1948
State of Israel declared
In a Tel Aviv art museum, hours before the British Mandate expired, David Ben-Gurion read aloud a declaration establishing the State of Israel. By dawn the next morning five Arab armies had invaded. Jews called what followed the War of Independence; Palestinians called the uprooting of seven hundred thousand their Nakba, the catastrophe.
Gandhi assassinated
On his way to evening prayers in a Delhi garden, Mohandas Gandhi was shot three times in the chest by a Hindu nationalist who blamed him for accommodating Muslims. He murmured He Ram and collapsed. India mourned. Nehru told the nation on radio that the light had gone out of their lives. He was seventy-eight.
Marshall Plan signed
The United States committed thirteen billion dollars to rebuild war-shattered Western Europe, with strings attached: no communists in government, open markets for American goods. The money rebuilt ports, factories, railways, and shattered economies across sixteen nations, and made Europeans firmly pro-American for a generation. Stalin forbade his satellites to take a cent, deepening the continent's Cold War divide.
Apartheid formalized in South Africa
The National Party won the South African election on a platform of racial separation and within months began passing laws assigning every citizen to a racial group and separating homes, schools, buses, and beaches. Black South Africans would need passes to enter white cities. A legal system of racial segregation had been built.
Truman beats Dewey
Every poll and every major newspaper predicted a Republican landslide under Thomas Dewey. The Chicago Tribune printed its early edition with the headline Dewey Defeats Truman. Truman, who had campaigned by train across America, won and posed the next morning holding the headline, grinning. American polling took a long time to live it down.
Berlin Airlift begins
Stalin cut off road and rail access to West Berlin, hoping to starve the Allies out. Truman and Clay responded with the largest airlift in history. For eleven months, American and British planes landed every ninety seconds, bringing food, coal, even children's chocolate. Stalin backed down. The Cold War's first direct confrontation ended in Western victory.
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
The UN General Assembly, meeting in Paris, adopted a Declaration drafted under Eleanor Roosevelt's stewardship that set out the inalienable rights belonging to every human being. Forty-eight countries voted yes; eight, including the Soviet bloc and Saudi Arabia, abstained. It had no legal force. It shaped the language of politics for decades.