TRADITIONAL
ISRAELI NARRATIVE
(1882-1949) |
TRADITIONAL
PALESTINIAN NARRATIVE
(1882-1949) |
a) The legitimacy
of the Zionist enterprise of returning
Jews to Eretz Yisrael is based on Jewish
descent from the ancient Israelites.
The Jewish people has inherited their
right to the land, religiously, legally,
and historically. Jews have always
looked and prayed toward Zion (Jerusalem),
never relinquished their relationship
to the land, and have always maintained
a presence since ancient times, despite
expulsions. Jews were treated as foreigners
and persecuted wherever they were during
their long Exile. |
a) Judaism is
a religion of revelation, like Christianity,
and has no inherent tie to a particular
land. Jews are not a nation but rather
a community of believers. In any case,
any Israelite presence was a short
period in the long history of Palestine.
Ultimately, religious myths, without
presence and possession, are incapable
of creating an ownership right. Palestinians
are in fact, descendants of all previous
inhabitants, including Israelites.
Those Jews living in Palestine and
the Muslim world before 1882 were well
treated by Muslim neighbors and rulers. |
b) Zionism was
an authentic response to the persecution
of Jews over millennia around the world.
Jews did not come as colonizers, but
rather as pioneers and redeemers of
the land, and did not intend to disrupt
the lives of the current inhabitants
of the Land of Israel. All land for
Jewish settlement was legally bought
and paid for, often at inflated prices. |
b) Zionism was
a European colonialist enterprise like
many in the late 19th century and was
a European ideology superimposed on
the Middle East. Moreover, it is an
ideology of expansion directed towards
robbing Arabs of their ancestral land.
Arabs were systematically expelled
by Zionist settlers from the beginning. |
c) The Arabs of
Palestine were not a national group
and never had been. They were largely
undifferentiated from the inhabitants
of much of Syria, Lebanon and Jordan.
They had no authentic tie to the Land
of Israel. Many only came for economic
opportunity after the Zionist movement
began to make the land fruitful and
the economy thrive. In all the years
of Arab and Muslim control from the
7th century, Palestine was never a
separate state and Jerusalem was never
a capital. |
c) The ancestors
of today’s Palestinians (Canaanites,
Jebusites, and others mentioned in
the Bible) were there before the Israelites,
as shown by both biblical and archaeological
evidence. Palestinians have lived continuously
in the land since then. Certainly by
the 1920s and likely much earlier,
there was a Palestinian identity and
nationality that differed fundamentally
from other Levantine Arab peoples. |
d) Zionist diplomacy
legitimately sought a Great Power patron
since Herzl, and found one in Great
Britain. True, Britain had its own
imperial agenda, but this does not
detract from the righteousness of the
Zionist cause. The Balfour Declaration
was ratified by the League of Nations,
constituting a statement of international
law approving a Jewish homeland in
Palestine. |
d) The British
foisted Zionism on the Palestinians
beginning with the Balfour Declaration
as part of their imperial strategy,
with no right whatsoever in international
law, and this was illegally ratified
by the League of Nations.” He
who did not own gave a promise to those
who did not deserve.” Zionists
worked hand in glove with Britain to
subjugate the Palestinian people. |
e) The riots of
1920, 1929 and 1936 were instigated
by unscrupulous Arab leaders for their
own nefarious purposes, particularly
the Mufti of Jerusalem, Hajj Amin Al
Husseini. The “Palestinian” population
had increased rapidly through immigration
of Arabs who were attracted by Zionist
economic successes, and the Arab population’s
living standards rose rapidly during
this period. The British frequently
stood aside when Arabs murdered Jews. |
e) All the disturbances
were justified and spontaneous revolts
by the Palestinian people against the
British/Zionist alliance and increasing
immigration. The increasing Jewish
immigration, facilitated by the British,
created the resentment that led to
the revolts. The British backed the
Zionists, who were responsible for
and had provoked the disturbances,
and punished Palestinians harshly and
illegitimately. |
f) The British,
who had been initially supportive of
the Zionist enterprise through the
Balfour Declaration and the early mandate,
began to backtrack early, as reflected
in the splitting off of Transjordan
in 1922, the Passfield White Paper
of 1930, and many other incidents.
They definitively repudiated the Balfour
Declaration with the White Paper of
1939, and were unabashedly pro-Arab
after that point. |
f) The British
were always pro-Zionist, except when
occasionally forced otherwise by Arab
pressure. They conspired with the Zionists
to destroy Palestinian leadership in
the 1936-39 revolt, thus making it
impossible for Palestinians to prepare
for the coming war with the Zionists.
The White Paper of 1939 had no effect
as it was not enforced. The British
deliberately trained Zionist soldiers
during the 1936-39 revolt and World
War II. |
g) The Zionist
movement accepted the UN partition
resolution of 1947 in good faith, albeit
reluctantly, as it had the 1937 Peel
Commission Report recommending partition.
War was forced on the Yishuv (Jewish
national community) by the Arabs. Solely
in self-defense, the Haganah (later
the Israeli Army) took over more land
than had been allotted in the Partition
Resolution and was justified in holding
it, as it would have inevitably become
a base for attacks on Israel. |
g) The UN partition
resolution of 1947 was illegitimate,
as the UN had no right to give away
the homeland of the Palestinians. The
Palestinians cannot be blamed for trying
to hold on to what was rightfully theirs.
Compromise was out of the question.
The Jewish leadership never genuinely
accepted the idea of partition; in
any case, expulsion (transfer) was
always the plan. |
h) The Yishuv
was numerically vastly inferior to
the combined Arab population, and it
bordered on a miracle that Israeli
survived the war (“the few against
the many”). All Jews realized
they would be massacred if they lost,
and fought with absolute determination
to prevent another Holocaust. Arab
atrocities proved they had no other
choice. |
h) The Jews had
planned for the war, had organized
both politically and militarily, had
strong support abroad and were in a
much more favorable position when war
came. Their armed forces outnumbered
all the Arab armies. Palestinians had
no infrastructure and no military training,
and were attacked and massacred repeatedly
by Jewish gangs. Arab “aid” consisted
primarily of attempted land grabs by
other Arab countries of Palestinian
land. |
i) The Palestinians
were not expelled. They fled, in most
cases, because they were ordered and
cajoled by their leaders and the Arab
states, in order to make room for conquering
Arab armies. In many cases Jewish officials
pleaded with the refugees to stay.
The Israeli decision to prevent refugees
from returning was justified, as otherwise
Israel would be destroyed by a hostile
Arab internal majority. Ultimately,
the responsibility and blame rests
with the Arab leadership for rejecting
the partition resolution. |
i) Beginning soon
after the adoption of the partition
resolution in November 1947 the Zionists
began to expel Palestinians from their
homes, almost certainly according to
a plan (Plan Dalet). Deir Yasin was
a planned massacre that succeeded in
stampeding Palestinians to leave. The
Nakba was planned and carried out as
ethnic cleansing. The Zionists recognized
that a Jewish state could not exist
until most Arabs were expelled, and
history proves this was the plan that
was carried out. |
j) The refugee
issue was artificially kept alive by
the Arab states, who deliberately used
the refugees as pawns against Israel.
The real reason for the continuation
of the conflict was the refusal of
the Arab states to recognize Israeli’s
existence. Israel has repeatedly offered
peace, but not at the price of the
destruction of Israel as a Jewish state,
which has been the Arab goal since
1948. |
j) The Palestinian
people have never ceased to protest
against the illegality and immorality
of their expulsion, and Palestinians
continue to identify themselves as
belonging to their real homes in Palestine.
The Arab states have repeatedly betrayed
the Palestinians, and only grudgingly
gave them space in refugee camps. There
can never be a settlement without Israel
recognizing its guilt and providing
appropriate redress. Palestinians in
other Arab countries are as much in
exile as anywhere else. |