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Remembering 54th Anniversary of the Israeli Massacre
of 49 Palestinians in Kafr Qasim, October 29, 1956
Sunday October 31, 2010 09:47 by Ghassan Bannoura - Palestine News
Network
On the evening of October 29, 1956 Israeli troops shot and killed 49
unarmed Palestinian civilians in the village of Kafr Qasem, 20 km east
of Tel Aviv near the green line.
Now the village has a population
of 18,100 Palestinians, some of whom marched today alongside neighboring
Arab villages to commemorate those killed 1956. People marched from the
village center to the memorial site and placed candles for those killed;
village leaders made speeches in commemoration.
Background
From 1949 till late 1966 the Israeli government decided to consider
all its Palestinians citizens a “hostile population “. All major Arab
population centers were governed by military administrations and divided
into four districts.
Seven Arab villages, including Kafr Qasim,
all along the green line, were considered as high infiltration threat.
The villages were patrolled regularly by border police (Magav) under the
command of Israeli army brigade commander Colonel Issachar Shadmi. Those
villages, containing some 40, 000 villagers, were called the Central
District.
October 29, 1956
On the day of the massacre, the
Israeli army decided to place all seven villages along the green line
under a curfew called the War Time Curfew, from 5 in the evening until 6
the following morning. Israeli soldiers were instructed to shoot and
kill any villager violating the curfew.
Even though the border
police troops were given the order by their commander at 3:30 in the
afternoon, they only informed the mayor of Kafr Qasim about an hour
later, leaving a window of 30 minutes for the 400 villagers working in
the fields or outside the village to come back home.
According to
Israeli investigation committee records, from 5:00 pm until 6:30 on
October 29, 1956, border police shot and killed 49 villagers from Kafr
Qasim as they tried to return home. Among those killed were 23 children
and one pregnant woman.
The killed and injured were left
unattended through the night. After the curfew ended, villagers took the
injured to hospitals and laid the dead to rest in a mass grave.
In his testimony during the investigation, the survivor Jamal Farij said
that soldiers shot villagers without any warning. He was driving back to
his village along with 28 passengers in a truck.
'We talked to
them. We asked if they wanted our identity cards. They didn't. Suddenly
one of them said, 'Cut them down' - and they opened fire on us like a
flood.'
Legal Action
Kafr Qasim Massacre Memorial
Eight Israeli soldiers were charged by the Israeli court and found
guilty of murder. The two commanding officers of the unit, Malinki and
Dahan, received 17 and 15 years’ imprisonment, respectively. These
sentences were later reduced.
Colonel Issachar Shadmi was tried
and found guilty only of extending the curfew without authority. He was
released after paying a fine of one Israeli cent. On November 1959,
after two years, all eight convicted soldiers were released on orders by
the Israel Committee for the Release of Prisoners .
Malinki
retained his military post and got a promotion to be in charge of
security for a top secret Israeli Nuclear Research Center located in the
Negev. Dahan was appointed as the head of the "Arab Affairs" department
by the city of Ramla, another Palestinian village Israel taken over
during 1948.
During Israel's creation in 1948, and years later,
Israeli soldiers shot and killed hundreds of Palestinian civilians. No
legal action has been taken against any Israeli leader, commander, or
soldier involved in what would later become known as the Palestinian
Nakba.
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