Ramat Rachel shooting attack

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Nativenameפיגוע הירי ברמת רחל
Location31°44′23″N 35°13′01″E / 31.73972°N 35.21694°E / 31.73972; 35.21694
Near Kibbutz Ramat Rachel, Israel
Date23 September 1956; 69 years ago (1956-09-23)
Attack type
Mass shooting
Ramat Rachel shooting attack
Part of Palestinian Fedayeen insurgency
Ramat Rachel shooting attack is located in Jerusalem District
Ramat Rachel shooting attack
The attack site
Native nameפיגוע הירי ברמת רחל
Location31°44′23″N 35°13′01″E / 31.73972°N 35.21694°E / 31.73972; 35.21694
Near Kibbutz Ramat Rachel, Israel
Date23 September 1956; 69 years ago (1956-09-23)
Attack type
Mass shooting
WeaponsSubmachine guns, Rifles
Deaths4 Israeli civilians
Injured16 Israeli civilians
AssailantsJordanian Legion soldiers

The Ramat Rachel shooting attack was a mass shooting carried out by Jordanian Legion soldiers, on 23 September 1956, who opened fire across the Israel/Jordan border on a group of Israeli archaeologists working inside Israeli sovereign territory near Kibbutz Ramat Rachel. Four Israeli archaeologists were killed in the event and 16 others were wounded.

On Sunday, 23 September 1956, a tour was held for a group of Israeli archaeologists at the archaeological excavations near Kibbutz Ramat Rachel. During the tour machine-gun fire was opened on the archaeologists from Jordanian positions at Mar Elias Monastery near the Jerusalem-Bethlehem road. The fire killed four people, including the archaeologist Jacob Pinkerfeld, and 16 others were wounded.[1] Another person who was seriously injured in the shooting died eventually of his wounds five years later.[citation needed][dubious discuss]

Official reactions

  • Jordan: Jordan expressed regret for the incident and blamed a single soldier who was "suddenly taken by madness".[2]
  • Israel: Israeli foreign ministry spokesman called Jordan's version completely unfounded, quoting witnesses at the event who stated that two submachine guns and three rifles were clearly seen firing from two Jordanian army outposts across the border at the archaeologists in Ramat Rachel.[2]

Aftermath

References

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