Publish date10 Apr 2022 - 18:41
Story Code : 545066

Remembering the Deir Yassin massacre 74 years later

On this day, April 09, in 1948, a couple of hundred armed Zionist militias from the pre-Israeli-state Irgun and Stern gangs walked into the village of Deir Yassin, a few kilometers to the west of Al-Quds, and committed one of the earlier massacres that became standard practice for the Zionist regime.
Remembering the Deir Yassin massacre 74 years later
After being taken prisoner, many villagers were paraded through Jerusalem’s Old City by the militias in order to widely publicize their “victory” in Deir Yassin. In several other Palestinian villages, Nakba survivors reportedly fled after hearing about the massacre in Deir Yassin, fearing similar violence.
 
Others who survived, fearful and terrified, left their homes and properties to seek shelter elsewhere. They became just another number in the still ongoing uprooting of Palestinians from their homes. No one has ever been held accountable for the Deir Yassin massacre.
 
Zionist propaganda even tried to dispute the fact that the massacre of Deir Yassin ever took place. However, that painful and shameful fact is now beyond any historical doubt, just like other infamous world massacres, such as the My Lai massacre committed by the US military in South Vietnam in 1968.
 
Daniel A. McGowan, a Jewish journalist in Jerusalem, who witnessed the massacre unfolding, has written that all reports about the massacre were "direct, fresh and convincing". However, many extremist Zionists "still refuse to believe it."
 
Nathan Friedman-Yellin, a criminal himself, found the Deir Yassin massacre to be "inhuman." He was a joint commander of the Jewish Stern Gang in 1948, yet he could not swallow his colleagues' actions.
 
A member of the UK delegation to the United Nations (UN), in a letter dated 20 April, 1948, confirmed the attack on Deir Yassin in which "250 Arab men, women and children" were killed in "circumstances of great savagery". Palestine, at the time, was a UK Mandate territory pending final status determination by the UN.
 
Of nearly 70 massacres during the 1948 Nakba, Deir Yassin would become one of those atrocities where almost all the acts of war criminality were unleashed: killing, destruction, pillaging, rape, and displacement.
 
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