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17 March 1947 – The Jewish Agency Press Office at 5 Ben Yehuda Street is bombed by John Hanson (Jack) May, a Palestine Police officer, in retribution for the deaths of colleagues and in response to a Palestine Post article by American commentator Ben Hecht, who wrote that he had "a little holiday in (his) heart when he heard of each British death". The bomb caused significant property damage, but as it was planted in the evening, when the offices were empty, there were no deaths or injuries.
9 April – The Deir Yassin massacre takes place, in which approximately 120 fighters from the Irgun and LehiZionist paramilitary groups attacked Deir Yassin near Jerusalem, an Arab village of roughly 600 people. The attack occurs as Jewish militia seek to relieve the blockade of Jerusalem.
13 May – Kfar Etzion massacre: The Gush Etzion (the Etzion Bloc), three Jewish kibbutzim which were established in 1945–1947 and dominated the road between Jerusalem and Hebron, hold off Arab attacks for ten days until one of the kibbutzim, Kfar Etzion, falls on 13 May, and the Arab forces massacre Kfar Etzion's remaining defenders. Altogether, 127 Jews, including 21 women, are killed in the battles of 12–13 May and the subsequent massacre. Only three men and one woman survive. The following day, the three other kibbutzim surrender and the prisoners are taken as POWs by the Arab Legion and held by Jordan for a year before being released.
All That Remains, ISBN0-88728-224-5. Page 398. al-Mukhayzin, 20 April, population 310 including 110 Jews.
Benny Morris, The birth of the Palestinian refugee problem. ISBN0-521-33028-9. Page 113. 'aimed at resecuring and widening the Jewish-held corridor through the Judean Hills to Jerusalem'.
Morris, page 113. 'aimed ... at wresting from Arab control further areas in and around Jerusalem'