Lewis Yelland Andrews: Difference between revisions
m ISBNs (Build KH) |
Clarityfiend (talk | contribs) m minor cleanup |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''Lewis Yelland Andrews''' (b. 1896 in [[Sydney]]; d. 26 September 1937 in [[Nazareth]]). He was a son of A.E. Andrews from Sydney. Andrews had fought in [[World War I]] for the Australian Imperial Forces.<ref>"Outrage Palestine", in: ''The Argus'' (Melbourne, Vic.), 29 September 1937, p. 15</ref> He later served as British district commissioner for [[Galilee]]. His assassination on 26 September 1937, caused [[United Kingdom|Britain]] to respond by outlawing the [[Arab Higher Committee]] and the arresting of its members. His assassination was considered to represent the apex of the great [[1936–1939 Arab revolt in Palestine|Arab revolt in Palestine]]. |
'''Lewis Yelland Andrews''' (b. 1896 in [[Sydney]]; d. 26 September 1937 in [[Nazareth]]). He was a son of A.E. Andrews from Sydney. Andrews had fought in [[World War I]] for the Australian Imperial Forces.<ref>"Outrage Palestine", in: ''The Argus'' (Melbourne, Vic.), 29 September 1937, p. 15</ref> He later served as British district commissioner for [[Galilee]]. His assassination on 26 September 1937, caused [[United Kingdom|Britain]] to respond by outlawing the [[Arab Higher Committee]] and the arresting of its members. His assassination was considered to represent the apex of the great [[1936–1939 Arab revolt in Palestine|Arab revolt in Palestine]]. |
||
Before his murder, one of Andrews' last tasks was to organise a program for the royal commission. He allegedly used his influence in favour of partition of the [[British Mandate for Palestine|British Mandate]]. For this, Andrews was allegedly targeted for assassination by [[Hajj Amin al-Husayni]]{{Citation needed|date=March 2008}}. |
Before his murder, one of Andrews' last tasks was to organise a program for the royal commission. He allegedly used his influence in favour of partition of the [[British Mandate for Palestine|British Mandate]]. For this, Andrews was allegedly targeted for assassination by [[Hajj Amin al-Husayni]]{{Citation needed|date=March 2008}}. |
||
On 26 September 1937, Andrews, Pirie-Gordon (the assistant district commissioner) and Andrews' bodyguard (a British police [[constable]]) were on their way from attending service at the [[Anglican]] [[Christ Church, Nazareth]] when they were gunned down by four Arabs.<ref>"Arab Terrorists Murder Australian Outside Church", in: ''The Canberra Times'', 28 September 1937, p. 1</ref> Andrews died on the spot and the bodyguard later died at the hospital. |
|||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | Britain immediately issued a warrant for al-Husayni's arrest and shortly later outlawed the Arab Higher Committee (of which al-Husayni was chairman). Al-Husayni escaped arrest and eventually made his way to [[Syria]] which became the committee's new base of operations. In the absence of the established leadership, more radical politicians assumed control of the resistance movement within [[Palestine]] itself. [[Anti-Zionist]] and anti-British attacks rapidly increased. |
||
Andrews was buried in [[Jerusalem]] and his grave is preserved in the Protestant [[Mount Zion Cemetery, Jerusalem (Protestant)|Mount Zion Cemetery]] there. He left a widow and three children. |
Andrews was buried in [[Jerusalem]] and his grave is preserved in the Protestant [[Mount Zion Cemetery, Jerusalem (Protestant)|Mount Zion Cemetery]] there. He left a widow and three children. |
Revision as of 08:03, 16 December 2012
Lewis Yelland Andrews (b. 1896 in Sydney; d. 26 September 1937 in Nazareth). He was a son of A.E. Andrews from Sydney. Andrews had fought in World War I for the Australian Imperial Forces.[1] He later served as British district commissioner for Galilee. His assassination on 26 September 1937, caused Britain to respond by outlawing the Arab Higher Committee and the arresting of its members. His assassination was considered to represent the apex of the great Arab revolt in Palestine.
Before his murder, one of Andrews' last tasks was to organise a program for the royal commission. He allegedly used his influence in favour of partition of the British Mandate. For this, Andrews was allegedly targeted for assassination by Hajj Amin al-Husayni[citation needed].
On 26 September 1937, Andrews, Pirie-Gordon (the assistant district commissioner) and Andrews' bodyguard (a British police constable) were on their way from attending service at the Anglican Christ Church, Nazareth when they were gunned down by four Arabs.[2] Andrews died on the spot and the bodyguard later died at the hospital.
Britain immediately issued a warrant for al-Husayni's arrest and shortly later outlawed the Arab Higher Committee (of which al-Husayni was chairman). Al-Husayni escaped arrest and eventually made his way to Syria which became the committee's new base of operations. In the absence of the established leadership, more radical politicians assumed control of the resistance movement within Palestine itself. Anti-Zionist and anti-British attacks rapidly increased.
Andrews was buried in Jerusalem and his grave is preserved in the Protestant Mount Zion Cemetery there. He left a widow and three children.
References
- Steven M. Gelber, "No Balm in Gilead: A Personal Retrospective of Mandate Days in Palestine," Carleton University Press (June 1989), pp. 100–101. ISBN 978-0-88629-104-4
- Martin Sicker, "Pangs of the Messiah: The Troubled Birth of the Jewish State" Praeger Publishers (30 January 2000), p. 134. ISBN 978-0-275-96638-6
Notes