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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › HittinHittin - Wikipedia

    The village was ruled by the Ottoman Empire from the 16th century until the end of World War I, when Palestine became part of the British Mandate for Palestine. On July 17 1948, the village was occupied by Israel, after its residents fled out of their homes because of Nazareth's occupation. in later years, the Moshavs Arbel and Kfar Zeitim were ...

  2. When the British Mandate of Palestine ended on 14 May 1948, and with the Declaration of the Establishment of the State of Israel, the surrounding Arab states—Egypt, Transjordan, Iraq and Syria—invaded what had just ceased to be Mandatory Palestine, and immediately attacked Israeli forces and several Jewish settlements.

    • Mandatory Palestine
  3. October 27–28, 1933. British police. 4. 4 Palestinian rioters killed, 1 policeman stabbed, 3 Palestinian rioters wounded, 5 Jewish civilians injured by rioters, 4 of them seriously. Jaffa riots (April 1936) April 19–20, 1936. Arabs. 21. 9 Jews killed, 40 Jews wounded (11 critically) in Arab attack in Jaffa.

  4. The next attack was mounted by the Sheva' (Seventh) Brigade after the first truce ended, during Operation Dekel. Villagers told Nazzal that when Nazareth fell (on 16 July), some twenty-five to thirty Arab Liberation Army soldiers stationed at Hittin began to withdraw.

  5. Sep 4, 2015 · The Palestine police picked up the dumped bodies of SNS assassinations in the south of the country, suggesting a zone of squad operations stretching beyond Galilee, or another ‘dirty war’ in southern Palestine.

    • Matthew Hughes
    • 2015
  6. Oct 9, 2023 · The Israeli-Palestinian conflict dates back more than a century, with flashpoints building from the United Nations’ 1947 initial UN Partition Plan to the 1973 Yom Kippur War, to the recent...

  7. Jun 29, 2021 · HUMAN SHIELDS, THE MILITARIZATION OF THE MANDATE, AND PALESTINIAN RACIALIZATION. The racialization and dehumanization of the Palestinians during the counterinsurgency in Palestine have often been dismissed or passed over in the scholarship on the Great Revolt.

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