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1938 in Mandatory Palestine

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1938 in the British Mandate of Palestine

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1937
1936
1935


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1939
1940
1941

See also:

1938 in the United Kingdom
Other events of 1938

Events in the year 1938 in the British Mandate of Palestine.

Incumbents

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Events

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Kibbutz Hanita, built in the Tower and stockade settlement method, 1938
  • 4 January – The British government appoints the Woodhead Commission to explore the practicalities of the partition of Palestine.
  • 10 January – James Leslie Starkey, a noted British archaeologist of the ancient Near East and Palestine who leads the first excavations in Tel Lachish, is killed by a gang of armed Arabs near Bayt Jibrin on a track leading from Bayt Jibrin to Hebron.
  • 23 February – The Port of Tel Aviv officially opens, as a competing (Jewish) port to the port in Jaffa, the latter having been crippled by the Arab revolt and general strike since 1936.
  • 1 March – Sir Harold MacMichael assumes office as the High Commissioner of Palestine.
  • 21 March – The founding of the kibbutz Hanita
  • 13 April – The founding of the moshav Shavei Tzion as part of the tower and stockade settlement scheme.
  • 19 June – 18 Arabs killed (9 men, 6 women and 3 children), 24 injured by a bomb that was thrown into a crowded Arab market place in Haifa.[1][2][3][4]
  • 26 June – The founding of the kibbutz Alonim
  • 29 June – Shlomo Ben-Yosef executed for ambushing an Arab bus near Safad.[5]
  • 6 July – 21 persons were killed in a bombing at Haifa vegetable market, mostly Arabs according to a discussion in UK Parliament.[6] Others reported higher casualties, 18 Arabs and 5 Jews were killed by two simultaneous bombs in the Arab melon market in Haifa, 79 people were wounded.[7]
  • 16 July – 10 Arabs were killed and 29 wounded by a bomb at a marketplace in Jerusalem.[7]
  • 17 July – The founding of the kibbutz Ma'ale HaHamisha
  • 25 July – The founding of the kibbutz Tel Yitzhak
  • 25 July – 39 Arabs were killed and over 60 wounded by a second bomb in the Haifa vegetable market.[7]
  • 26 July – 53 persons were killed and 45 wounded in a. bombing at Haifa vegetable market, according to a conversation in the UK Parliament the following year.[8]
  • 16 August – Former Jewish policeman Mordechai Schwarcz executed for the murder of an Arab policeman
  • 17 August – The founding of the moshav Beit Yehoshua
  • 25 August – The founding of the kibbutz Ein HaMifratz
  • 26 August – 24 Arabs were killed and 39 wounded by a bomb in the Jaffa vegetable market.[9]
  • 30 August – The founding of the kibbutz Ma'ayan Tzvi
  • 2 October – 1936–1939 Arab revolt in Palestine: In the 1938 Tiberias massacre, Arab rioters kill 19 Jews in the city of Tiberias, eleven of whom are children.[10] During the massacre, 70 armed Arabs set fire to Jewish homes and the local synagogue.
  • 12 October – The British Government announces sending a further four battalions to Palestine.[11]
  • 18 October – British army troops regain control of the old city of Jerusalem, which is occupied by Arab extremists in early October.
  • 9 November – A technical British committee, known as the Woodhead Commission, rejected the Peel Commission partition plan mostly on the grounds that it could not be achieved without a large forced transfer of Arabs.[12] It proposed "a modification of partition which, ...seems, subject to certain reservations, to form a satisfactory basis of settlement", if the U.K is prepared to provide a "sufficient assistance to enable the Arab State to balance its budget".[12]
  • 16 November – The founding of the moshav Sharona
  • 17 November – The founding of the moshav Geulim
  • 24 November – The founding of the kibbutz Eilon
  • 25 November – The founding of the kibbutz Neve Eitan
  • 25 November – The founding of the kibbutz Kfar Ruppin
  • 29 November – The founding of the kibbutz Kfar Masaryk
  • 22 December – The founding of the kibbutz Mesilot

Unknown dates

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Notable births

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Notable deaths

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29 June – Shlomo Ben-Yosef

References

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  1. ^ Tom Segev, Haim Watzman. The Seventh Million. p. 39. Citing Arnold Zweig's letters to Sigmund Freud
  2. ^ "Haifa Bombs Fell Scores". New York Times. New York. 19 June 1939. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  3. ^ "Bomb Blast Kills 18 Arabs at Haifa". New York Times. New York. 20 June 1939. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  4. ^ "18 Arabs Die In Bomb Blast". The Vancouver Sun. 19 June 1939. Retrieved 15 October 2011.
  5. ^ Marlowe, John (1946). Rebellion in Palestine. London: The Cresset Press. pp. 198–199.
  6. ^ https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/1939-06-28/debates/9ee4d4aa-fea8-4f83-b86a-64eaad159956/BombExplosionsHaifa
  7. ^ a b c Marlowe. p.200
  8. ^ https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/1939-06-28/debates/9ee4d4aa-fea8-4f83-b86a-64eaad159956/BombExplosionsHaifa
  9. ^ Marlowe. p.201
  10. ^ "League of Nations Archives". Archived from the original on 8 June 2019. Retrieved 11 August 2010.
  11. ^ Marlowe. p.203
  12. ^ a b "Woodhead commission report". 1938.
  13. ^ "הלכה לעולמה חברת הכנסת לשעבר נאוה ארד" [Former Member of Knesset Nava Arad has died]. Maariv. 22 February 2022.