Background Following the collapse of
Nazi Germany and before the
establishment of the State of Israel, the majority of Jews in Europe were living without clarification of their legal and national statuses. The majority of them were classified as
displaced persons, though where they were displaced from and where they ought to be relocated to were points of contention. The official position of the
Haganah, as defined by
David Ben-Gurion and the
Jewish Agency, was that European Jewry had been treated so differently that its members needed to continue to be differently treated. Therefore, in opposition to the policies of
quota immigration imposed by the
British White Paper, they sought to permit and facilitate unlimited Jewish immigration of
Holocaust survivors to
Mandate Palestine.
Origins caption needed --> The TTG Brigade was created by
Israel Carmi, who was an officer of the
Jewish Brigade while concurrently acting as a senior representative of the then-underground
Haganah. Carmi was initially engaged in
revenge operations against those believed to have been responsible, at least in part, for the
Shoah. Along with certain of his fellow soldiers in the Jewish Brigade, he was responsible
for executing hundreds of Germans, Austrians, and Italians. Most of these were identified by Carmi and his men as having been active members of the
SS or otherwise as having assisted in the deportation or extermination of Jews within the
Nazi sphere of influence. The number of Nazis they killed is unknown, but may have been as high as 1,500. The TTG Brigade came into existence when Carmi falsely identified himself at a checkpoint to confuse a sentry and allow him and his companions to have unhindered passage. It led to the creation of fictional paperwork, seals, passes, orders, requisition forms, and even unit uniforms and insignia.
Evolution As Carmi's goals shifted from revenge to rescue, so too did the TTG Brigade become more and more an instrument for the liberation of displaced persons and their eventual passage to Palestine. The function of the TTG was first and foremost to provide the illusion of official status before occupying Allied forces. This allowed the members of the brigade to engage in rescue activities without undue interruption or objection from the occupying powers. Purporting to act as if they were under orders as part of the TTG Brigade allowed its members to pass through roadblocks, military checkpoints, and international borders, often with large numbers of displaced Jews in their care. The second function of the group, which developed over time, was to extract from the Allied forces the greatest quantity of material and personnel assistance for the rescue efforts of the brigade's members. This included the fictional group's requisition and use of civilian and military vehicles, gasoline, rations, medical supplies, and other such materiel. The brigade was also involved, with the assistance of false TTG paperwork, in the acquisition of large quantities of small arms and other martial equipment for use by the Haganah in Palestine.
Dissolution The first goal of the group, illegal emigration, became less important as military control of civilian movement became less strict. The group's Zionist goals, centering on illegal immigration to Palestine (), became obsolete with the acceptance of the
United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine and the
international recognition of Israel. As more and more allied forces withdrew from Europe, fewer resources were available for acquisition by the members of TTG. Likewise, as the
Palestine war loomed, the military skills they had accumulated encouraged withdrawal of most of them to serve as officers in the newly formed
Israel Defense Forces. Most of the Jews who were rescued in this manner made
aliyah to Israel, where they settled in the cities or else became
kibbutzniks. Many of these actively supported the war effort during the 1948 Palestine war. The arms and materials stolen by the TTG contributed to the Israeli war effort and warmaking capacity. Most of the members of the TTG Brigade entered service in the Haganah and fought as part of the IDF during the war. ==See also==