Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Untold Story of British WWII Concentration Camps for Jewish Refugees

Untold Story of British WWII Concentration Camps for Jewish Refugees


ome and shameful history of British concentration camps for Jewish refugees in Palestine during the Second World War still remains largely unspoken.

Atlit detainee camp
When one refers to the issue of Jewish concentration camps, the dark history of the Nazi Holocaust aimed against European Jews usually comes to mind; however, it was not only fascist regimes who detained Jews in the 1930's-1940's.
Remarkably, the story of British concentration camps for Jewish refugees still remains largely untold.
"Today, when Europe is shutting its borders in the face of the huge flow of Arab refugees from Syria and Iraq, it is worth mentioning that Britain, now lecturing others on moral values, in 1939-1948 captured and detained, in its own concentration camps, thousands of Jewish refugees who escaped doom in Nazi death camps," Russian-Israeli travel blogger Alexander Lapshin wrote on his Facebook page. 
In the 1930's European Jews were not welcomed anymore in Nazi-controlled Germany. The Jewish community was stigmatized, and anti-Semitism was on the rise. In the face of increasing repression many Jews fled Germany. Needless to say, the nationwide Kristallnacht ("Night of Crystal") in Germany in November 1938 facilitated a sharp increase in Jewish emigration.
But where could they go? It was a time when Palestine was seen by many as the only light at the end of the tunnel.
However, in the 1930's Palestine, then Mandatory Palestine, was a geopolitical entity ruled by the British administration.
Incredible as it may seem today, London immediately restricted the number of Jews who could flee to the Palestinian Mandate to only 15,000 per year.
London was clearly not a Nazi sympathizer, but the truth of the matter was that the British government wanted to preserve the established balance of power in its mandated territory in the Middle East. In turn, London put its geopolitical interests above the interests of destitute European Jewish refugees.
From 1939 in response to the high influx of Jewish asylum seekers, the British government organized a network of detainee camps for Jews, labeled by the British administration in Palestine as "illegal immigrants."
In the beginning of the Second World War those who avoided detention in Nazi death camps — Treblinka, Sobibor, Belzec, Majdanek and Auschwitz-Birkenau — were arrested and thrown in quickly erected British concentration facilities in the Palestinian Mandate, Cyprus, and Mauritius.
The grim irony of the situation was that the British concentration camps looked strikingly similar to those established by Nazi Germany in Europe.
Tens of thousands of desperate Jewish asylum seekers were captured by the British on the shores of Palestine and placed into detainee camps.
One of them, the Atlit camp, located 12 miles south of Haifa, is still standing as a silent reminder of these shameful historical events. From 1939 to 1948 more than 70,000 Jews had gone through this camp, a terrible place surrounded by barbed wire and watchtowers. Unfortunately, many died there due to the deplorable living conditions. Embarrassingly, there were many Holocaust survivors among those arrested by the British administration in Palestine.
When new inmates arrived at Atlit, they were stripped naked and sprayed with DDT. It was the same humiliating procedure many of them had already faced in Nazi camps and ghettos.
What is even more shocking, the British concentration camps were still functioning when the Red Army liberated European Jews from the Nazis. Britain continued to capture Jewish "illegal immigrants" preventing them from entering the Palestinian Mandate until the late 1940's.
The Atlit camp was eventually closed after being attacked by Israeli guerrillas in 1945. Among them was young Yitzhak Rabin, future Israeli politician, statesman, general and Prime Minister.
On May 14, 1948, head of the Jewish Agency David Ben-Gurion, proclaimed the the re-establishment of the sovereign State of Israel.

1 comment:

  1. ''The British were one of the founders of Cocentration Camps if not the first. In the Anglo-Boer War (1899-1902) in South Africa, 28,000 Men, Women and Children died in these death camps, due to the lack of proper administration. They could not beat the Boers, so they took out on their wives and children, and burned their farms, removing many family bibles before doing so, keeping these as souverneers ''. Anyone who still thinks the British are angels, must truly do a study on what happened here.'' No apology has ever been made by the British.

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