1934 in Mandatory Palestine

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1934 in the British Mandate of Palestine

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1933
1932
1931


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1935
1936
1937

See also:

1934 in the United Kingdom
Other events of 1934

Events in the year 1934 in the British Mandate of Palestine.

Incumbents[]

Events[]

  • According to official statistics there were 42,359 Jewish immigrants during 1934.[1]
The first German Youth Aliyah group walking towards Kibbutz Ein Harod, 1934
  • 19 February – The first organized group of Youth Aliyah children from Germany, organized by the Youth Aliyah Bureau, arrive in Palestine and is sent to study in Kibbutz Ein Harod.
  • 14 May – Severe rainstorms in Tiberias lead to a flood in which 35 people are killed and about 100 buildings are destroyed.
  • 18 July – The founding of settlement Kiryat Bialik by Jewish German immigrants of the Fifth Aliyah.
  • December – National Defence Party (Palestine) established.

Unknown dates[]

  • The Organized illegal Jewish immigration to Palestine begins in 1934, following the deteriorating situation of the German Jews after the Nazi Party rise to power in 1933 and also as a result of the adoption of anti-Semitic policies in other European countries which included pogroms, persecutions and restrictions.
  • The "Sieff Institute" is established in 1934 in Rehovot, a research institute which later becomes the Weizmann Institute of Science.

Notable births[]

Notable deaths[]

  • 4 July – Hayim Nahman Bialik (born 1873), Russian-born Jewish poet and one of the pioneers of modern Hebrew poetry.
  • 27 March – Musa al-Husayni (born 1853), Palestinian Arab politician and leader of the Palestinian Arab national movement from 1922 until 1934. He never recovered from the beating he received from the Palestine Police in Jaffa five months earlier.
80-year-old Musa al-Husayni being clubbed by a British Policeman, Jaffa, 27 October 1933.

References[]

  1. ^ O'Brien, Conor Cruise (1986) The Siege. The Story of Israel and Zionism. 1988 Paladin Edition. ISBN 0-586-08645-5. p.202
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