According to official statistics there were 30,327 Jewish immigrants during 1933.[1]
1 January – Establishment of the cooperative bus company Egged through a merger of four smaller bus cooperatives.
30 January – The ZionistYouth Aliyah movement is founded in Germany with the aim of arranging the resettlement of Jewish youth in Palestine in kibbutzim and youth villages, where they would be trained for agricultural work.
27 October – Following the discovery in Jaffa harbour of a large shipment of weapons destined for an address in Tel Aviv the Arab Executive calls a general strike. A demonstration in Jaffa led by the president of the Executive, Musa al-Husayni, turned into a riot in which a crowd of several thousand attacked the small force of policemen who responded with baton charges and gunfire. 26 demonstrators and one policeman were killed. Amongst the 187 injured was 80-year-old Musa al-Husayni, who never recovered and died the following year. There followed six weeks of rioting in all the major towns in which 24 civilians are killed. The disorders were suppressed by the police, not the army. They were different from earlier disturbances in that the targets were British Government institutions rather than Jews.[2][3][4][5]
13 November – The founding of the moshavElyashiv by Jewish immigrants from Yemen, which was the first settlement to be established by Yemenite Jews.
Unknown dates
The founding of kibbutz Mishmarot by Jewish immigrants from Russia, Lithuania and Latvia.
16 June – Haim Arlosoroff (born 1899), Russian (Ukraine)-born left-wing Zionist leader, leader of the Labor Zionist movement in Palestine during the mandate period and head of the political department of the Jewish Agency. Assassinated.
Notes and References
[Conor Cruise O'Brien|O'Brien, Conor Cruise]
A Survey of Palestine – prepared in December 1945 and January 1946 for the information of the Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry. Reprinted 1991 by The Institute of Palestine Studies, Washington. Volume I. . pp.31,32
Horne, Edward (1982). A Job Well Done (Being a History of The Palestine Police Force 1920 – 1948). The Anchor Press. . pp.193,194,199