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This article has the first Irgun attacks in 1937. The first one is only 2 dead, so no massacre, understandable. The second one "Black Sunday" has enough dead (10) but the first Irgun attack on this list isn't until February 27, 1939. Can someone explain why or fix it? Seems the point of having such a table as this would be to make reviewing the timeline easier, and if attacks are missing then it becomes misleading, right? -- 192.157.104.33 ( talk) 03:15, 12 February 2024 (UTC)
I'll be adding events to the list in the coming couple of days. I find it vastly unbalanced.-- 79.177.150.22 ( talk) 00:48, 19 November 2014 (UTC)
Jaffa Riots started as fighting between two Jewish groups. One can hardly free them from the "responsibility". I "uncommented" Jews which was commented out and hidden from that column. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 199.127.252.143 ( talk) 18:14, 15 April 2012 (UTC)
Thanks Dlv999 for the recent edit, the entry seems more balanced now. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 199.127.252.143 ( talk) 14:41, 16 April 2012 (UTC)
Why is it that "Responsible" column blames "Arabs" for killings committed by Arabs and blame "names of Jewish organisations" for killings committed by Jewish militants ? To the eyeballers this makes Arab sounds like monsters and Jews as defenders? The entire list looks like a massive Israeli propaganda to the observer. A desperate cleanup is needed. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 199.127.252.143 ( talk) 18:11, 15 April 2012 (UTC)
Kachol ( talk) 01:21, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
I’ve made a number of changes to this article in an effort to clean it up, expand it, and remove the obvious pro-Arab POV that characterized it beforehand. The primary changes are as follows: 1. I’ve modified the list to include all acts of violence in which three or more persons were killed in politically or racially motivated actions. The previous format set the bar at 10 persons killed, which to me appeared both arbitrary and obfuscating. The British Mandate period in Palestine was characterized by daily small scale attacks on civilians which most often resulted in five fatalities or less. Including all attacks in which there were at least three fatalities presents a much more accurate picture of the level of violence in Palestine at the time, and still falls within the parameters of a reasonable definition of a “massacre” – an event in which a group of persons is killed. In this case, dozens of attacks are omitted from this list in which one or two fatalities were incurred, but semantically, two persons are referred to as a “pair”, not a “group”, and the murder of two persons is commonly referred as a “double murder”. 2. I’ve changed the column previously titled “Death Toll” to “Casualties” and included notes to provide context. 3. I’ve removed all incidents which lacked source citations, and added source citations for those which I was able to locate, and have modified the information contained therein accordingly. 4. I’ve removed the source citation to the Centre for Defense and International Security Studies. While the link is functioning, I’ve been unable to locate the document cited through the actual CDISS website despite an extensive search. Moreover, the format of the document is not consistent with other documents that are linked to from the CDISS website and, quite frankly, the logo on the document looks fabricated. As a result, this link appears highly suspect. For two of the incidents that cite this source, I’ve been able to find alternate sources. For the other two – the Haifa police station bombing and the bus bombings in Haifa and Ramle – I have not been able to find alternate sources and have thus removed the incidents from the list. If someone can provide information as to how the CDISS document can be accessed from the main website, or can provide alternate sources, I’d gladly endorse a reinstatement of the two incidents. 5. I’ve removed the source citations for both Benny Morris and Uri Milstein. This is not a reaction to controversy surrounding their political positions, but rather significant criticism of the authenticity and scholarly value of their works. Both authors have had charges of fabrication leveled against them by other historians, and thus I felt their works are too controversial to be cited in an encyclopedia article. The result of removing the authors’ citations has been nil – I was able to find alternate sources for all of the incidents citing their works. 6. I’ve avoided using sources from overtly polemical works, memoirs, and websites, and also removed such citations from the article. These include the cited “Encyclopedia of the Palestine Problem” and “All That Remains”. Websites that I’ve deliberately avoided citing include palestineremembered.com, alnakba.org, eretzyisroel.org, the Jewish Agency website and others that are obviously partisan. I have made one exception in citing jewishvirtuallibrary.org, but only in cases where there was no other record of Jewish attacks on Arabs, not vice versa. The removal of “All that Remains” posed a problem as it eliminated any remaining source for what was listed as the “Sa’sa’ village ambush”. Despite an extensive Google search, I was unable to find any nonpartisan website source for this event. The Wikipedia page for Sa’sa’ however, cites a New York Times story from February 16, 1948. I am unable to access this story, but for the moment I will leave the incident on the page until I am able to access an NYT archive to verify the source. 7. I’ve attempted to make the list as comprehensive as possible. The previous note at the top of the article read: “Note: In many cases the actual number of killed is uncertain, and many of the facts are disputed. More information can be found in the appropriate articles.” It seems both absurd and colossally lazy to put such a disclaimer above a posted article. If you don’t have all (or at least the majority) of the facts about a particular subject, especially one that is so easily researched, then either do the homework or don’t post the article at all. Wikipedia is a collaborative encyclopedia, not a bulletin board – there are limits to how much amateurism, and bias, is tolerated.
Kachol ( talk) 21:12, 18 December 2007 (UTC) With regards to Milstein and Morris, I think it would be best to leave them off the page considering that a) their work is disputed, and b) their citations are unnecessary given that alternate sources are available. Just to gage your view on this matter, what would you need to see (as far as criticism of their work is concerned) in order to convince you that they should be omitted? The reason I'd rather not use palestineremembered.com, eretzyisroel.org and similar sources is, as I've stated before, that they are overtly polemical. Their purpose is to further a specific agenda. While this is perfectly understandable, it casts doubt onto their veracity as sources. In fact, with such a controversial topic, I'd much rather err on the side of caution and not cite ANY Jewish or Arab sources. As you saw by my first edit, the sources I cited were all third-party except for Tom Segev, and his citations were only supplementary. I'm not saying that all Jewish or Arab sources are inherently fraudulent, but the motive for bias is so great that it casts doubt on the entire article. The fact that palestineremembered.com uses primary sources from that era only exacerbates my concerns, because it is likely that those sources are even more slanted and given to propogandizing than modern ones. Are there no third party sources that could be used for the entries citing these sources? As for the Jewish Virtual Library, it seems a bit one-sided that you'd doubt their authenticity yet accept that of palestineremembered.com without question. It is exactly this type of back and forth that I wanted to avoid by not citing any Jewish or Arab sources - thus, if you can find any alternate source for the Stern Gang's bombing of the Arab National Committee's HQ I would support using that instead. Otherwise this article (like so many other articles on Wikipedia, unfortunately) is just going to turn into a race to see who can cite more sources off the web regardless of their actual academic value. Also, why did you reintroduce two entries that have no citations (Ein al Zeitun and Abu Shusha)? And, why did you remove the note about the vandalism against Jewish settlements and the burning of agricultural fields and uprooting of trees. I included this specifically because I felt they provided important context to the event, just as the Irgun burning down 100 homes in Jaffa does (as you appear to agree with). Similarly, I included the note about the majority of Arabs being killed by Arab militias because it is something that would not be immediately evident to the layperson and provides a better understanding of why Arab casualties were so high during that time period. While I do have problems with the current format of the article, as it stands I don't feel these problems are significant enough to warrant an immediate change. As such, I think we can both agree that heretofore we will discuss any changes we'd like to make on the talk page before actually implementing them in the article. Awaiting your response, then - kachol
Hi Kachol. You seem to be news here so let me explain something to you, you may not be aware of. When information in article is wikilinked, (placed between double square brackets so that it appears like
this, and you can press on the link and go to another page where there are sources listed, we do not need to cite the sources again in this article. You deleted or changed the text in a bunch of these links in your edit, causing them to appear as
redlinks, leading to no page.
I hope that explains why I restored the
Abu Shusha massacre and
Ein al Zeitun massacre.
That is also why I removed the notes from the column when there were articles on the subject. The details can be covered in that article, not here, since this is a list that is designed to provide an overall summary that links to specific articles where the event is discussed in detail.
I appreciate very much that you are holding off from making changes on the items we disagree on, which are the use of
Benny Morris,
Uri Milstein and Palestine Remembered. I agree that these sources have biases as we all do, but they are used extensively throughout Wikipedia. Palestine Remembered only uses Village Statistics for its sources on population and land area. It relies mostly on
Benny Morris and
Walid Khalidi for information on attacking forces and the fate of various villages. If you feel strongly about Palestine Remembered, we can fact check the claim against the sources they cite by asking someone with a copy of their books (I believe
Huldra (
talk ·
contribs) may have some) to double check it.
I hope I've addressed some of your concerns and would like to say Welcome to Wikipedia, I hope you enjoy editing here.
Tiamut
21:38, 18 December 2007 (UTC)
NPoV doesn't mean to introduce facts as if everybody were responsible, particularly when one's wants to make an article about a massacre ?
Jews that were killed during Deir Yassin events (battle and then massacre) are not victims of a massacre. They were killed by the Arab villagers who defended themselves.
For exactly the same reasons, the Arabs who were killed in 1920, 1921 and 1929 were not massacred. They were killed because Jews protected themselves. I suggest they are removed from the list of victims or we add all victims (Jews - Arabs - British) for all events reported in this article.
Kachol ( talk) 23:16, 30 December 2007 (UTC) Whoever posted this, I'm inclined to agree with you. My original edit of this article cited Arabs as the culprits for all of the riots in the 1920s and 30s, for the exact reason you mention here. This was changed to "Arabs, Jews, British authorities" without my consent and without discussion on the talk page, so I'm glad you changed it back. As I've already stated, I try to keep my sources exclusively third-party in order to minimize bias. In this case, both Gilbert and Bard (cited) support the conclusions that the Arabs were the instigators/aggressors in 1920, 1921, 1929, and 1936-39. As for primary sources, two official, third-party inquiries were established by the British to investigate the riots in 1921 and 1929. Both the Haycraft Commission (1921) and the Shaw Commission placed responsibility on local Arabs for instigating the violence (both cited).
This article doesn't respect NPoV. These events were not all "massacres" but most events occured in the context of a civil war. Where is the "official" and "relevant" definition of massacre ? Ceedjee ( talk) 17:25, 28 December 2007 (UTC)
Kachol ( talk) 23:16, 30 December 2007 (UTC) Hey Ceedjee, I did the majority of the editing on this page and yeah, you're right, it's somewhat difficult to get a bead on exactly what constitutes a "massacre". I briefly address this issue in my original talk page post. My definition of "massacre" is the same as that of the American Heritage dictionary: "The act or instance of killing a large number of humans indiscriminately and cruelly." Obviously this is still a somewhat vague definition, so I figured the best way avoid the silly discussions about whether 10 is a "large enough" number or 20 is "too large" would be to just put it at 3, as in: "Two's company, three's a crowd." Now that I think about it, the name of this article is kind of inflammatory and not really appropriate to an encyclopedia. Does anyone have any suggestions with regard to changing the name? I thought "mass killings" - that has fewer connotations, but then it's still a relative term as far as numbers are concerned.
Why don't we simply name the article: List of attacks committed prior to the 1948 Arab–Israeli war in Mandate Palestine. It is more neutral, and the reader can judge by himself. Evidently, all attacks were made onto civilian populations, but the ones with death tolls of less than 10 people, could not semantically be considered as massacres. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Patrick.N.L ( talk • contribs) 07:11, 8 January 2009 (UTC)
I think this source doesn't refer to massacres but just give losses : Routledge Atlas of the Arab-Israeli Conflict.
I will remove all events where this source is used to refer to a massacre and where historians don't state it was. If this source would state all these where massacres, then we will discuss its relevance and reliability.
Ceedjee (
talk)
10:41, 31 December 2007 (UTC)
Kachol ( talk) 01:58, 6 January 2008 (UTC) Ceedjee, In response to this post and your post in NPoV above: Respectfully, I disagree. The number of people killed very much is the matter, because it is the only concrete, available definition for massacre. What does the "reality" of the massacre even mean? And exactly what context do you feel qualifies an incident as a massacre? Lastly, and I say this without any ill will, why should your opinion on context be considered? Again, the only sources we should be referring to when it comes to defining the term massacre are dictionaries and encyclopedias. I mentioned one of these sources above, but here's another: Webster's II "massacre" - the savage killing of a considerable number of people. Due to the fact that it's nearly impossible to come to a collective agreement on, or even an accurate assessment of, which specific killings were done "savagely" or "cruelly" or "indiscriminately", we've decided to base this list on the quantified element of the definition. If you have a problem with defining massacre in this way, then you have a problem with the name of the article, not specific entries on the list. If you include only those incidents which historians refers to as massacres, your list will still be biased, because historians consistently disagree on these matters. Moreover, "massacre" is an inherently subjective term. One historian's standards for a massacre are not necessarily any more right or wrong than another historian's or even a layperson's. What Tiamut and I have attempted to do here is "objectify" the word massacre by strictly focusing on the quantified element. Again, I'm open to a discussion on changing the name of the list, but I'd strongly disagree with cherry-picking certain entries because this or that historian felt that he had the right to make a polemic out of history by using the word "massacre" while another wanted to remain impartial and only used the word "killings".
Kachol ( talk) 12:43, 11 January 2008 (UTC)Ceedjee, let me clarify. First: You gave an opinion on the definition of "massacre" above. I pointed out that your personal definition is irrelevant - not because your opinions don't have value, but simply because in an encyclopedia we should only be citing verifiable, authoritative sources. Second: I completely agree with what you're saying about independently deciding which events fit the "massacre" definition. It's not exactly independent research, but it is biased. Now, in a case where there is an academic debate over FACTS between scholars, Wikipedia's policy on 'teaching the controversy' (if you will) applies. However, in this case, the debate is not academic, it's normative. In other words, the term "massacre" is so subjective that it doesn't matter whether or not you're the world's greatest historian, you status would not afford you authority on the subject. It's like naming an article "Good things that happened before 1948". Does being a historian make you an authority on deciding what was good or what was bad, or afford your views any more credence than anyone else's? I can find dozens of sources that call this event or that event a massacre, but none of them would be relevant. Thus, as I've said numerous times before, I STRONGLY SUPPORT your proposition to change the name of this article, and I think that the name you proposed below is a good one. However, as a bit of advice, I think that adding another article that discusses massacres will, inevitably, lead to the problems I mentioned above. I estimate that the resulting article will simply end up becoming a propaganda-battleground between activist Jews and activist Arabs like so many other Wikipedia articles on this subject. Third: A little etiquette? I'm gladly you're so knowledgeable about the nature of Wikipedia ("not a room for negotiation"), but this is probably the silliest statement I've ever read. If there is anywhere that DEFINITELY IS a room for discussions regarding the verifiability, authenticity and authority or sources, it's the TALK page for an article - hence the name of the page. And your statement regarding my and Tiamut's (I'm assuming she's included in your allegation) historical ignorance is a little offensive. I'm certainly not infallible, and I'd be more than willing to discuss/correct any particular errors I've included, but the least you could do is point out to which "mistakes" you are referring instead of making such a blanket condemnation. I'd be very interested in finding out which events/contexts/scholarly papers you feel I "don't know" well enough, considering that I've studied this subject quite extensively, previously lived in the Middle East for many years and have visited many of these locations and spoken to persons who were involved in many of these incidents.
This : http://www.palestineremembered.com is not a reference. I will try to find references in historian publications (mainly in Morris, The Birth (...) revisited). If they are not referred there, I will remove this. Ceedjee ( talk) 10:48, 31 December 2007 (UTC)
Kachol ( talk) 08:35, 12 January 2008 (UTC)Ceedjee, with regards to this website and the "encyclopedia" you also mention: Welcome to the mess that is Wikipedia. In other words, one of Wikipedia's main flaws - and the reason it will probably never be trusted as a singular source - is that its standards of differentiation between cited sources are highly ambiguous and rely on general opinion (see WP:SOURCE). In the extreme case, especially with regards to relatively obscure events such as these, there is - theoretically - nothing stopping a person from simply creating his/her own website and asserting facts as he/she sees fit, then citing that website as a source. In the more common case, events are presented as "disputed" between sources despite the fact that one side of the dispute is obviously less authoritative than the other. Wikipedia's administrators believe that this problem naturally solves itself through what they call "consensus" editing - in truth, most articles covering controversial topics simply come to represent the lowest common denominator of opinions. Thus, although I agree with you about both of these sources, and would support their removal, Tiamut could just as easily - and justifiably - disagree with you and reinstate them.
This article doesn't respect NPoV because it states as massacres events that historian doen't always refer to as such. I think of course about al-Tantura. I must check for some others. How could such a list respect NPoV here ? Ceedjee ( talk) 10:48, 31 December 2007 (UTC)
Due to lack of sources and Pov issues, I suggest to rename to Casualites of the Arab-Zionist conflict before 1948. Ceedjee ( talk) 12:15, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
Oppose - I think what we need to do instead is list only those events that are termed "massacres" by reliable sources. While I initially welcomed Kachol's edits to this page and the idea of defining any and all attacks against 3 or more unarmed people as "massacres", that seems to be too unwieldy. We need a source for every entry that calls it a "massacre" explicitly. All entires that do not have a source as such, should be deleted from the article. If you want to work on the article name you suggested, there is a related discussion at Talk:Israeli-Palestinian conflict on compiling casualty figures for the entire conflict. I'm sure they would be very interested in your help there. (unsigned statement by user:Tiamut.
Kachol ( talk) 04:40, 12 January 2008 (UTC)Again, see my post above. Explain what qualifies a historian as an authority on what constitutes a massacre. This is an inherently subjective term. There are three primary elements in its definition: 1) fatality 2) quantity 3) cruelty. Fatality is objective - either someone died or did not die. But there is nothing at all in the training of a historian that prepares him/her to make an "expert" assessment of what is a "large" quantity or a "cruel" quality, because no such training exists. The only persons who MIGHT have a claim to expertise on these matters are semantic experts or linguists, but even that is specious. Consider that the US Supreme Court has, for over 200 years, been unable to come up with a definable set of standards for the Constitutional clause "cruel and unusual punishment" for just this reason - there is no right or wrong set. This is also why most respected historians, history textbooks and ESPECIALLY encyclopedists refrain from using terms like "massacre", "atrocity", "glorious", and other inherently un-empirical terms. Changing the paradigm of this article to one that includes only those events labeled "massacre" will simply have the effect of creating a list of events used by various unqualified persons trying to make a political point with said events. Were the Nebi Musa riots a massacre? Maybe, maybe not. If I think they were not, explain to me what makes a historian's opinion more "expert" than mine. Does he/she have a better understanding of what cruelty is? If anything, that would be a question for philosophers. I don't see any other option but to change the name of this article.
Please note that every entry on this list must have a WP:RS that described the incident in question as a "massacre" explicitly, in order to be included. This is in line with our guidelines on verifiability and reliable sourcing. While I initially agreed to allowing the inclusion of events lacking in such sources, that was a mistake that has led to an unwieldly article scope and POV editing. I will be removing every entry that does not have a reliable source indicating that it is a massacre in the coming days. Tiamut 17:21, 11 January 2008 (UTC)
This : List of massacres committed prior to the 1948 Arab-Israeli war in Mandate Palestine is equivalent to List of massacres committed in Mandatory Palestine, given the British Mandate ended on May 14, 1948, just before the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.
Unless disagreement, I will proceed to the move.
Ceedjee (
talk)
06:50, 26 May 2008 (UTC)
where does Gilbert say "5000 Arabs killed?" I looked on the page about the revolt, and the only source to say that was Al Jazeera, hardly impartial. Also, if its true, as I have heard British were mostly responsible, then it should be noted. Tallicfan20 ( talk) 05:38, 12 July 2009 (UTC)
because massacre implies that one side is responsible and talks about the death of the other. When people talk about Deir Yassain, no one mentions what happened to a few Jews that same day. Likewise, during the attacks and pogroms on the Jews, I think there needs to be emphasis on the Jews killed. Or I think this article should be renamed.
Seeing as there is an article on Irgun attacks, I think there should be an article on Arab attacks on Jews. You cannot have one without the other or it is not NPOV on this site and blatantly biased. Tallicfan20 ( talk) 10:55, 12 July 2009 (UTC)
At the risk of repeating what is said above, the selection of entries in this list makes little sense. The article starts by saying that it is restricted to deaths of "civilians or non-combat military personnel" but many of the entries clearly don't match that. Moreover, many of the entries do not carry sources which support insertion - this includes almost everything sourced to Gilbert's Atlas, which rarely gives sufficient detail to identify the nature of the victims. Also a lot of examples from List of Irgun attacks during the 1930s are missing. Zero talk 05:34, 24 August 2010 (UTC)
The scope of this article was vaguely defined, I am trying to improve this. IMHO it should cover killings and massacres during the existence of the British Mandate for Palestine, which is an undisputed, objectively quantifiable time period. Marokwitz ( talk) 06:46, 15 May 2011 (UTC)
Thoughts? No More Mr Nice Guy ( talk) 05:59, 17 April 2012 (UTC)
This article currently lists the 1937-1939 riots with their total casualties as one incident and then various killings that were part of these riots as if they were two separate things. It creates a false impression. -- 68.6.227.26 ( talk) 04:31, 16 December 2012 (UTC)
Bombing of Arab National Committee HQ January 4, 1948 . Says responsible party is "stern gang" --> and redirects to "Lehi" . Why not change it to Lehi like all the other entries, as stern gang only appears once on this page but Lehi appears multiple times. The Lehi group was called stern gang by the British. They are the same group. I wanted to change these words but Wikipedia threatened me since I have lower than 500 edits. Spike82 ( talk) 04:33, 9 February 2016 (UTC)
Why was my edit of the Tiberias Massacre reverted? It's not placed chronologically in the chart, and I gave a credible source for my description. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 79.179.162.66 ( talk) 01:06, 15 February 2016 (UTC)
... means what? If they died in hospital etc., they were part of the "Fatalities" - or we change heading to "IMMEDIATE fatalities". Arminden ( talk) 13:17, 15 August 2016 (UTC)
Today, Ethanbas removed two incidents—the April 23, 1948, Cairo-Haifa Train bombing and the April 25 Sorona [should be Sarona] Police Station bombing—with the edit summary "those 2 events aren't real; there was no sorona bombing, and there were many train bombings but none on april 23 1948".
Ethanbas is right. The source cited, The Complete Idiot's Guide to Middle East Conflict, places both bombings in April 1947, not 1948 (probably a Wikipedia editor's error). [1] [Insert rant about how using Google Books and reading only a single page of a book is not a good way to perform research.] So do other reliable sources, including The British Army and Jewish Insurgency in Palestine, 1945–47 [2] and Colonisation and Conflict 1750–1990. [3]
I therefore propose restoring the bombings to the table with the dates corrected. — Malik Shabazz Talk/ Stalk 03:13, 29 May 2017 (UTC)
https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=List_of_killings_and_massacres_in_Mandatory_Palestine&diff=789494866&oldid=787379801 The aggressors were Arabs in this incident, so I rolled back this edit. Ethanbas ( talk) 18:25, 7 July 2017 (UTC)
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with only 2 fatalities. I think it violates "It is restricted to incidents in which at least three people were deliberately killed"
"more than 5,000 Arabs, over 300 Jews, and 262 Britons had been killed and at least 15,000 Arabs were wounded" from 1936–1939 Arab revolt in Palestine#Casualties
The table should include a 'total fatalities' part, which lists the total number of fatalities in all -- as well as the specific number of Jews killed, and the specific number of Arabs killed. Wallingfordtoday ( talk) 03:13, 7 December 2018 (UTC)
I find this column jarring for many of the incidents. For bombs or one-sided massacres, it's clear, but for many others the responsible party remains disputed. Onceinawhile ( talk) 21:03, 11 May 2019 (UTC)
Why are Jewish attacks by Irgun detailed to like an attack with 3 Muslims dead; when Arab attacks can be grouped even though they have 50-60 deaths each. For example the Hebron massacre does not have an entry even though it is 20 times the size of some Irgun attack. It is quite biased; a good solution would be to have sub totals per year with total Jews killed by Arabs, total Arabs killed by Jews, and total Arabs killed by British forces. Patrick.N.L ( talk) 20:13, 16 March 2022 (UTC)
Massacres have perpetrators. Including the victims of a massacre as a 'responsible party' is dubious and open to massive interpretation. Patrick.N.L ( talk) 07:08, 23 April 2022 (UTC)
Many of the incidents currently listed do not fit with the general understanding of massacre. I propose splitting the list into two: A list of massacres with a narrower definition, and a list of other incidents that meet the current definition.
As a strawman, I propose that an incident only be considered a massacre if
There should also be guidelines about who is the "responsible party" (as in the thread above). Perhaps any side responsible for over a quarter of the deaths could be listed as a responsible party. LachlanA ( talk) 04:22, 21 November 2023 (UTC)
Two are labeled "Jewish militants ( Stern Gang)" and one is labelled "Jewish militants ( Lehi)" the page for Lehi says that Stern Gang is just an exonym for the Lehi, should all three show Lehi? So it's clear that all the are the same group. Is there a reason to call them Stern Gang instead? Is there any good reason to keep them separate? MWQs ( talk) 13:51, 20 June 2024 (UTC)