"Lest we Forget the Surafend Massacre. 10 December 1918. Mass killing of Palestinian villagers by ANZAC forces."
Mural in Gladigal / Sydney in memory of the victims of the premeditated massacre against the villagers of Sarafand al-Amar and a Bedouin camp by occupying Australian, New Zealand and Scottish soldiers in 1918.
The Australian participants in the murders were members of the Light Horse Brigade.
In his book Bersheeba, Australian journalist Paul Daley says this about the attitudes of Australian troops towards the Arabs in Palestine:
"For a lot of these [Australian] guys who joined the light horse, the 'natives' were aboriginal people… These guys would have grown up with living memory or family memory of massacres in and around rural properties from which Aboriginal people were dispossessed. So there was a parallel, I believe, between the way they viewed, on a human scale, the Bedouin and the town Arabs and the Aboriginal people back home."
No soldiers were ever identified for the killings at Surafend so there was no justice for the victims. ANZAC soldiers kept quiet according to their code of loyalty/secrecy which was recently cited as a problem in the investigation of war crimes against Australian special forces in Afghanistan.












