews throughout the world to assist financially in the rebuilding
of the community of Hevron. The brochure detailed the destruction,
and contained pictures of the synagogues and holy places before
the Arab destruction. It educated the reader about the holy
city where their forefathers were buried and about the ancient
Jewish community. The Spanish language volume expressed urgency
for help, communicating that the community desperately needed
funds for rebuilding. [We scanned and translated it online
www.sephardiccouncil.org/heb.html]
Partially
because the British had no great love for Jews, as well as the
fact the British did not want to provoke the Arab world, the
British government was unwilling to subsidize the costs for
a large police force in Palestine to control the Arabs. In addition,
the British adamantly did not allow any independent legal Jewish
self-defense force. Thus, the Jews were disarmed and had virtually
no protection against rioting Arabs.
Later,
in a bizarre twist of fate, the British helped the Arabs become
the undeserving masters over the Jews. The British essentially
sided with the Arabs and issued a set of discriminatory regulations.
One restricted Jewish rights to pray at the Western Wall in
Jerusalem. Pierre Van Paassen an eyewitness recorded in his
memoirs: "On the same day of the Hevron massacre, the Arabs
had rioted in Jerusalem, crying, 'Death to the Jews! The government
is with us!'
The
riots of 1929 were investigated internationally and reported
in the Hope Report. According to the report, the riots were
instigated by none other than Amin al-Husseini, the same man
who, one decade later, would be working hand-in-hand with Adolph
Hitler to murder the Jews in Arab countries and the Balkans
during the Holocaust. The Shaw Commission would later report
(in March 1930) that the violence occurred due to Racial
animosity on the part of the Arabs
The
Jewish community in Hevron was able to rebuild, and indeed they
did. Progress was quickly made, and a letter issued in 1931
from the World Sephardic Confederation points this out, After
20 months of morning and frustration, the victims of the land
began to return to their national lands and to live again in
the Jewish settlement
Encouraged and protected by the Communal
Council of Hebron, a few dozen families have already returned
to their homes
Today 125 people live in the city and many
others are being readied to return in order to make the Jewish
settlement grow that has never ceased to be.
Avraham,
the father of the Jewish people, selected Hebron as the first
home for the Jewish people. There, Avraham purchased the historic
Cave of the Makhpela. Other than Jerusalem, Hebron is indeed
the holiest location for the Jewish people. Today, Hevron boasts
more than 600 Jews living in a strong community. The city is
bordered to the east by the large settlement of Kiryat Arba
that has a population of 6,000. While 1929 stands out as a dark
year in the dark history of the Jewish people, today, attacks
persist against Jews in modern-day Hevron as the norm, not the
exception.
###