When Hitler Nearly Reached Israel

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March 11, 2026

5 min read

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In early 1942, half a million Jews in Palestine were weeks away from a Nazi invasion. What stopped Hitler from finishing what he started?

In early 1942, the 500,000-strong Jewish community of pre-state Israel faced the threat of Nazi genocide during World War II.

The German army launched a campaign to seize the Middle East, then largely under British control. The targets: vital oil fields, the Suez Canal, and the land of Israel itself, then called Palestine. If Field Marshal Erwin Rommel's Afrika Korps reached its borders, the Jewish community there would be in grave danger.

Rommel, considered invincible after a string of military triumphs, led the Axis assault. After taking the Libyan port city of Tobruk, his forces pushed east into Egypt. The British 8th Army fell back to El-Alamein, 60 miles from Alexandria, a position chosen by Field Marshal Sir Claude Auchinleck because a vast desert depression on one flank made it defensible ground.

Rommel, confident of a breakthrough, declared: "Once through El-Alamein, our road to the Nile was clear." From the Nile, the road to Palestine would be wide open.

In Palestine, local Arabs anticipating a Nazi victory grew emboldened. Swastikas appeared on streets, copies of Mein Kampf filled Arab bookstores, and some Arabs greeted each other with "Heil Hitler."

Alexandria descended into panic. British personnel fled in trucks. Refugees packed the trains. Officials frantically burned their records.

The situation was dire.

In Palestine, local Arabs anticipating a Nazi victory grew emboldened. Swastikas appeared on streets, copies of Mein Kampf filled Arab bookstores, and some Arabs greeted each other with "Heil Hitler." Jews feared to be outside after dark.

On July 26, 1942, German radio promised Palestinian Arabs they would receive Jewish property once the Nazis arrived. Arabs were already marking Jewish homes they intended to claim. Rabbi Haskel Besser, an eyewitness, wrote in The Rabbi of 84th Street: "Streets filled with Arabs who were actually fighting among themselves over who was going to get which house."

The British-appointed Mufti of Jerusalem, Amin Al-Husseini, a fanatical antisemite with close ties to Nazi leadership who had met personally with Adolf Hitler and Adolf Eichmann, stood ready to form an Arab unit to assist SS forces in slaughtering the Jews.

In Palestine, the Jewish community braced itself. Shelters and first aid stations were set up across the country. Buses were retrofitted as ambulances. The Haganah (the Jewish underground defense force) planned both a defense and, if necessary, a last-stand evacuation to Mount Carmel near Haifa, from which civilians might be evacuated by sea. But to where? The question had no easy answer.

This period would come to be known as the "two hundred days of dread."

Many Jews turned to prayer. Rabbi Zev Paretzky's book Miracle at El-Alamein describes the intensity of those prayers in synagogues, in small prayer houses, and at the graves of revered sages. Public fast days were declared.

Rabbi Eliezer Yehuda Finkel, who had fled Mir, Poland in 1941 and re-established the renowned Mir Yeshiva in Jerusalem, declared: "It is true that there are no weapons, but there is a way to escape the troubles of Hitler — Torah and prayer."

Rabbi Yosef Shlomo Kahaneman, who had rebuilt the great Ponevezh Yeshiva in Bnei Brak after it was destroyed by the Nazis, cited the prophet Obadiah (1:17): "And on Mount Zion will be refuge." The Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem, Rabbi Tzvi Pesach Frank, quoted the same verse when asked about the situation. The Zhviler Rebbe of Jerusalem was unequivocal: "The enemy will not be able to enter."

Rabbi Yitzchak HaLevi Herzog, the Chief Ashkenazi Rabbi of the Palestine Mandate, was urged by Lord Halifax, the British Conservative politician then serving as ambassador in Washington, not to return to Palestine given the danger. Rabbi Herzog replied: "The prophets did not foretell a third destruction of the Temple. I firmly believe the enemy will not reach the gates of our land."

Then fate, and Hitler himself, intervened.

Even as Rommel stood within striking distance of a world-altering victory, Hitler refused to commit the reinforcements that might have pushed him through.

Even as Rommel stood within striking distance of a world-altering victory, Hitler refused to commit the reinforcements that might have pushed him through. Preoccupied with the Soviet front and dismissive of the North African campaign as a sideshow, Hitler repeatedly denied Rommel the troops, tanks, and fuel he needed and urgently requested. Some historians argue that had Hitler backed Rommel fully in the summer of 1942, the Middle East could have fallen. Instead, Rommel's overextended forces attacked El-Alamein on June 30, 1942 — and failed. The Allied line held.

At the Second Battle of El-Alamein, from October 23 to November 4, British forces under Lieutenant-General Bernard Montgomery broke through German lines for good, ending the Nazi threat to the region. It was the first major Allied land victory of the war. Churchill captured its significance precisely: "Before El-Alamein, we never had a victory. After El-Alamein, we never had a defeat." He called it "the end of the beginning."

The victory denied Germany access to Middle Eastern oil and secured vital supply routes. It was a turning point in the war.

There is a painful irony here. British immigration restrictions had blocked Jews from fleeing to Palestine during the Holocaust, yet it was a British victory that saved the Jews of Palestine from the same fate.

Since the Arab pogroms of the early 1920s, the Yishuv and later the State of Israel have faced existential threat after existential threat and survived them all against staggering odds. During the darkest years of the Holocaust, the Jewish community of Palestine was spared a Nazi invasion.

Between Purim and Passover, the holidays that mark Jewish survival and redemption, may the Jewish people merit complete redemption in our time.

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Lowell D. Blackman
Lowell D. Blackman
27 days ago

The German plan also included a simultaneous victory at Stalingrad, a drive to the oil-rich Baku region and thence a movement through Iraq and on to Mandatory Palestine to meet up with Rommel's forces who, if the battle had gone in his favor, would take the Suez Canal and cut off the British lifeline from India.

Rommel was not the superhero general often portrayed. He was a very good tactician but not a particularly good strategist and he was encumbered by a lack of supplies and a feckless Italian ally. And when Rommel had earlier taken Tunisia, he allowed the SS to gather information and make plans about what to do with the large Jewish populations in North Africa vis-a-vis the Final Solution. And finally, his venerated Atlantic Wall failed to stop the Allied landing on June 6, 1944.

Shmuel
Shmuel
30 days ago

I was disappointed to read "Then fate and Hitler intervened". This seems to deny the truth that the victory was 100% from Hashem. While I'm sure that you believe this as well, I feel that this sentence is very misleading.

Rachelle Emanuel
Rachelle Emanuel
1 month ago

Good article, but incomplete. You missed the amazing miracle of the Germans surrendering at El Alamein at the very beginning of July 1942 because they had drunk salt water from a British-built pipeline. This is recorded by Peter Rainier (an Australian Major) in his book Pipeline to Battle. I strongly recommend listening to Jacob Astor's lecture on the subject at https://www.torahanytime.com/lectures/313436

Bracha Goetz
Bracha Goetz
1 month ago

Wow, amazing, thank G!d!

Mike
Mike
1 month ago

This might be a little strange as a comment but I’ve wondered about sharing this for a long time.

You might be interested to know that Bernard Montgomery comes from a branch of the Montgomery family which almost definitely carries the Y-Chromosomal Haplogroup J-L26, and it clusters with many Jewish, (Katz esp.) few European, and some Arab families today. Montgomery also lead the allied invasion force on D Day.

My paternal line is descended from the same branch as his and is confirmed J-L26. Nobody seems to know what to do with us, and we aren’t sure of our paternal origins on that line, but we don’t have many European surnamed cousins paternally and have clustered quite closely together apparently for centuries.

I don’t know if there’s any significance, but thought I’d share.

Jack
Jack
20 days ago
Reply to  Mike

This is not all completely correct. J-L26 is a massive macro haplogroup. The downsteam subclade that the Montgomery J-L26 cluster belongs to is not closely related to any Jewish subclades under L26.

Charlotte
Charlotte
1 month ago

Thank you for this article. It brings to the fore how God handles everything if we only continue to have faith.

Elana Szabo
Elana Szabo
1 month ago

We had many family members who came to Is Israel in the 30's and were part of our brave heroes. This article made me realize what heroes they were
The

Jake
Jake
1 month ago

Great article! I knew there was panic during Rommel's approach, but no more detail. Do we know anything about the Gestapo's preparations for the invasion and wiping out such a large number of Jews? They must have been salivating at such a huge prize. They were consummate planners and must have made whatever preparations they could with the Multi.

Again, great info well presented. Thanks, and thanks to Aish for getting this to us.

Last edited 1 month ago by Jake
Barbara Thomas
Barbara Thomas
1 month ago

The hand of God is all over these victories. May it ever be the same.
I'm not Jewish, but as one who reads the Bible beginning in childhood, Old Testament as well as New Testament, makes very clear the outltanding love from God to the Jewish people.

Tova Saul
Tova Saul
1 month ago

Thank you!

Pauline Kyriazis Mourouzis
Pauline Kyriazis Mourouzis
1 month ago

Thank you for sharing this miraculous story .when we fall on our knees and cry out to our heavenly Father, He hears and answers.

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