Zionists Proclaim New State Of Israel; Truman Recognizes It And Hopes For Peace;
TelAviv Is Bombed, Egypt Orders Invasion
By GENE CURRIVAN Special to The New York Times
el Aviv, Palestine, Saturday, May 15 -- The Jewish state, the world's newest
sovereignty, to be known as the State of Israel, came into being in Palestine at
midnight upon termination of the British mandate.
Recognition of the state by the United States, which had opposed its
establishment at this time, came as a complete surprise to the people, who were
tense and ready for the threatened invasion by Arab forces and appealed for help
by the United Nations.
In one of the most hopeful periods of their troubled history the Jewish
people here gave a sigh of relief and took a new hold on life when they learned
that the greatest national power had accepted them into the international
fraternity.
Ceremony Simple and Solemn
The declaration of the new state by David Ben-Gurion, chairman of the National Council and the first Premier of reborn Israel, was delivered during a simple and solemn ceremony at 4 P.M., and new life was instilled into his people, but from without there was the rumbling of guns, a flashback to other declarations of independence that had not been easily achieved.
The first action of the new Government was to revoke the Palestine White Paper of 1939, which restricted Jewish immigration and land purchase.
In the proclamation of the new state the Government appealed to the United Nations "to assist the Jewish people in the building of its state and to admit Israel into the family of nations."
The proclamation added: "We offer peace and amity to all neighboring states and their peoples, and invite them to cooperate with the independent Jewish nation for the common good of all. The State of Israel is ready to contribute its full share to the peaceful progress and reconstitution of the Middle East."
World Jews Asked to Aid
The statement appealed to Jews throughout the world to assist in the task of
immigration and development and in the "struggle for the fulfillment of the
dream of generations -- the redemption of Israel."
Plans for the ceremony had been laid with great secrecy. None but the hundred
or more invited guests and journalists was aware of the meeting until it
started, and even the guests learned of the site only ten minutes before. It was
held in the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, a white, modern-design two-story building.
Above it flew the Star of David, which is the state's flag, and below, on the
sidewalk, was a guard of honor of the Jewish Agency for Palestine.
As photographers' bulbs flashed and movie cameras ground out reels of the
scene, great crowds gathered and cheered the Ministers and other members of the
Government as they entered the building. The security arrangements were perfect.
Sten guns were brandished in every direction and even the roofs bristled with
them.
The setting for the reading of the proclamation was a dropped gallery whose
hall held paintings by prominent Jewish artists. Many of them depicted the
sufferings and joys of the people of the Diaspora, the dispersal of the Jews.
The thirteen Ministers of the Government Council sat at a long dais beneath
the photograph of Theodor Herzl, who in 1897 envisaged a Jewish state. Vertical
pale blue and white flags of the state hung to both sides. To the left of the
ministers and below them sat other members of the national administration. There
are thirty-seven in all, but some were unable to get here from Jerusalem.
At 4 P.M. sharp the assemblage rose and sang the Hatikvah, the national
anthem. The participants seemed to sing with unusual gusto and inspiration. The
voices had hardly subsided when the "squat, white-haired chairman, Mr. Ben-Gurion,
started to read the proclamation, which in a few hours was to transform most of
those present from persons without a country to proud nationals. When he
pronounced the words, "We hereby proclaim the establishment of the Jewish
state in Palestine, to be called Israel," there was thunderous applause and
not a few damp eyes.
After the proclamation had been read and the end of the White Paper and of
its land laws pronounced, Mr. Ben-Gurion signed the document and was followed by
all the other members of the administration, some by proxy. The last to sign was
Moshe Shertok, the new Foreign Minister and the Jewish Agency's delegate to the
United Nations. He was roundly applauded and almost mobbed by photographers.
The ceremony ended with everyone standing silently while the orchestral
strains of the Hatikvah filled the room. Outside, the fever of nationalism was
spreading with fond embraces, warm handshakes and kisses. Street vendors were
selling flags, crowds gathered to read posted bulletins, and newspapers were
being sold everywhere.
As the sabbath had started, there was not the degree of public rejoicing that
there would have been any other day.
The proclamation was to have been read at 11 P.M. but was advanced to 4
because of the sabbath. Mr. Shertok explained that the proclamation had to be
made yesterday because the mandate was to end at midnight and the Zionists did
not want a split second to intervene between that time and the formal
establishment of the state.
In the preamble to the declaration of independence the history of the Jewish
people was traced briefly from its birth in the Land of Israel to this day. The
preamble touched on the more modern highlights, including Herzl's vision of a
state, acknowledgment of the Balfour Declaration in 1917, and its reaffirmation
by the League of Nations mandate and by the United Nations General Assembly
resolution of Nov. 29, 1947.
It asserted that this recognition by the United Nations of the right of the
Jewish people to establish an independent state could not be revoked and added
that it was the "self-evident right of the Jewish people to be a nation, as
all other nations, in its own sovereign state."
The proclamation stated that as of midnight the National Council would act as
a Provisional State Council and that its executive organ, the National
Administration, would constitute a provisional government until elected bodies
could be set up before Oct. 1.
Israel, the proclamation went on, will be open to immigration by Jews from
all countries "of their dispersion." She will develop the country for
the benefit of all its inhabitants, it added, and will be based on precepts of
liberty, justice and peace taught by the Hebrew prophets.
The new state, according to the proclamation, will uphold the "social
and political equality of all its citizens without distinction of race, creed or
sex" and will guarantee full freedom of conscience, worship, education and
culture."
The statement pledged safeguarding of the sanctity and inviolability of
shrines and holy places of all religions. It also contained a promise to uphold
the principle of the United Nations.
There was great cheering and drinking of toasts in this blackened city when word was received that the United States had recognized the provincial Government. The effect on the people, especially those drinking late in Tel Aviv's coffee houses, was electric. They even ran into the blackness of the streets shouting, cheering and toasting the United States.
Source: New York Times, May 15, 1948