-
Havlagah (Hebrew: הַהַבְלָגָה ha-
Havlagah, lit. 'The Restraint') was the
strategic policy of the
Yishuv during the 1936–1939 Arab
revolt in Palestine...
- Haganah's
activities were moderate, in
accordance with the
strategic policy of
havlagah (lit. 'self-restraint'),
which caused the
breakaway of the more radical...
- 1937 in
Mandatory Palestine. It was
among the
first challenges to the
Havlagah (lit. restraint)
policy not to
retaliate against Arab
attacks on Jewish...
- Haganah,
practiced the
policy of
Havlagah (restraint);
Irgun militants did not
follow this
policy and
called themselves "
Havlagah breakers." The
Irgun began...
- Arab
revolt in Palestine, Ben-Gurion
instigated a
policy of
restraint ("
Havlagah") in
which the
Haganah and
other Jewish groups did not
retaliate for Arab...
-
against Jews, and
emblematic as a
rejection of the
establishment policy of
Havlagah, or restraint. For this reason, and
especially for
having been the first...
- near Acre. In
November 1937, the
Irgun formally rejected the
policy of
Havlagah and
embarked on a
series of
indiscriminate attacks against Arab civilians...
-
Jewish Agency, Ben-Gurion,
responded to the Arab
Revolt with a
policy of "
Havlagah"—self-restraint and a
refusal to be
provoked by Arab
attacks in
order to...
- Arab Revolt, he called,
together with
other rabbis, for
adherence to the
Havlagah policy of the
Haganah and for
avoidance of acts of revenge. He died on...
- and in Herzliya. The date is
known as the day the
policy of
restraint (
Havlagah) ended, or as
Black Sunday when
operations resulted in the
murder of 10...