56 Friday, April 21, 1919 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS The Battle for Jerusalem Was the High Water Mark in Fight That Created an Independent State of Israel . skirmishes occured in all precarious position. In order to accomplish parts of Palestine, includ- this the Hagana had infil- ing Jerusalem, between JERUSALEM — The his- trated a handful of soldiers the Jewish settlers and tory of military campaigns among the residents, in- Arab irregulars. Several is dominated by what is cluding a few young women. Arab neighborhoods in called "the high water Since time immemorial the New City fell to com- mark." The high water the most effective way of de- bined regiments of mark in the 1948 war was feating a walled city has Hagana, Palmach and Jerusalem, heart and soul of been through siege. Like Irgun troops. Meanwhile, the newborn Jewish state. their Hebrew ancestors less the Jewish garrison in No one understood this than 2,000 years before the Old City continued to better than David Ben- them, this is what the Jews resist. G-urion, commander-in- of Jerusalem were to face. chief of the, as yet, unde- It must be remembered This time, however, not that all this was before the clared Jewish state's armed only the walled section of state of Israel was officially forces. The early days after the city was to be blockaded, declared. The declaration of the United Nation's Nov. but the other sections as the state in Tel Aviv on May 29, 1947 partition _ an- well. nouncement were heady '14, 1948 opened the flood- By the end of March gates through which the ones for the 600,000 Jews of 1948, the vital artery lead- armies of five Arab coun- Eretz Yisrael. But the danc- ing to Jerusalem past tries poured in. The soldiers ing in the streets that ac- Bab el Wad was blocked of the Jewish state, out- companied the United Na- by Arab irregulars. The manned and lacking suffi- -- A Palmach jeep is shown during the 1948 cere- ' tions decision was prema- last convoy to slip cient war material, stub- monies dedicating the Burma Road — Road of Valor ture. Included in the parti- through and reach the bornly withstood their foes that broke the Arab seige of Jerusalem. Prime Minis- tion agreement was a clause ter David Ben-Gurion can be seen at left reviewing the city was wiped out on re- on four fronts. that called for the Holy City troops. turning from the Etzion to be, in the language of the In the meantime, the corpus Bloc. Without supplies "a lawyers, tive route to Jerusalem Jerusalem would starve. siege of Jerusalem entered combat. separatum" — "a separate Abdul Khader Husseini, its fourth week. Even body," to be administered by On May 28, the ghetto successfully built al- the Arab guerilla chief- though the Egyptians were fell, Abdullah Tell, com- most under the eyes of an international regime for tain who had vowed to advancing on Tel Aviv and mander of the Arab Legion, the Arabs) in winning the a period not exceeding 10 strangle Jerusalem, was fierce fighting ensued in the surveyed the motley group struggle for Jerusalem years. making good his threat. - Galilee, the Israeli High of men and women who had was eloquently ex- This bitter pill was swal- lowed by the Jewish Agency For the Hagana leaders Command, under Ben- been defending the Jewish pressed by Prime Minis- Executive when it accepted the situation was untena- Gurion's prodding, were presence there and then ter Ben-Gurion at a dedi- the resolution. At the outset exclaimed to Moshe cation ceremony in De- ble. Until the end of March preoccupied with the dan- it appeared that they had they had refrained from gers facing Jerusalem. For Russnak, the Hagana com- ceinber 1948. "The road been forced to renounce mander, "If I had known you that we are dedicating making large scale assaults the time being, the be- what was most dear to all of on the guerilla armies. This leaguered Jewish remnants were so few I would have today embodies the them. Yet it was to turn — come after you with sticks, height of our war effort time they had no choice. in the Old City were still for homeland and hide- and perhaps they felt this Ben-Gurion remarked, weathering the Jordanian not guns." pendence, for it is bound that the most predictable of "The High Commissioner Legion's mortar attacks. Without food and without factors, Arab intransigence, gave us a solemn promise to • Once again, Ben-Gurion guns the fate of the New up inextricably with the would hand them what they keep the road open (to was determined to hieak City would be identical to most glorious chapter of could not take for them- Jerusalem) and he has through the Arab blockade. that of the Jewish quarter our struggle — that for selves. This was how the re- failed to keep his word. Now Years later he wrote, "At in the Old. Only two mira- Jerusalem. This was ,the focal point of our War of strictions of the partition it is up to us to open it." last we had a state, but we cles • could prevent the resolution were to be cir- The twin operations, one were about to lose our capi- Jewish state from being Liberation." On June 11, the Arab ar- cumvented by circum- taking place near the tal." He instructed Yigael stillborn as far as stances. It would thus be- entrance to Bab el Wad, Yadin, then chief of opera- Jerusalem was concerned. mies agreed to a cease-fire, come possible in response to code-named Nakhshon, and tions officer of the Hagana, One was the building of an enabling the newly created Arab policies of aggression the other concentrating on to prepare an attack on the alternative route to Israel Defense Forces to against the UN decision to the Arab villages that con- Latrun police fortress. Jerusalem. The other was a bring ammunition, supplies mould by force of arms a vi- trolled the highway on the Yadin, who was more con- cease-fire. Neither of them and reinforcements to able frontier that-would in- heights at the approach to cerned about the imminent seemed particularly likely Jerusalem in great quan- elude the 100,000 Jews of Jerusalem, were successes. loss of the last Jewish out- to occur in the last days of tities. The heart was out of, Jerusalem. The order of the day pub- post before Tel Aviv and May. Both of them were to danger. The infant state At a meeting of Hagana lished for the men before the about the events in the be realized just over two would survive. Jerusalem, although divided, became commanders in a battles illustrates the ex- north, hesitated. "If we fol- weeks later. the capital of Israel. Two de- ' Jerusalem high school in tent of the stakes riding on low his (Ben-Gurion's) December 1947, Ben- The importance of the cades later, it was also to be their effort: "If Jerusalem ideas," he is reported to Gurion spoke prophetic remains cut off this will haVe said, "we will save our Burma Road (the alterna- reunited. words to his men. He told have a fateful effect on the capital and lose our state." them that if the Arabs whole war." were able to conquer the But the commander- On April 17, 300 trucks _vrP,-J\ - (-) r N bringing 1,000 tons of food in-chief remained ada- and goods rolled into tie be- mant. He dismissed his - C p rack;"\Q;x \ sieged city. Even though it yo'ung officer, later to be- _ 0_ 0 I \./ ) YYup c Th e,-,14 was already Shabat, men in come Israel's foremost prayer shawls rushed into archeologist and today - ea j.D - 1 h C.. il n GS t - 4■ .) L EL * ( •) the street to greet the deputy prime minister, . `saviors.' An old rabbi with two words, "Take kr. tm 4 L - A ∎ shouted, "These men hallow Latrun." -czA.k DA, 4•t,it_ kNLA heaven and earth." The two attempts to over- The Jerusalemites' re- power the strategic' Latrun a./D joicing was to be short- police station overlooking lived. In a few days the the Tel Aviv - Jerusalem Arabs once more retook highway ended in a dismal - -\\)- t\&rM 2-1 the strongholds guarding and costly failUre. Hun- the "gate of the valley." dreds of young Jews, many From the end of April of them having arrived in Units of Israel's Defense Forces are shown at In- until the middle of May the country only a few days dependence Day ceremonies in 1951. previously directly from British detention camps in Cyprus, and possessing no Former U.S. Army Col. David Marcus, alias Mic- military experience, lost key Stone, Israel's commander of the Jerusalem front, their lives there. At the sent the above letter (partially shown) urging re- same time as these young newed attacks on the Arab position of Latrun. The men were dying on the attacks failed and Latrun remained in Arab hands for parched fields of Latrun, the 20 years, until the Six-Day War, but construction of last defenders of the Jewish the Burma Road ended the seige of Jerusalem. Mar- quarter in the Old City were cus was killed a few weeks later when a Jewish sentry perishing in house-to-house did not recognize him in the dark. From the World Zionist Organization -- city, "they can end us, and our state will be finished before it is born." The decision to defend Jerusalem, while easy to ar- rive at, was extremely dif- ficult to implement. Perched as it is on the main spine of the Judean hills, the city was tenuously con- nected to Tel Aviv by one road. This ran through mountainous terrain over- looked for the most part by Arab villages. It ended in a bottleneck at Bab el Wad, "gate of the val- ley," near the Trappist monastery at Latrun. At this juncture the road curved northward, passing close by a police station which was occupied by the Arab Legion and their British sponsors. Even in relatively peace- ful times Jewish convoys plying the trail to Jerusalem were subject to Arab snipers. And this road transported not only men and munitions but also the produce of Jewish farms to feed Jerusalem. Another factor com- plicating the defense of Jewish Jerusalem was its water supply system. Most of the life-giving liquid came from the springs at Rosh HaAyin, situated 10 miles east of Tel Aviv, and fed by pipeline to the Holy City. It was vulnerable to sabotage and the spring's proximity to Arab vil- lages increased its strategic importance. The demographic distri- bution within Jerusalem contributed to the hard- ships involved in defending it. Jewish neighborhoods were inextricably mixed with Arab ones. The more than 2,000 Jews living in- side the Old City walls were cut off from direct contact with their New City breth- ren. Although many Jews had fled the confines of the walled q9arter, the philos- ophy of holding on to every piece of Jewish land made it imperative to defend its - U' rn 1- ' 5 .4 i S1 . t • 4i 4 t m.