Deir Yassin: A Brutal Massacre Carried Out By Zionist Death Squads in 1948 Etched Into the Consciousness of Palestinians

Deir Yassin is why we resist—to reclaim our stolen village and avenge the blood of our martyrs. Throughout the storied history of Palestinian resistance, heroes vowed revenge in the name of Deir Yassin: resistance fighters killed 77 zionists in an operation four days after the 1948 massacre, the Deir Yassin Unit of Arab resistance fighters carried out an operation that killed 40 settlers under the command of martyr Dalal Al-Mughrabi in 1978, and the Deir Yassin Operation of 1972 was an internationalist feat of anti-imperialist resistance that shook the world.

The Deir Yassin Operation was launched 53 years ago today. Three Japanese comrades—Bassem, Salah, and Ahmed—joined forces with five Palestinian comrades to strike the zionist entity at its heart. Their real names were Tsuyoshi Okudaira, Yasuke Yasuda, and Kozo Okamoto, and they were members of the Japanese Red Army, which received weapons, training, and finances from the PFLP. They had trained in Lebanon, and all were students: Bassem of architecture, Salah of electrical engineering, Ahmed of botany, and all of revolution.

Their location of choice was the so-called “Lod Airport” (now “Ben-Gurion Airport”) in occupied Al-Lydd.  Known as quiet men, they quietly arrived from Paris at 10 PM, waited for their luggage—violin cases loaded with weapons, ammunition, and explosives—and carried out their revolutionary duty. By the time they were done with their operation, 26 zionists were left dead on the ground and 80 were wounded. Five Palestinian comrades fired outside the airport in support. Bassem was martyred after he ran out of ammunition, Salah blew himself up in a revolutionary act, and Ahmed (Kozo) went on to become a revolutionary icon after spending 13 years in solitary confinement in the zionist prisons.

In interrogation, Kozo declared that the operation was part of the global revolution against zionism and imperialism. He and the masterful tactician Dr. Wadie Haddad had planned it. In the attached video, PFLP founder Bassam Abu Sharif claims the operation on behalf of the PFLP, stating that it is a continuation of the PFLP’s line of “attacking the enemy wherever it hurts most” in reference to Wadie Haddad’s slogan “behind the enemy in every place.” After brutal psychological and physical torture, Kozo was freed in 1985 in the Ahmed Jibril prisoner exchange, and he went on to live his life in asylum in Lebanon after a troublesome period. Kozo was interviewed years later; he stated that he had hoped to be martyred during the operation, and when asked if he regretted anything: “I had no choice but to open fire in the name of armed struggle.”

Five weeks after the operation, the Mossad assassinated PFLP leader Ghassan Kanafani and his 17-year-old niece Lamees in Beirut in retribution for the Deir Yassin Operation. When the day comes, we will tell you Ghassan’s story.

Glory to the glorymakers, the internationalist revolutionaries who upheld the promise of resistance and global revolution. The echoes of Deir Yassin’s pain are reflected in the bullets of our comrades, the internationalist fighters united against imperialism who pledged to keep the memories of the martyrs and usurped villages alive.

The struggle for Palestinian liberation and the fight against zionism everywhere transcends borders. With every stone thrown, every bullet fired, and every zionist weapons company dismantled, our resistance honors our martyrs and struggle with every act of defiance until our lands are liberated of zionism and freed, from the river to the sea. We will never forget Deir Yassin, and we will never forget the bravery of those who committed themselves to liberation by any means necessary.

Remember Deir Yassin. Remember our heroes. For this—our joint struggle—is the legacy of Deir Yassin and our inheritance.

Source: Resistance News Network

Image is from PFLP Poster with statement written below: Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine:

From Japan to Yemen to Palestine… the revolution continues

Memory from history:
The Lydd Airport Operation — 30 May 1972
Today marks 53 years since the heroic Lydd Airport operation, carried out by a squad from the Japanese Red Army in full coordination and planning with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

https://abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=19398

#deirYassin #palestine #pflp #resistance

🧵🍉Cuando te digan que empezó el 7 de octubre, recordales la masacre de Deir Yassin, un crimen perpetrado por el sionismo en Palestina, iniciando así el terrorismo que hoy destruye Gaza. Ocurrió el 9 de abril de 1948, meses antes de la Nakba. No olvidamos. No perdonamos. #DeirYassin #PalestinaLibre‼️
Bluesky

Bluesky Social

Today In Labor History April 9, 1948: The Irgun and Lehi Zionist paramilitary slaughtered over 100 Palestinians in the Deir Yassin massacre, near Jerusalem. Many of the victims were women and children. Rape and mutilation were also alleged. It was part of the Nakba and expulsion of Palestinians from Palestine. As news of the massacre spread, it sparked terror among Palestinians throughout the region, convincing many to flee their homes. It also strengthened the resolve of Arab governments to attack, which they did a few weeks later, sparking the Arab-Israeli War of 1948. Menachim Begin was leader of the Irgun at the time. He went on to found the Likud Party and he became prime minister of Israel from 1977 to 1983. Many Arab states produced postage stamps commemorating the massacre. All of them use the image of a map of Palestine with a bloody dagger thrust into it.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #nakba #palestine #israel #zionism #terrorism #massacre #deiryassin #freepalestine #EndtheOccupation

I don’t think that this needs a comment…

#nakba #deiryassin

@palestine

The scientific community has often mobilised in the past to defend human rights and international law. In an open letter published in the New York Times in December 1948, cosigned by Hannah Arendt and Albert Einstein, the authors denounced the visit of Menahem Begin, leader of the Tnuat Haherut party, precursor to Likud (the party of current Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu), in these terms:

https://archive.org/details/AlbertEinsteinLetterToTheNewYorkTimes.December41948

@palestine
#Palestine
#DeirYassin
#Israel

Albert Einstein Letter to The New York Times. December 4, 1948 New Palestine Party. Visit of Menachen Begin and Aims of Political Movement Discussed : Albert Einstein, Hannah Arendt, Sidney Hook, et.al. : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive

New Palestine Party. Visit of Menachen Begin and Aims of Political Movement Discussed. A letter to The New York Times. Saturday December 4, 1948 by Albert...

Internet Archive

Testimony by Palmach soldier Uri Pinkerfeld, born in Jerusalem in 1928 and served in the Palmach's Third Battalion.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uo_99T-vHFM

On the strategic value of the massacre in Deir Yassin. The speaker is not apologetic. Admitting there was a massacre (something Zionist state historians still reject) and explaining it was not intentional. All the other firsthand descriptions seem to constitute evidence for on going #domicide.

The Palmach (1941-1498) was the "elite" fighting force of the #Yishuv, the Jewish community in Palestine during the British Mandate period and the precursor to the #IDF. The British trained the Palmach and during the 1936-1939 Palestinian revolt against British occupation and their policies to allow increased Jewish immigration to Palestine, the British security forces, including the Palmach, employed tactics such as detentions, house demolitions, and deportations to quell the uprising.

See:

One Palestine, Complete: Jews and Arabs under the British Mandate by Tom Segev

Ploughing Sand: British Rule in Palestine 1917-48 by Naomi Shepherd.

@palestine
@israel
@histodons
#IsraelWarCrimes #Nakba #DeirYassin

אורי פינקרפלד, חייל בפלמ"ח // Testimony by Uri Pinkerfeld, Palmach soldier

YouTube

Deir Yassin was a brutal massacre carried out by zionist death squads in 1948 indelibly etched into the collective consciousness of all Palestinians. The attack was conducted primarily by the Irgun and Lehi, fascist Zionist paramilitary organizations. The massacre was carried out despite the village having agreed to evade conflict. It occurred during the 1947-1948 civil war and was a central component of the Nakba and the 1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight. 107 people were killed in the massacre.

Deir Yassin is why Palestinians resist—to reclaim their stolen village and avenge the blood of the martyrs. Throughout the storied history of Palestinian resistance, heroes vowed revenge in the name of Deir Yassin: resistance fighters killed 77 zionists in an operation four days after the 1948 massacre, the Deir Yassin Unit of Arab resistance fighters carried out an operation that killed 40 settlers under the command of martyr Dalal Al-Mughrabi in 1978, and the Deir Yassin Operation of 1972 was an internationalist feat of anti-imperialist resistance that shook the world.

The Deir Yassin Operation was launched 51 years ago today. Three Japanese comrades—Bassem, Salah, and Ahmed—joined forces with five Palestinian comrades to strike the zionist entity at its heart. Their real names were Tsuyoshi Okudaira, Yasuke Yasuda, and Kozo Okamoto, and they were members of the Japanese Red Army, which received weapons, training, and finances from the PFLP. They had trained in Lebanon, and all were students: Bassem of architecture, Salah of electrical engineering, Ahmed of botany, and all of revolution.

Their location of choice was the so-called “Lod Airport” (now “Ben-Gurion Airport”) in occupied Al-Lydd.  Known as quiet men, they quietly arrived from Paris at 10 PM, waited for their luggage—violin cases loaded with weapons, ammunition, and explosives—and carried out their revolutionary duty. By the time they were done with their operation, 26 zionists were left dead on the ground and 80 were wounded. Five Palestinian comrades fired outside the airport in support. Bassem was martyred after he ran out of ammunition, Salah blew himself up in a revolutionary act, and Ahmed (Kozo) went on to become a revolutionary icon after spending 13 years in solitary confinement in the zionist prisons.

In interrogation, Kozo declared that the operation was part of the global revolution against zionism and imperialism. He and the masterful tactician Dr. Wadie Haddad had planned it. In a recorded video, PFLP founder Bassam Abu Sharif claims the operation on behalf of the PFLP, stating that it is a continuation of the PFLP’s line of “attacking the enemy wherever it hurts most” in reference to Wadie Haddad’s slogan “behind the enemy in every place.” After brutal psychological and physical torture, Kozo was freed in 1985 in the Ahmed Jibril prisoner exchange, and he went on to live his life in asylum in Lebanon after a troublesome period. Kozo was interviewed years later; he stated that he had hoped to be martyred during the operation, and when asked if he regretted anything: “I had no choice but to open fire in the name of armed struggle.”

Five weeks after the operation, the Mossad assassinated PFLP leader Ghassan Kanafani and his 17-year-old niece Lamees in Beirut in retribution for the Deir Yassin Operation.

Glory to the glorymakers, the internationalist revolutionaries who upheld the promise of resistance and global revolution. The echoes of Deir Yassin’s pain are reflected in the bullets of the comrades, the internationalist fighters united against imperialism who pledged to keep the memories of the martyrs and usurped villages alive.

The struggle for Palestinian liberation and the fight against zionism everywhere transcends borders. With every stone thrown, every bullet fired, and every zionist weapons company dismantled, the resistance honors the  martyrs and struggle with every act of defiance until the lands are liberated of zionism and freed, from the river to the sea. We will never forget Deir Yassin, and we will never forget the bravery of those who committed themselves to liberation by any means necessary.

Remember Deir Yassin. Remember our heroes. For this—our joint struggle—is the legacy of Deir Yassin and our inheritance.

https://abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/post/2024/05/30/deir-yassin-a-zionist-massacre-a-resistance-unit-and-an-operation/

#deirYassin #gaza #japaneseRedArmy #palestine #pflp #redArmy #resistance #westAsia

Deir Yassin: A Zionist Massacre, a Resistance Unit, and an Operation – Abolition Media

Today is a good day to learn history.

Today is the 76th anniversary of the Deir Yassin massacre.

Not so long ago.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deir_Yassin #DeirYassin

Deir Yassin - Wikipedia

Today In Labor History April 8, 1948: The Irgun and Lehi Zionist paramilitary slaughtered over 100 Palestinians in the Deir Yassin massacre, near Jerusalem. Many of the victims were women and children. Rape and mutilation were also alleged. It was part of the Nakba and expulsion of Palestinians from Palestine. As news of the massacre spread, it sparked terror among Palestinians throughout the region, convincing many to flee their homes. It also strengthened the resolve of Arab governments to attack, which they did a few weeks later, sparking the Arab-Israeli War of 1948. Menachim Begin was leader of the Irgun at the time. He went on to found the Likud Party and he became prime minister of Israel from 1977 to 1983. Many Arab states produced postage stamps commemorating the massacre. All of them use the image of a map of Palestine with a bloody dagger thrust into it.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #nakba #palestine #israel #zionism #terrorism #massacre #deiryassin #freepalestine

Orphaned children whose parents had been killed at Deir Yassin.

Credit: IDF archive / Still from the film 'Born in Deir Yassin'

@israel
@palestine
#WarCrimes
#DeirYassin
#israel
#palestine