Jewish Brigade





































Jewish Brigade

Brigada.jpgJB sleeve patch.jpg
Insignia and sleeve patch of the Jewish Brigade

Active 1944–1946
Country
 United Kingdom
Branch
 British Army
Type Infantry
Size
Brigade group, 5,000 volunteers
Engagements
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  • World War II
    • Italian Campaign



Commanders
Notable
commanders
Ernest Benjamin

The Jewish Infantry Brigade Group,[1] more commonly known as the Jewish Brigade Group[2] or Jewish Brigade,[3] was a military formation of the British Army in World War II. It was formed in late 1944[1][2] and was recruited among Yishuv Jews from Mandatory Palestine and commanded by Anglo-Jewish officers. It served in the latter stages of the Italian Campaign, and was disbanded in 1946.


After the war, some members of the Brigade assisted Holocaust survivors to emigrate illegally to Mandatory Palestine as part of Aliyah Bet.[4][5]




Contents






  • 1 Background


    • 1.1 Anglo-Zionist relations


    • 1.2 Origins of the Jewish Brigade




  • 2 Jewish Brigade


    • 2.1 Creation


    • 2.2 Military engagements




  • 3 Post-war deployment and disbandment


    • 3.1 Involvement in the Bricha


    • 3.2 Military legacy




  • 4 Legacy


    • 4.1 Medals and awards


    • 4.2 Legacy


    • 4.3 In popular culture




  • 5 Partial list of notable veterans of the Jewish Brigade


  • 6 See also


  • 7 References


  • 8 Sources


  • 9 External links





Background



Anglo-Zionist relations




Jewish Brigade headquarters under both Union Flag and Zionist flag


After World War I, the British and the French empires replaced the Ottoman Empire as the preeminent powers in the Middle East. This change brought closer the Zionist Movement's goal of creating a Jewish state. The Balfour Declaration of 1917 indicated that the British Government supported the creation of a Jewish homeland in Palestine in principle, marking the first official support for Zionist aims. It led to a surge of Jewish emigration in 1918–1921, known as the "Third Aliyah".[6] The League of Nations incorporated the Declaration in the British Mandate for Palestine in 1922. Jewish immigration continued through the 1920s and 1930s, and the Jewish population expanded by over 400,000 before the beginning of World War II.[6]




Brigadier Ernest Benjamin, commander of the Jewish Brigade, inspects the 2nd Battalion in Palestine, October 1944.


In 1939, however, the British Government of Neville Chamberlain appeared to reject the Balfour Declaration in the White Paper of 1939, abandoning the idea of establishing a Jewish Dominion. When the United Kingdom declared war on Nazi Germany in September 1939, David Ben-Gurion, the head of the Jewish Agency, famously declared: "We will fight the White Paper as if there is no war, and fight the war as if there is no White Paper."[7]



Origins of the Jewish Brigade


Chaim Weizmann, the President of the Zionist Organization (ZO), offered the British government full cooperation of the Jewish community in Mandatory Palestine. Weizmann sought to establish an identifiably Jewish fighting formation within the British Army. His request for a separate formation was rejected, but the British authorized the enlistment of Palestinian volunteers in the Royal Army Service Corps and in the Pioneer Corps, on condition that an equal number of Jews and Arabs was to be accepted. The Jewish Agency promptly scoured the local Labour Exchange offices to recruit enough Arab unemployed as "volunteers" to match the number of Jewish volunteers, and others were recruited from the lower strata of the Arab population offering cash bounties for enlistment. The quality of the recruits was, not surprisingly, abysmally low, with a very high desertion rate particularly among the Arab component, so that at the end most units ended up formed largely by Jews. The volunteers were formed in a RASC muleteers unit and a RASC Port Operating Company, and in the Pioneers Companies 601 to 609 (all but two lost during the Greece Campaign, with the last two returned to Palestine and disbanded there). From 1942, a large number of further Palestinian Arab/Jew mixed units were formed, still with the same mixed ethnic composition and the same quality problems encountered in the Pioneers Companies, including six RASC (Jewish) Transport Units,[8] a women's Auxiliary Territorial Service and a Woman Territorial Air Force Service[9] and several auxiliaries in local units of the Royal Army Ordnance Corps, Royal Engineers and Royal Army Medical Corps. Nine non-combat infantry companies were also raised as part of the Royal East Kent Regiment ("the Buffs"), to be used as guards for prisoners-of-war camps in Egypt. On August 1942 the Palestine Regiment was formed, again plagued by the same mixed recruiting and its associated low quality problems (the regiment was derisively called the "Five Piastre Regiments", due to the large number of Arab "volunteers" that had enlisted just for the cash bonus provided by the Jewish Agency).[10]


However, there was no designated all-Jewish, combat-worthy formation. Jewish groups petitioned the British government to create such a force, but the British refused.[11] At that time, the White Paper was in effect, limiting Jewish immigration and land purchases.[5]


Some British officials opposed creating a Jewish fighting force, fearing that it could become the basis for Jewish rebellion against British rule.[5] In August 1944, Winston Churchill finally agreed to the formation of a "Jewish Brigade". According to Rafael Medoff, Churchill consented because he was "moved by the slaughter of Hungarian Jewry [and] was hoping to impress American public opinion."[11]



Jewish Brigade



Creation




1st Battalion of the Jewish Brigade on parade


After early reports of the Nazi atrocities of the Holocaust were made public by the Allied powers, the Prime Minister Winston Churchill sent a personal telegram to the US President Franklin D. Roosevelt suggesting that "the Jews... of all races have the right to strike at the Germans as a recognizable body." The president replied five days later saying: "I perceive no objection..."


After much hesitation, on July 3, 1944, the British government consented to the establishment of a Jewish Brigade with hand-picked Jewish and also non-Jewish senior officers. On 20 September 1944 an official communique by the War Office announced the formation of the Jewish Brigade Group of the British Army and the Jewish Brigade Group headquarters was established in Egypt at the end of September 1944 (the formation was styled a brigade group because of the inclusion under command of an artillery regiment). The Zionist flag was officially approved as its standard. It included more than 5,000 Jewish volunteers from Mandatory Palestine organized into three infantry battalions of the Palestine Regiment and several supporting units.



  • 1st Battalion, Palestine Regiment

  • 2nd Battalion, Palestine Regiment

  • 3rd Battalion, Palestine Regiment

  • 200th Field Regiment (Royal Artillery)


The New York Times dismissed it as a "token"[citation needed] while The Manchester Guardian lamented, "The announcement that a Jewish Brigade will fight with the British Army is welcome, if five years late. One regrets that the British Government has been so slow to seize a great opportunity."



Military engagements




Men of the Jewish Brigade ride on a Churchill tank in North Italy, 14 March 1945




Jewish Brigade soldiers in Tarvisio




Jewish Brigade troops on the Italian-Austrian border


In October 1944, under the leadership of Brigadier Ernest F. Benjamin, the brigade group was shipped to Italy and joined British Eighth Army in November which was engaged in the Italian Campaign under 15th Army Group.[5][12]




Joseph Wald, a Jewish Brigade soldier, carries an artillery shell. The Hebrew inscription on the shell translates as "A gift to Hitler."


The brigade group took part in the Spring Offensive of 1945. It took positions on the front line in the Alfonsine sector, and was soon engaged in combat. On March 19–20, 1945, it initiated two attacks. The brigade then moved to the Senio River sector, where it fought against the German 4th Parachute Division commanded by Generalleutnant Heinrich Trettner. On April 9, the brigade crossed the river and established a bridgehead, widening it the following day.[13] During its 54 days of operations in Italy (March 3 to April 25, 1945) the Jewish Brigade suffered 30 killed and 70 wounded.[14] Its dead are buried in the Piangipane cemetery, near Ravenna.


In addition, they were represented among the liberating Allied units at a papal audience. The Jewish Brigade was then stationed in Tarvisio, near the border triangle of Italy, Yugoslavia, and Austria. They searched for Holocaust survivors, provided survivors with aid, and assisted in their immigration to Palestine.[5] They played a key role in the Berihah's efforts to help Jews escape Europe for British Mandatory Palestine, a role many of its members were to continue after the Brigade disbanded. Among its projects was the education and care of the Selvino children. In July 1945, the Brigade moved[12] to Belgium and the Netherlands.


Overall, in the course of World War II, the Jewish Brigade's casualties were 83 killed in action or died of wounds and 200 wounded.[15]



Post-war deployment and disbandment



Tilhas Tizig Gesheften (commonly known by its initials TTG, loosely translated as "kiss [literally, lick] my arse business") was the name of a group of Jewish Brigade members formed immediately following the Second World War. Under the guise of British military activity, this group engaged in the assassination of Nazis, facilitated the illegal immigration of Holocaust survivors to Mandatory Palestine, and smuggled weaponry to the Haganah.[5]


The Jewish Brigade also joined groups of Holocaust survivors in forming assassination squads known as the Nakam for the purpose of tracking down and killing former SS and Wehrmacht officers who had participated in atrocities against European Jews. Information regarding the whereabouts of these fugitives was gathered either by torturing imprisoned Nazis or by way of military connections. The British uniforms, military documentation, equipment, and vehicles used by Jewish Brigade veterans greatly contributed to the success of the Nokmim. The number of Nazis the Nokmim killed is unknown, but may have been as high as 1,500.[16][17][18]


After assignment to the VIII Corps District of the British Army of the Rhine (Schleswig-Holstein), the Jewish Brigade was disbanded in the summer of 1946.[19]



Involvement in the Bricha


Many members of the Jewish Brigade assisted and encouraged the implementation of the Bricha. In the vital, chaotic months immediately before and after the German surrender, members of the Jewish Brigade supplied British Army uniforms and documents to Jewish civilians who were facilitating the illegal immigration of Holocaust survivors to Mandatory Palestine. The most notable example was Yehuda Arazi, code name "Alon," who had been wanted for two years by the British authorities in Palestine for stealing rifles from the British police and giving them to the Haganah. In 1945, Arazi and his partner Yitzhak Levy travelled from Mandatory Palestine to Egypt by train, dressed as sergeants from the Royal Engineers. From Egypt, the pair travelled through North Africa to Italy and, using false names, joined the Jewish Brigade, where Arazi secretly became responsible for organising illegal immigration. This included purchasing boats, establishing hachsharot, supplying food and compiling lists of survivors.[20]


When Arazi reached the Jewish Brigade in Tarvisio in June 1945, he informed some of the Haganah members serving in the Brigade that other units had made contact with Jewish survivors. Arazi impressed upon the Brigade their importance in Europe and urged the soldiers to find 5,000 Jewish survivors to bring to Mandatory Palestine.[21] Jewish Brigade officer Aharon Hoter-Yishai recalled that he doubted the existence of 5,000 Jewish survivors; regardless, the Jewish Brigade accepted Arazi's challenge without question. For many Jewish soldiers, this new mission justified their previous service in the British forces that had preceded the creation of the Jewish Brigade.[22]


Another Jewish Brigade soldier actively involved in the Berihah was Israel Carmi, who was discharged from the Jewish Brigade in the autumn of 1945. After a few months, the Secretariat of Kibbutz HaMeuchad approached Carmi about returning to Europe to assist with the Berihah. Carmi's previous experience working with survivors made him an important asset for the Berihah movement. He returned to Italy in 1946 and attended the 22nd Zionist Congress in Basel, where he gained insight into how the Berihah operated throughout Europe. Carmi proposed establishing a second Berihah route across Europe in the event that the existing route collapsed. In addition, he also proposed dividing the Berihah leadership into parts: Mordechai Surkis, working from Paris, would be responsible for the financial workings; Ephraim Dekel in Prague would run the administrative element, and oversee the Berihah in Poland, Czechoslovakia and Germany; and Carmi, working from Prague, would oversee activities in Hungary, Yugoslavia and Romania.[23]




The Fighters against Nazis Medal


Jewish Brigade soldiers, assisting with the Berihah, specifically took advantage of the chaotic situation in post-war Europe to move Holocaust survivors between countries and across borders. Soldiers were intentionally placed by Merkaz Lagolah at transfer points and border crossings to assist the Jewish DPs (displaced persons).[24] For example, Judenberg, a sub-camp of the Mauthausen concentration camp, acted as a Berihah point where Brigade soldiers and partisans worked together to assist DPs. Similarly, in the city of Graz, a Berihah point was centred in a hotel where a legendary Berihah figure, Pinchas Zeitag, also known as Pini the Red or "Gingi," organised transports westwards to Italy.[25] One of the Jewish Brigade's greatest contributions to the Berihah was the use of their British Army vehicles to transport survivors (up to a thousand people at a time) in truck convoys to Pontebba, the brigade's motor depot. These secret transports generally arrived at 2 or 3 a.m., and the Brigade always ensured that DPs were greeted by a soldier or an officer and welcomed into a dining hall with food and tea. Everyone was given a medical examination, a place to sleep, and clean clothing; and within a few days the group was moved to hachsharot in Bari, Bologna and Modena. After recuperating and completing their hachshara training, the DPs were taken to ports where boats would illegally set sail for Mandatory Palestine.[26] Historians estimate that the Jewish Brigade assisted in the transfer, between 1945 and 1948, of 15,000–22,000 Jewish DPs as part of the Berihah and the illegal immigration movement.[27]



Military legacy





The Volunteer Ribbon was awarded to members of the Jewish Legion of WW1 and Jewish Brigade of WW2


In 1948, after the Israeli Declaration of Independence, many Jewish Brigade veterans served with distinction in the Israel Defense Forces during the Israeli War of Independence. Many veterans would serve as high-ranking officers in the Israeli military, 35 becoming generals.[28][29]



Legacy



Medals and awards




The Italian Gold Medal of Military Valour awarded in 2018 to the warflag of the Jewish Brigade


Among the brigade's soldiers, 78 were mentioned in dispatches, and 20 received military decorations (7 Military Medals, 7 Order of the British Empire medals, 4 Military Crosses, and 2 US awards).[30]. Veterans of the Brigade were later entitled to The Volunteer Ribbon and the Fighters against Nazis Medal of the State of Israel. On 3 October 2018, after a unanimous support vote by the Italian Parliament, the war flag of the Jewish Brigade Group was awarded the Italian "Medaglia d'Oro al Valor Militare" [31] for its contribution to the liberation of Italy during WW2. The medal was attached to the warflag of the 7th Armoured Brigade, heirs of the Jewish Brigade Group, in a celebration at the Bet Hagdudim (Battalions Museum)) of Avihayil, near Netanya.



Legacy


The Jewish Brigade inspired numerous memoires, books[32] and films.[33] In 1998, filmmakers Chuck Olin (Director) and Matthew Palm (Co-Producer) released their award-winning documentary, In Our Own Hands. The film aired on PBS in the United States, and played in numerous film festivals around the world.



In popular culture


In Leon Uris novel Exodus, and the subsequent film, protagonist Ari Ben Canaan of the Haganah succeeds in organising the movement of refugees to Palestine, through his experience of action and use of procedures gained during the war as an officer of the Jewish Brigade.



Partial list of notable veterans of the Jewish Brigade


British Jews


  • Ernest Benjamin

  • Bernard M. Casper

  • Edmund Leopold de Rothschild


Palestinian Jews



  • Yehuda Amichai

  • Meir Argov

  • Ted Arison

  • Hanoch Bartov

  • Yehoshua Bar-Hillel

  • Haim Ben-Asher

  • Zvi Brenner

  • Reuven Dafni

  • Yehiel Duvdevani

  • Israel Carmi

  • Yohanan Peltz

  • Mordechai Gichon

  • Amir Gilboa

  • Elazar Granot

  • Dov Gruner

  • Hans Jonas

  • Shraga Har-Gil

  • Haim Laskov

  • Mordechai Maklef

  • Shimon Mazeh

  • Nissan Nativ

  • Yitzhak Orpaz

  • Bernard Dov Protter

  • David Rubinger

  • Gideon Schocken

  • Shlomo Shamir

  • Chaim Sheba

  • Mordechai Surkis

  • Israel Tal

  • Adin Talbar

  • Moshe Tavor

  • Yehoshafat Harkabi

  • Aharon Hoter-Yishai

  • Yigal Hurvitz

  • Danny Matt

  • Gideon Ben-Yisrael

  • Meir Zorea

  • Amram Zur

  • Shalom Zysman




See also




  • Jewish Legion

  • The Volunteer Ribbon

  • Fighters against Nazis Medal


  • Special Interrogation Group (SIG)


  • The Sixth Battalion – a documentary about Jewish soldiers forced to fight for the Nazis in the Slovak Republic during the Second World War.

  • Jewish Parachutists of Mandate Palestine


  • Tilhas Tizig Gesheften, a paramilitary sister effort undertaken by many members of the brigade



References





  1. ^ ab Adler, Cyrus; Henrietta Szold (1946). American Jewish Year Book, Volume 48. Page 69: American Jewish Committee. Retrieved March 23, 2010..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ ab Teaching About the Holocaust: A Resource Book for Educators. Page 27: DIANE Publishing. 1995. ISBN 1-4289-2637-2.


  3. ^ Medoff (2002), page 111


  4. ^ Medoff (2002), page 217


  5. ^ abcdef Paraszczuk (2010)


  6. ^ ab Goldstein, Joseph (1995). Jewish History in Modern Times, pp. 122–123


  7. ^ Blum, Howard. The Brigade. p. 5.


  8. ^ Numbered 148, 178, 179, 405, 468 and 650


  9. ^ 3500 and 500 strong, respectively


  10. ^ For the whole history of the 1915–1943 units formed in Palestine, see Marcel Roubiçek, "Echo of the Bugle", Franciscan Printing Press, Jerusalem 1975


  11. ^ ab
    Medoff, Rafael (2002). Militant Zionism in America: the rise and impact of the Jabotinsky movement. Page 111.



  12. ^ ab Joslen, p. 453.


  13. ^ Jewish Brigade Group


  14. ^ .http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/judaica/ejud_0002_0011_0_10123.html


  15. ^ "Find War Dead". Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 9 December 2016. The CWGC lists 110 names of the Palestine Regiment of whom about 20 have non-Jewish surnames


  16. ^ Morris Beckman, The Jewish Brigade, p. 213


  17. ^ Ian Black and Benny Morris: Israel's Secret Wars: A History of Israel's Intelligence Services, p. 188


  18. ^ Beckham, Morris (1999). The Jewish Brigade: An Army With Two Masters, 1944-45. Sarpedon Publishers. ISBN 1-885119-56-9.


  19. ^ Watson, Graham E., Rinaldi, Richard A., The British Army in Germany (BOAR and after): An organizational history 1947–2004, Tiger Lily Publications, 2005, p. 7


  20. ^ Carmi, Israel (1960). In the Footsteps of Fighters (in Hebrew). Tel Aviv: Marachot. p. 165.


  21. ^ Bauer, Yehuda (1970). Flight and Rescue: Brichah. New York: Random House. pp. 64–66.


  22. ^ Hebrew University Oral History Archive (January 5, 1964). Interview with Aharon Hoter-Yishai (in Hebrew). Jerusalem, Israel. pp. (4), 22.


  23. ^ Carmi, Israel (1960). In the Footsteps of Fighters (in Hebrew). Tel Aviv: Marachot. pp. 248–255.


  24. ^ Dan, Haim (1972). From the Egyptian Desert to Munich: Diary of a Jewish Brigade Soldier (in Hebrew). Tel Aviv: Am Oved. p. 84.


  25. ^ For more information on specific involvement of Jewish Brigade soldiers in Berihah missions, see Israel Ben Dor, Book of the First Battalion of Jewish Brigade Fighters, (in Hebrew), (Macabim: Melzer, 2000): 260, 264 and Gabriel Sheffer, Moshe Sharett: Biography of a Political Moderate (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996): 752–755.


  26. ^ Gelber, Yoav (1983). Jewish Palestinians Volunteering in the British Army during the Second World War: The Standard Bearers - The Mission of the Volunteers to the Jewish People, Vol. III (in Hebrew). Jerusalem: Yad Izhak Ben-Zvi. p. 441.


  27. ^ Haganah Archive (February 13, 1968). Oral Testimony of Liev Garfunkel, (in Hebrew). Tel Aviv, Israel. pp. 93.28.


  28. ^ Morris Beckman, The Jewish Brigade, p. 140


  29. ^ https://www.independent.co.uk/news/jewish-brigade-shot-nazi-prisoners-in-revenge-1191139.html


  30. ^ Morris Beckman, The Jewish Brigade, p. 161


  31. ^ Gold Medal for Military Valour, the highest italian combat medal]]


  32. ^ Amazon (2010)


  33. ^ Olin Associates (2010)




Sources




  • Adler, Cyrus; Szold, Henrietta (1946). American Jewish Year Book, Volume 48. American Jewish Committee.


  • Beckham, Morris (1999). The Jewish Brigade: An Army With Two Masters, 1944–45. Sarpedon Publishers. ISBN 1-885119-56-9.


  • Blum, Howard (2002). The Brigade: An Epic Story of Vengeance, Salvation, and WWII. New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 0-06-019486-3.


  • Casper, Bernard M (1947). With the Jewish Brigade. London: Edward Goldston. Contains a foreword by Brig. E F Benjamin, CBE, former commander of the Jewish Brigade. Casper was Senior Chaplain to the Brigade.


  • Joslen, H. F. (2003) [1st Pub. HMSO 1960]. Orders of Battle: Second World War, 1939–1945. Uckfield: Naval & Military Press. ISBN 1-84342-474-6.


  • Medoff, Rafel (2002). Militant Zionism in America: The Rise and Impact of the Jabotinsky Movement in the United States. University of Alabama Press. ISBN 978-0-8173-1071-4.


  • Paraszczuk, Joanna (March 3, 2010). "We Proved to the World That We Can Fight; Veterans Attend a Special Showing in Tel Aviv of Chuck Olin's Award-winning Documentary About the Outstanding all-Jewish Brigade that Helped Defeat Hitler". The Jerusalem Post.


  • In Our Own Hands: The Hidden Story of the Jewish Brigade in World War II (DVD). Film Resource Center. 1998.


  • Rocca, Sam M (2013). The Jewish Brigade Group and the Jewish Units in the British Army in World War II. Italy: Soldiershop Publishing. Archived from the original on 2013-09-19.


  • Shamir (Rabinovitch), Shlomo. Divine Intervention and a Jewish Flag in the British Army. Israel (2014). ISBN 978-965-555-748-0. Shamir was the Jewish Brigade Commander on behalf of the Haganah and the Jewish Institutions in Palestine.



External links








  • Combat and Resistance: Jewish Soldiers in the Allied Armies on the Yad Vashem website


  • Jewish Brigade Group (the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum)


  • The Jewish Brigade (Israeli MFA)


  • Chaim Weizmann on the Jewish Brigade, 1944 Shapell Manuscript Foundation


  • Jewish Brigade Group (JVL)


  • Chuck Olin Digital Film Archive (University of Illinois Library) (Digital video interviews from members of the Jewish Brigade)










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