Pre-State Peace Efforts
by Mitchell Bard
In 1913, the Zionist leadership recognized the desirability of reaching an agreement with the
Arabs. Sami Hochberg, owner of the newspaper, Le-Jeune-Turc,
informally represented the Zionists in a meeting with the Cairo-based
Decentralization Party and the anti-Ottoman Beirut Reform Society and was
able to reach an agreement. This entente verbale led to the adoption
of a resolution assuring Jews equal rights under a decentralized
government. Hochberg also secured an invitation to the First Arab Congress
held in Paris in June 1913.
The Arab Congress proved to be surprisingly receptive
to Zionist aspirations. Hochberg was encouraged by the Congresss
favorable response to the entente verbale. Abd-ul-Hamid Yahrawi, the
President of the Congress, summed up the attitude of the delegates:
All of us, both Muslims and Christians, have the best
of feelings toward the Jews. When we spoke in our resolutions about the
rights and obligations of the Syrians, this covered the Jews as well.
Because they are our brothers in race and we regard them as Syrians
who were forced to leave the country at one time but whose hearts always
beat together with ours, we are certain that our Jewish brothers the
world over will know how to help us so that our common interests may
succeed and our common country will develop both materially and morally
(authors emphasis).1
The entente verbale Hochberg negotiated was rendered
ineffectual by wartime developments. The outspoken Arab opposition to the Balfour
Declaration convinced the Zionist leadership of the need to make a
more concerted effort to reach an understanding with the Arabs.
Chaim
Weizmann considered the task important enough to lead a Zionist
Commission to Palestine to explain the movements aims to the Arabs.
Weizmann went first to Cairo in March 1918 and met with Said Shukeir, Dr.
Faris Nimr and Suleiman Bey Nassif (Syrian Arab nationalists who had been
chosen by the British as representatives). He stressed the desire to live
in harmony with the Arabs in a British Palestine.
Weizmanns diplomacy was successful. Nassif said
there was room in Palestine for another million inhabitants without
affecting the position of those already there.2 Dr. Nimr disseminated information through his Cairo newspaper to dispel
the Arab publics misconceptions about Zionist aims.3
In 1921, Winston Churchill tried to arrange a meeting
between Palestinians and Zionists. On November 29, 1921, the two sides met
with the Arabs insisting that the Balfour Declaration be abrogated.4
Weizmann led a group of Zionists that met with Syrian
nationalist Riad al-Sulh in 1921. The Zionists agreed to support Arab
nationalist aspirations and Sulh said he was willing to recognize the
Jewish National Home. The talks resumed a year later and raised hopes for
an agreement; in May 1923, however, Sulhs efforts to convince
Palestinian Arab leaders that Zionism was an accomplished fact were
rejected.5
Over the next 25 years, Zionist leaders inside and
outside Palestine would try repeatedly to negotiate with the Arabs.
Similarly, Israeli leaders since 1948 have sought peace treaties with the Arab states, but Egypt and Jordan are the only nations
that have signed them.
Notes
1Aharon Cohen, Israel
and the Arab World, (NY: Funk and Wagnalls, 1970), p. 97.
2Jon Kimche, There
Could Have Been Peace: The Untold Story of Why We Failed With
Palestine and Again With Israel, (England: Dial Press, 1973), pp.
136-137.
3Aharon Cohen, Israel
and the Arab World, (NY: Funk and Wagnalls, 1970), p. 71-73.
4Yehoshua Porath, The
Emergence of the Palestinian-Arab National Movement, 1918-1929,
(London: Frank Cass, 1974), pp. 65-67.
5Yehoshua Porath, The
Emergence of the Palestinian-Arab National Movement, 1918-1929,
(London: Frank Cass, 1974), pp. 112-114.
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