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My part in the attack on the King David Hotel

Finchley pensioner Miraim Abramoff recalls the Jerusalem bomb which killed 91

July 12, 2012 15:04
The aftermath of the bomb which devastated Jerusalem’s King David Hotel

BySimon Round, Simon Round

3 min read

Sixty-six years ago, Miriam Issacaroff made an urgent call to her siblings in Tel Aviv, telling them she was sending her parents from Jerusalem to stay with them, asking them to keep them safe because "something big" was about to happen in the city.

It would change history. The 20-year-old, who had joined the Irgun a year earlier, knew that Jewish paramilitaries were about to plant a bomb at the King David Hotel, the headquarters of the British Mandate authorities in Palestine.

Now 86, with a married name of Abramoff and living in Finchley, she is one of the few surviving Israelis who played a part in the attack on July 22 1946. "I thought perhaps my brother or I would be killed. I told my parents we'd see each other soon. But I knew everything might not be all right."

She was the assistant to some of the highest-ranking members of the Irgun, who had confided in her about the plan two months previously. "I felt very weak that day. But I wanted the British out. We wanted our country."