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The Most Passengers Ever Carried on an Airplane

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Eric Salard/Wikimedia

In 1991, the country of Ethiopia was nearing the end of a debilitating civil war. The government of the country was about to be toppled, and the nation of Israel and worldwide Jewish organizations were concerned for the fate of thousands of Ethiopian Jews.

In just a few days, the Israeli government undertook a massive airlift of Ethiopian Jews to Israel, and on one of those planes, a record was broken for the most passengers ever on an airplane.

The Beta Israel, as the Ethiopian Jews were known, were unable to flee the civil war. The Israeli government had sensed the worsening situation in 1990 and made covert plans to get them to Israel. American diplomats also helped to facilitate the upcoming operation, and George H. W. Bush wrote a letter to the then-leader of the Ethiopian government, Mengistu Haile Mariam, asking him to allow all the Jews to exit the country at once. The Ethiopian leader’s previous stance was only to allow the Beta Israel to leave the country in exchange for weapons, but this time, he agreed to let them go.

The massive airlift was code-named “Operation Solomon,” and though it had been planned for weeks, the Israeli government and defense forces only had two days to carry it out. They ended up completing it in less than 36 hours.

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Knowledge Stew
Knowledge Stew

Published in Knowledge Stew

Stories for fact seekers, trivia buffs, and curious minds

Daniel Ganninger
Daniel Ganninger

Written by Daniel Ganninger

The Writer, Editor, and Lackey of Knowledge Stew and Fact World, and I write about interesting things. Come along for the journey at knowledgestew.substack.com.

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