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January
23: The British apprehend the illegal immigrant ship
"Hilda".
February
13: The "Sakaria", the Betar illegal immigrant
ship, arrives in Haifa from Romania. All 2,400 passengers are
arrested by the British.
September
14: The mobilization of Jewish soldiers is carried
out by the Jewish Agency. The first quota of 400 allotted to
the Jews is filled within 24 hours. The mobilization effort
expands with time, and by September 1942 15 battalions will
be set up. Though they constitute part of the infantry force,
they are employed for years in guard duty and service jobs only.
The request of the Jews to be assigned to combat is not accepted
at this stage.
November:
Two illegal immigrant ships, "Pacific" and "Milos",
arrive at Haifa at the start of the month, carrying some 1,800
Jewish escapees from Europe.
November
25: The Haganah sabotages the vessel "Patria"
anchored in Haifa port, in which the authorities assemble 1,900
illegal immigrants, with the intention to expel them to Mauritius.
The ship sinks rapidly and 216 of the immigrants die. The government
agrees to permit the survivors of the disaster to remain in
Palestine, but despite this, 1,645 illegal immigrants from the
vessel "Atlantic", whom the British have no time to
embark on the "Patria" are evacuated to Mauritius.
December
14: An illegal immigration ship, the "Salvador"
sinks off the Turkish shore en route to Palestine, with 103
of 180 passengers lost at sea.
Some
10,600 immigrants arrive in Palestine in 1940, over half of
them illegal.
Seven
new settlements are established, for of them in the Galilee.
Chairman
of the Jewish Agency Executive: David
Ben Gurion.
Treasurer
of the Jewish Agency: Eliezer
Kaplan.
Chairman
Youth Aliyah Department: Henrietta
Szold.
Chairman
of the Immigration Department: Eliahu Dobkin and Moshe Shapira. |
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January
22: Haganah weapons are discovered at the Ben
Shemen youth village. Eleven persons are arrested, including
the head of the village, Dr. Siegfried Lehmann.
February
28: Ordinances are published restricting the sale and
lease of Arab lands to Jews: The Land Transfer Regulations in
accordance with the White
Paper. The Yishuv responds with protests and demonstrations.
March
13: The underground Haganah radio "Kol Israel"
starts broadcasting.
April
22: The director of the Ben
Shemen youth village and seven teachers and employees are
sentenced to 3 - 7 years imprisonment.
June:
The threat of war in Palestine grows with the surrender of France
to Germany and the alliance of Italy with Germany. Syria and
Lebanon are now reigned by French forces loyal to the pro-Nazi
Vichy
government.
June
18: Members of the Etzel
command who were imprisoned in summer 1939 are released.
June
19: Death of Zalman David Levontin (1856-1940), one
of the first of the Hovevei Zion group and one of the founders
of Rishon LeZion and Yesod Hamaaleh. In 1903, Levontin founded
the Anglo Palestine Bank in Jaffa and acted as its manager until
1924.
June
26: A group of officers under the command of Avraham
Stern secede from Etzel
and set up a separate organization called Lehi.
July
5: The British rescind the demand that the Haganah
turn over its weapons.
July
15 and 24: Haifa is bombed by Italian aircraft.
August
4: Death of Zeev
Jabotinsky.
August
18: Violent confrontation between Haganah and Etzel
in Herzliyah.
September
9: The Italian aircraft bomb Tel Aviv. Over 100 residents
are wounded.
September
13: The Italian army crosses into Egypt from Lebanon.
September
14: The establishment of a Palestinian Regiment consisting
of separate Jewish and Arab infantry, is announced.
September
16: Lehi members rob the Anglo-Palestine Bank of thousands
of pounds to subsidize their activities.
September
21: Haifa is bombed again by Italian aircraft.
"Shai", the intelligence service of the Haganah is
established.
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Nazi
Germany and World War II in 1940.
January:
The Germans establish a labor camp for Jews at Belzec.
February:
The Lodz
ghetto is officially founded. In April, the ghetto will
be closed off from the rest of the city.
April:
The Nazis begin with the construction of a wall to enclose the
future Warsaw ghetto.
August:
The Nazis begin expelling the 80.000 Jews of Cracow and other
Polish towns.
Romania
promulgates anti-Jewish laws.
September:
The German occupiers extend the Nürnberg Laws to the 4.000
Jews of Luxembourg.
Franz
Rademacher drafts detailed plans for transferring Jews to
Madagascar.
The
British government agrees to the formation of the Jewish Division
on the same basis as the Polish and Czech exile armies.
"Jud
Süss", a Nazi propaganda film filled with hatred against
Jews, begins playing. (See 1925,
Jewish history and culture).
October:
The Warsaw
Ghetto is established. In November, the ghetto will officially
declared in existence and the 400.000 jews are forbidden to
move outside its boundaries.
The
Nazis deport more than 6.500 German Jews from the Rhineland to
internment camps in France.
A
second Nazi propaganda film against Jews, "Der ewige Jude"
- "The Eternal Jew" is launched.
The
YIVO Institute
moves from Vilna to New York.
Arthur
Koestler (1905-1983), Hungarian born writer and journalist,
writes "Darkness at Noon".
Charles
Chaplin directs "The
Great Dictator", a parody of Adolf Hitler that also satirizes
Mussolini. The movie discusses antisemitic activities and centers
around mistaken identities. |