Tuesday, August 16, 2022

THE MURDERERS OF JEWS ARE CELEBRATED AS HEROES BY THE PALESTINIANS

Palestinians Celebrate 1929 Massacre of Hebron Jews

The 1929 Hebron massacre killed 67 Jews; to the Palestinian leadership, the worst of the killers are national heroes.

 

 

The 18th of the Hebrew month of Av is the anniversary of the 1929 Arab massacre of 67 Jews in Hebron. While the massacre started in Hebron, rampaging Arabs also murdered Jews in Jerusalem and Safed. Over the course of just one week, Arabs killed 130 Jews.

 

Haj Amin Al-Husseini flew to Germany to visit with Hitler in 1941. The Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, Amin al-Husseini, met with Adolf Hitler in 1941

         The Grand Mufti with Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler who was the architect of the Final Solution. In 1929 the Grand Mufti encouraged the Muslims to attack the Jews

 

Of the many participants in the massacre, three murderers who “committed particularly brutal murders [of Jews] at Safed and Hebron,” according to the report by the British Government to the League of Nations (Dec. 31, 1930), were singled out by the British authorities and hanged for their actions.

While the massacre took place 65 years before its creation, the Palestinian Authority has adopted the three murderers as Palestinian heroes and role models, and it marks the day of their hanging each year in order to glorify their killings.

 

                                                                      A student of the Hebron Yeshiva lost a hand during the attack

                                                       Funeral for murdered Jews of Safed, 1929

 

This year is no different, and the PA has published numerous items in its official press honoring the killers. Referring to them as “fighters” and “martyrs,” the PA’s official daily Al-Hayat Al-Jadida on June 18 intertwined the glorification of the murderers with the modern-day PA policy prohibiting the sale of land to Jews.

Read the article:

“Yesterday, June 17, was the 92nd anniversary of the execution of the three fighters Muhammad Jamjoum, Fuad Hijazi and Ataa Al-Zir by the British Mandate authorities. The three martyrs wrote a letter the day before the execution which said: ‘We have willingly sacrificed our souls and skulls so they will be foundations for building our nation’s independence and freedom, so that the nation will continue to be united and carrying out jihad in order to remove the enemies from Palestine and so that we will protect its land and not sell even one inch of it to the enemies.’”

The article was accompanied with an image of three cards hanging from nooses with “Muhammad Jamjoum,” “Fuad Hijazi” and “Ataa Al-Zir” written on them. The text on the bottom of the cards reads: “The Martyrs of the Al-Buraq Rebellion [the PA’s name for the massacre and accompanying riots] June 17, 1930.”

On June 17, PA television marked the hanging of the murderers by running a number of special fillers. One shows an artist creating an image of the killers while part of the song “From Acre Prison,” in which Al-Zir is referred to as “the distinguished person,” is played in the background.

The lyrics read:

Muhammad Jamjoum, Ataa Al-Zir and Fuad Hijazi, the power of ammunition,
Look at the one going first, the distinguished person,
They are executing us on verdicts of the oppressor

The text on screen states, “The homeland will never forget its revolutionaries.”

On a previous occasion, PA TV emphasized the importance of the song glorifying these three murderers, saying that it is a “basic part of our culture” and an expression of the Palestinian “national identity.”

Using the song to glorify the killers, the PA presenter added that the chorus expresses pride in the murderers, whom he calls the “noble heroes of Palestine.” The narrator said, “Because songs are a basic part of our culture and they express our national identity … and because these songs are present in our consciousness and still fascinate us with values and meanings. … It’s here: ‘The Tune of the Homeland.’” The lyrics of the song include, “From Acre Prison went forth the funeral of Muhammad Jamjoum and Fuad Hijazi/Take revenge for them, my people.”

The narrator added, “This is the chorus of the pain and suffering from the torture of prison … which expresses the pride of the young ones who presented the most wondrous things in the pages of the [history of the] struggle against the invading occupiers. They are the noble heroes of Palestine—Martyrs Muhammad Jamjoum, Ataa Al-Zir and Fuad Hijazi. … Our poet was witness to the three becoming Martyrs, and his talent provided the poem ‘The Ground Shook Under the Invaders’ Feet.’”

The poem reads:

They were three heroes
Who competed with each other who would die first
Their feet rose above the hangman’s neck
They became an example, O my friend
Throughout the length and width of the land
And from Acre Prison went forth the funeral

The second filler refers to the murderers by declaring, “Glory and eternity to our people’s pure martyrs.”

PA chief Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah Party also celebrated the murderers with a post on the official Facebook page of Fatah’s Commission of Information and Culture: “Ninety-two years since the execution of the heroes of the Al-Buraq Rebellion.” They post includes the lyrics, “Three men who competed over death/And their feet rose above the hangman’s neck.”

The image shows the three murderers. In the upper left corner is the Fatah logo, which includes a grenade, crossed rifles and a map that presents all of Israel together with PA-controlled areas as “Palestine.”

As Palestinian Media Watch has already exposed, this is not the first time the PA has glorified the 1929 murderers. Rather, the adoption and glorification of the killers is an annual event.

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