Kfar Yuval hostage crisis

33°14′48″N 35°35′53″E / 33.24667°N 35.59806°E / 33.24667; 35.59806Date15 June 1975; 48 years ago (1975-06-15)
Attack type
hostage-takingDeaths3 Israelis (+ 4 attackers)Injured3PerpetratorArab Liberation Front claimed responsibility
No. of participants
4
  • v
  • t
  • e
Palestinian insurgency
in South Lebanon
Engagements

International incidents

The Kfar Yuval hostage crisis, which took place during 15 June 1975, was a raid by a squad of Palestinian militants belonging to the Arab Liberation Front on the Israeli moshav of Kfar Yuval in which the militants took residents as hostages and attempted to bargain for the release of terrorists held in Israeli prisons. One person was killed during the takeover.

An IDF special unit freed the hostages and killed the four militants the same day. During the operation, an IDF soldier was killed, and his wife, one of the hostages, was fatally wounded.

Details of the attack

Moshav Kfar Yuval. Photo taken in 2011

On 13 June 1975 a squad of militants belonging to the Arab Liberation Front militant organization crossed the border from Lebanon, heading towards the Israeli village of Kfar Yuval. The squad, which was hiding in the apple plantations of the village, was not detected by the security forces, although security had been reinforced in the village after the breach in the border fence was discovered. On the night of 15 June four militants infiltrated a house in the village. One of the family members, Nehemiah Joseph, who was an Armored Corps soldier, attempted to stop them, blocking the entry to the house doors by gathering furniture next to the door, but was killed by the militants immediately; the other people in the house were taken hostage.

After Israeli military forces arrived at the scene negotiations with the militants began, with the help of the local resident Rahamim Cohen, who volunteered for the job as he spoke fluent Arabic. The militants presented a proclamation with demands to release prisoners detained in Israeli prisons, including Archbishop Hilarion Capucci and Japanese militant Kōzō Okamoto.

Takeover operation

Yaakov Mordecai, the husband of hostage Simcha Mordecai and a combat soldier in the Golani Brigade in his army service, heard about the hostage-taking while on his way to work and quickly returned to the village, not knowing that his wife and 11-month-old son were among the hostages. He spoke with the commander of the northern command and demanded to be allowed to join the takeover force, mainly because he knew how the rooms in the house were laid out. The commander of the northern command accepted and Yaakov joined the takeover operation team.

As the force began breaking into the house they were shot at by the militants. Yaakov went ahead of the rest of the takeover team and charged into the house and shot two militants dead, but was himself killed by a grenade that also fatally injured his wife Simcha. The rest of the takeover force, encouraged by Mordechai's daring move, broke into the house and in the resulting exchange of fire, killed the rest of the squad.

Yaakov Mordecai was killed and Yitzhak Yosef-Chai, the father of the family taken hostage, and his son Avraham Yosef-Chai were seriously injured during the exchange of fire. Yaakov's wife Simcha was also injured, and died the next day in the hospital. Their infant son Assaf was saved because his mother hid him in a washing machine. Both Assaf and his brother Bezalel were wounded.[1]

Yaakov Mordecai was posthumously awarded the Medal of Courage.

References

  1. ^ "Israelis Seek to Adopt Child Whose Parents Terrorists Killed". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 18 June 1975. Archived from the original on 3 April 2023.

External links

  • Palestinian Raiders Hold Israel Family But Then Are Slain – published on The New York Times on 15 June 1975
  • Terrorists Attack Israeli Villagers – published on the Herald-Journal on 16 June 1975
  • Israel Retaliates After Raid On Village Leaves 7 Dead – published on the Milwaukee Journal on 16 June 1975
  • Mother Gets Guerrillas To Spare Son; Then Dies – published on the Virgin Islands Daily News on 17 June 1975
  • v
  • t
  • e
Prominent terrorist attacks against Israelis in the history of the Arab–Israeli conflict – the 1970s
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
  Attacks launched from the West Bank   Attacks launched from the Gaza Strip   Attacks launched from Lebanon   Attacks launched from Jordan
indicates the terrorist attack which caused the greatest amount of Israeli casualties during the 1970s
List of projectile attacks from Lebanon on Israel and the Golan Heights
1960s 1980s
  • v
  • t
  • e
Prominent Palestinian militancy attacks in the 1970s
Within Israel
Within the Gaza Strip
Aircraft attacks and hijackings
Worldwide
* Attacks launched from Lebanon 1960s 1980s