1929 ⟶ 1929 Palestine Riots
A long-running dispute between Muslims and Jews over access ...Year
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1933
🌍 Britain Receives Mandate for Palestine
At the San Remo conference Britain receives the League of Nations' British Mandate of Palestine.⟶

League of NationsBritish MandatePalestineSan Remo ConferenceZionismPolitical MandateMiddle East


📜 British Mandate for Palestine Comes into Effect
Mandate for Palestine to Great Britain comes into effect.⟶

British MandatePalestineZionismPost-WWITerritorial ControlPolitical DevelopmentInternational PoliticsMandate System


✈️ Fourth Aliyah to Palestine
The Fourth Aliyah was a direct result of the economic crisis and anti-Jewish policies in Poland, along with the introduction of stiff immigration quotas by the United States. The Fourth Aliyah brought 82,000 Jews to British Mandatory Palestine, of whom 23,000 left.⟶

AliyahImmigrationZionismBritish MandateEconomic CrisisAnti-Jewish PoliciesMigration Patterns20th Century


💥 1929 Palestine Riots
A long-running dispute between Muslims and Jews over access to the Western Wall in Jerusalem escalates into the 1929 Palestine riots. The riots included attacks by Arabs on Jews, resulting in massacres in Hebron and Safed, and violence against Jews in Jerusalem.⟶

1929 Palestine RiotsArab-Jewish ConflictHebron MassacreSafed MassacreWestern WallViolenceBritish MandateZionismIntercommunal Violence

🇮🇱 Fifth Aliyah to Palestine
The Fifth Aliyah was primarily a result of the Nazi accession to power in Germany (1933) and later throughout Europe. Persecution and the Jews' worsening situation caused immigration from Germany to increase and from Eastern Europe to continue. Nearly 250,000 Jews arrived in British Mandatory Palestine during the Fifth Aliyah (20,000 of them left later). From this time on, the practice of "numbering" the waves of immigration was discontinued.⟶
AliyahZionismImmigrationNazi GermanyBritish MandateJewish DiasporaMandatory PalestineRefugees
