“Jewish
villages were built in the place of Arab villages. You do not even
know the names of these Arab villages… There is not one single
place built in this country that did not have a former Arab
population.”
-
Moshe Dayan, Ha’aretz,
4 April 1969
 |
|
Displaced
Palestinians (1948)
|
May
15th marks the 54th anniversary of the
creation of the state of Israel. Given the history of conflicts,
wars and Palestinian dispossession associated with the event, it is
of little surprise that the Arabs have come to refer to that
momentous day in 1948 as “Al Nakba,” or “the catastrophe.”
In
1948, in the wake of UN General Assembly resolution 181 partitioning
Palestine into a Jewish and an Arab state, what was to be known as
the “Declaration of Independence” was issued by the State
Provisional Council on the 14th of May. This set the stage for the
protracted conflict that erupted in the Middle East.
In
looking back on 54 years of conflict, it appears that there is a
silver lining to the cloud - the persistent voices of the small but
vocal academic community commonly referred to as “revisionist
historians,” referred to by Norman Finkelstein in Palestine:
The Truth About 1948. These are the Israeli scholars who, in
the wake of the 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon, sought to question
what had hitherto been the accepted version of events in the
Arab-Israeli conflict.
Many
facts about the founding of the Jewish state have thus come to light
and entered the realms of scholarly discourse. Prior to their
efforts, the Arab discourse on Israeli abuse and crimes were largely
discredited as “Arab propaganda.” There is now a wealth of
evidence provided by Israeli academia to support Arab claims. These
historians, who enjoyed access to Israeli governmental archives and
data that no Arab could have gained, have irrevocably shattered many
of the myths that had shrouded the creation of Israel.
Rapid
advances in the media have also allowed the protestations of a
hitherto marginalized community to come to international attention,
that being the orthodox Jewish community, which is vehemently
opposed to the very existence of an Israeli state, alleging that the
Zionist ideology is a crime against Judaism. It is therefore a
surprise to many to read the official
statements of the Central Rabbinical Congress of the
United States of America and Canada, which states, among other
things:
Consistently,
since its inception, our sages and rabbis condemned the Zionist
heresy. To this day Torah true Jewry has remained loyal to the
heavenly decree of exile… It is only logical that during the
Israeli State’s 52 years of existence, its most passionate and
consistent opponents have been traditional Torah Jews. Therefore,
the ongoing suffering and trail of death unleashed upon Jews and
non-Jews by the Israeli state are not the work of the faithful
remnant of Torah Jews who have always denounced the state’s very
existence. Thus, [the] ultimate heresy of Zionism, its denial of
Divine providence over history was [an] inevitable outgrowth of an
overall rejection of G-d and Torah which typified the movement’s
founders...
Other
Jewish and/or Israeli organizations have also come to the forefront,
ranging between secular academic or popular calls for reform and a
cessation of brutality (Not
In My Name, Tikkun,
and Gush
Shalom) to the religious dogma of the orthodox Jewish rabbis,
who condemn the very existence of the state of Israel (Jews
Not Zionists, and Neturei
Karta). Held in common, though, is the desire to expose Israeli
crimes and to distance themselves from the policies of the Israeli
government.
An area that has often been subjected to much debate is the
Israeli suggestion that Jewish settlers came to an almost
uninhabited no man’s land and proceeded to build a civilization
where there was none. These allegations, however, would seem to be
largely disproved by Moshe
Dayan’s statement that:
Jewish
villages were built in the place of Arab villages. You do not even
know the names of these Arab villages, and I do not blame you
because geography books no longer exist. Not only do the books not
exist, the sArab villages are not there either. Nahlal arose in the
place of Mahlul; Kibbutz Gvat in the place of Jibta; Kibbutz Sarid
in the place of Huneifis; and Kefar Yehushu’a in the place of Tal
al-Shuman. There is not one single place built in this country that
did not have a former Arab population.
This
is glaring testimony to the fact that Palestinian homes were
expropriated and occupied by Jewish settlers, contrary to widely
held beliefs cultivated by Israel. This allegation, however, ties in
with another major point of contention: the Palestinian exodus. The
Israelis have long held that Palestinians evacuated their homes in
response to broadcast calls by Arab governments. Palestinians, on
the other hand, have claimed that the exodus was prompted by attacks
by Jewish terrorist organizations such as the Palmach, the Irgun,
and the Stern Gang, against Palestinian villages and towns. One
notable example often cited is Deir
Yassin, where hundreds of Palestinians lost their lives.
While
Israel has long held that reports of a massacre in Deir Yassin were
fabrications, the
account of a Red Cross representative who arrived at the
village shortly after the massacre, bears poignant testimony to
Israeli crimes against Palestinian civilians.
Dayan’s words, however, are merely evidence of a
continuation of a long-held strategic goal formulated by the
Zionists decades earlier. For this, we turn to the father of
Zionism, Theodor Herzl, who wrote
in 1895:
We must expropriate gently the private property on the estates assigned
to us… We shall try to spirit the penniless population across the
border by procuring employment for it in the transit countries.
While denying it any employment in our own country… The
property owners will come over to our side. Both the process of
expropriation and the removal of the poor must be carried out
discreetly and circumspectly… Let the owners of immovable
property believe that they are cheating us, selling us something far
more than they are worth… But we are not going to sell them any
thing back.
In
essence then, the 1948 attacks on Palestinian civilians were the
culmination of a policy of acquiring Palestinian land, begun
initially through peaceful means, but ending with the brutal methods
aptly demonstrated in Deir Yassin. This resulted in the almost
complete erasure of any traces of the original Palestinian society,
while the original
maps of Palestine reveal an overwhelming majority of
Palestinians.
Statistics
on the number of Palestinian villages destroyed by Jewish militias
and settlers will inevitably vary. Some Palestinian groups have
undertaken to assess the numbers involved, resulting in a list of an
estimated 419
destroyed villages.
Effectively
then, what we are witnessing might prove to be the first cracks in
the foundation stones of the Israeli state. The myths that had been
so carefully nurtured are being slowly, yet systematically and
inevitably, destroyed. The dominant Israeli narrative that
surrounded that creation of the state has for the most part been
discredited, primarily due to the work of Israeli academics. More
and more, Jewish and Israeli groups opposed to Israeli policies and
brutality are making their voices heard. It is also ironic that the
Zionist ideology that has long claimed to find its theological
origins in the Torah is coming under vehement attack by the orthodox
adherents of Judaism. But these gains cannot detract from the
suffering inflicted on countless Palestinian lives by the Israeli
state, a suffering that cannot and will not be forgotten. May 15th
is the day Arabs mark the anniversary of the greatest crime that
befell them, and renew their pledge to never forgive and never
forget.
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