Hurum air disaster
Accident | |
---|---|
Date | 20 November 1949 |
Summary | unknown |
Site | Hurum, Norway |
Aircraft type | Douglas DC-3 (C-47A-25-DK) |
Operator | Aero Holland |
Registration | PH-TFA |
Passengers | 30 |
Crew | 4 |
Fatalities | 34 |
Injuries | 1 |
Survivors | 1 |
The Hurum air disaster was an Aero Holland plane crash in Hurum southwest of Oslo, Norway as it was approaching Fornebu Airport on 20 November 1949.
The plane, a Douglas DC-3 with registration PH-TFA was en route from Brussels-Zaventem Airport. Among the 30 passengers on board were 26 Jewish children from Tunisia on their way to Norway, as an intermediary stop before making aliyah, the return to Israel. The plane crashed into the forest at 16:56, and 34 of the 35 people on board perished. A 12-year old boy named Isaac Allal was the only survivor.[1]
The crash was the second deadliest air disaster in Norway at that time, exceeded only by the 35 deaths in the 1947 Kvitbjørn disaster. Public sympathy ran high, and the leader of the Norwegian Labor Party, Håkon Lie started a fundraiser to build a Norwegian village in Israel called Moshav Norge.[1]
A memorial to the victims has been raised at the crash site. It is symbolically fenced and decorated with Stars of David. Parts of the wreckage are also at the memorial.
See also
References
^ Norwegian report on Norway's relationship with Israel (in Norwegian)
- Accident description at the Aviation Safety Network
- Page about the memorial (in Norwegian)