British mandate

Glimpse into the past: KKL-JNF publishes archival photos of Shavuot celebrations pre-state

The photos were taken from the 1930s and 1940s during festivities in Jerusalem, Haifa, Kibbutz Ramat Yohanan, Kibbutz Ramat David and other communities.

Shavuot – First Fruits Festival. Mishmar HaEmek, 1943.
 IDF parade in Ramle, 1954.

Historical significance of six operational IDF bases revealed for Israel's 77th Independence Day

 Jews demonstrate against the White Paper in Jerusalem, May 22, 1939.

Purim’s lesson: The White Paper showed why Jews must defend themselves - opinion

 View of the "Palestine Gazette."

Unveiling the past: State Archives digitizes official British Mandate newspaper


This week in Jewish history: Biblical civil war, Jewish refugees killed by torpedo

A highly abridged weekly version of Dust & Stars – Today in Jewish History.

 The MV Struma, a ship that carried hundreds of Jewish refugees but was sunk by a Russian torpedo.

Children in Safed find Mandate-era grenade, bomb squad called to the scene

A soldier on duty noticed children carrying a suspicious bag and intervened. He identified the item as an old grenade and quickly alerted the police bomb squad.

 Children in Safed find unexploded hand grenade

Ghosts of a Holy War: How the 1929 Hebron massacre shaped a century of conflict

Yardena Schwartz's new book explores the 1929 Hebron massacre and its lasting impact on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, drawing parallels to today's ongoing strife.

Synagogue desecrated by Arab rioters. Hebron.

My Word: The tale of one Jerusalem neighbourhood teaches resilience and hope - opinion

A tour of Jerusalem's Mekor Haim neighborhood reveals its history of resilience, wartime challenges, and ongoing growth, blending past heroism with present-day hope and coexistence amid conflict.

 THE MEKOR HAIM Central Synagogue with its fort-like roof and memorial to those who fell defending the neighborhood in 1948.

Jerusalem calling: The birth of Mandate-era broadcasting in British Palestine

In 1950, two years after the establishment of the State of Israel, Jerusalem Calling (by now Kol Yerushalayim) merged with Kol Yisrael, which became the country’s official radio station.

 An Arab Tahkt group performs on the radio.

This week in Jewish history

July 22, 1920: Keren Hayesod founded, July 24, 1922: League of Nations grants Britain mandate to administer Palestine.

 A POSTCARD honors Noble Prize winner Rosalyn Yalow.

Tel Mond's agricultural history is Sir Alfred Mond's Zionist legacy

Sir Alfred Mond, a Jewish industrialist from England, invested in Eretz Israel in 1917, establishing an agricultural company in the Sharon area, founding communities like Tel Mond.

 "The Lord's House" Museum in Tel Mond, Israel

Murder and rape in the dunes of pre-state Israel: The story of a hike turned horror

They were friends and perhaps wanted to become lovers. They also loved the Land of Israel and set out to walk through it. Tragically, their walk was horrifyingly interrupted.

 THE ILL-FATED couple: Yochanan Stahl and Celia Zohar.

Thanks to the UN's bias against Israel, Islamic extremism reached Europe - opinion

Why do countries not wake up and see what is already happening in European countries, with Islamic enclaves established by the refugees that even the local police are afraid to enter?

 THE UN Security Council meets, last month, prior to voting on a resolution demanding an immediate Gaza ceasefire for Ramadan leading to a permanent sustainable ceasefire and for the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages. The resolution passed.

The world must be reminded of the Palestinian genocide campaign against Jews - opinion

There was a genocide campaign. It was conducted not against ‘Palestine’, but in Palestine, in the Mandate of Palestine.

 Pro-Palestinian demonstrators protest as they take part in the ‘Biden: Stop supporting genocide!’ rally in New York City on January 20.

Forbidden Tel Aviv love in a complicated time

While the movie celebrates the spirit of Tel Aviv 80 years ago, it was actually filmed in Puglia, Italy, where Winterbottom and his team found buildings that were “new, white, and low-rise."

 A SCENE from ‘Shoshana.’