About 8,000 Jews were
living in Palestine before 1882. Creation of a “Jewish State” in such a
small country with such a small Jewish community, which owned virtually
no land to settle on, was practically
impossible.
Consequently, building an exclusive Jewish State in Palestine implied
bringing Jews from the four corners of the world, acquisition of the
land and ethnically cleansing it from its indigenous Arab population.
COLONIAL
SETTLEMENT:
Hovevei Zion, the
precursor of the Zionist Organization, sponsored the first wave of
pioneer settlers, which started in 1882 and ended in 1903. About 35,000
immigrants arrived in Palestine within this wave. Almost half of them
left within several years of their arrival.
Eliezer Ben Yehuda, a
fanatical Zionist, was one of the settlers of the first wave. When his
ship arrived in Jaffa in 1882, he found himself watching the Arab
passengers on board and suddenly he realized that they were far more at
home in the “Promised Land” than he was. Eventually he found that he
could not swallow his doubts so he left “Eretz Yisrael” and became a
Territorialist, believing that the Jews should seek a country in a land
other than
Palestine. (Karen Armstrong, Holy War: The Crusades and their
Impact on Today’s World. Macmillan,
London, 1988, pp.
60-64)
The second wave
started in 1904 and ended with the break of WWI in 1914. It brought
about 40,000 immigrants to
Palestine.
As with the first wave, nearly half of them left the country in later
years.
According to Bar-Zohar,
when the first immigrants from the Russian Zionist societies came to
Palestine “it was no land flowing with milk and honey that greeted
them… The hard labor, malaria, and hunger claimed many victims. Of
those who survived, many decided to leave that accursed land on the
first available ship. Later, Ben-Gurion was to contend that of every
ten immigrants who arrived with the Second Aliyah, nine later left the
country”. (Michael Bar-Zohar, Ben-Gurion: A Biography. New York:
Delacorte Press, 1977, pp. 13-14)
This 2nd
wave included a number of Socialist Zionists. Prominent among the new
Socialist Zionist immigrants was Ben Gurion. Another socialist Zionist,
Yitzhak Ben Zvi (2nd President of the State of Israel)
arrived in Palestine within this wave as well.
The 3rd
wave, which started in 1919 and ended in 1923, brought another 40,000
settlers. As conditions improved under the British Mandate in
Palestine, few of them returned to their countries of origin.
The 4th
wave, 1924 – 1929, brought 82,000 immigrants of who 23,000 left in
later years.
In order to boost
Jewish immigration to
Palestine,
the Zionist Organization entered into negotiations with the Nazis to
facilitate emigration of German Jews. As a result of these
negotiations, an agreement was signed, which allowed tens of thousands
of German Jews to immigrate to Palestine. The 5th wave of
Jewish immigrants, which took place during the period 1929-1939, brought
250,000 settlers and the 6th brought another 150,000 who
arrived in Palestine between 1939 and 1948. (For a detailed discussion
of the Transfer Agreement, see: Edwin Black, The Transfer Agreement: The
Untold Story of the Secret Pact Between the Third Reich & Jewish
Palestine.
New York:
Macmillan Publishing Co. London: Collier Macmillan Publishers, 1984)
The total number of
Jews in Palestine in 1946 was 608,225 and the total land owned by them
was 1,585,365 donums, which represented less than 7% of the area of
Palestine. (Walid Khalidi, From Haven to Conquest, Appendix I,
pp.841-843)
The ethnic cleansing
operations perpetrated during the 1948 war and the Absentees Law as well
as the Law of Return issued in 1950 facilitated confiscation of Arab
homes and lands to build settlements for more colonial settlers who
flooded Palestine following the creation of Israel.
LAND ROBBERY:
A pre-meditated and
pre-planned campaign of land theft started shortly following the ethnic
operations of 1948. A law was passed in the Israeli Knesset in 1950,
the “Absentees Property Law”. According to this law, any body that was
not present directly before, during or after the war was, regardless of
the reason, defined as “absentee” and his land as surrendered. Thus it
was confiscated.
About 20 percent of
the Palestinians in Israel were internally displaced in the 1948 war –
in other words, while remaining in Israel, have been prevented from
returning to their homes and villages. These displaced persons were
considered as “absentees” and became refugees in their own country while
their lands were confiscated.
More significantly
was the fact that Palestinian Arabs who were driven out or obliged to
leave during the war in 1948 were not allowed to return to their homes
and lands. Those who tried to return were considered “infiltrators” and
were shot to death by Unit 101 of the IDF, a company of paratroopers,
which was formed under the command of Ariel Sharon.
Another law, “The
Land Requisition Law”, was passed in 1953 to “legitimize” the
expropriation of Arab lands. According to this law acts of theft and
robbery of land were legal.
Moshe Smilansky, one
of the pilgrim fathers of Zionism, published an article stating that:
“When we came back to our country after having been evicted two thousand
years ago, we called ourselves ‘daring’ and we rightly complained before
the whole world that the gates of the country were shut. And now when
they [Arab refugees] dared to return to their country where they lived
for one thousand years before they were evicted or fled, they are called
‘infiltrees’ and shot in cold blood. Where are, Jews? Why do we not at
least, with a generous hand, pay compensation to these miserable
people? Where to take the money from? But we build palaces...instead of
paying a debt that cries unto us from earth and heaven... And do we sin
only against the refugees? Do we not treat the Arabs who remain with us
as second-class citizens? Did a single Jewish farmer raise his hand in
the parliament in opposition to a law that deprived Arab peasants of
their land? How does sit solitary, in the city of Jerusalem, the Jewish
conscience!” (From Haven to Conquest, p. 834)
ETHNIC
CLEANSING:
Subjecting
Palestinian Arabs to ethnic cleansing was an integral part of the
implicit and explicit political Zionist thought and parlance all along.
In his diaries, Herzl
made it clear that “the existing landed property was to be gently
expropriated, any subsequent resale to the original owners was
prohibited, and all immovables had to remain in exclusively Jewish
hands. The poor population was to be worked across the frontier
‘unbemerkt’ (surreptitiously)… This population was to be refused all
employment in the land of its birth… In 1901, the 5th Zionist Congress
founded the Jewish National Fund. According to the by-laws of the JNF,
acquired land became inalienable Jewish property and could no longer be
sold or leased to non-Jews…” (Documented article published by L.M.C.
Van Der Hoeven Leonhard in Libertas, (Holland) Lustrum, number 1960, pp.
1-5, reproduced in Walid Khalidi, From Haven to Conquest, pp. 115-124.
See also, Benny Morris, Righteous Victims: A History of the Zionist-Arab
Conflict, 1881-1999.
New York,
Alfred A. Knopf, 1999, pp. 21-22)
David Ben-Gurion
believed that the Zionists had to exert pressure to force the British to
act. But if necessary, he wrote in his diary, “We must ourselves
prepare to carry out the removal of the Palestinians”. (Michael Palumbo,
The Palestinian Catastrophe, p. 4, citing Ben-Gurion's Diary - published
in Hebrew - vol. IV, p. 299)
In a report to the
Jewish Agency Executive on 12 June 1938, Ben-Gurion stated “I am for a
compulsory transfer; I don't see anything immoral in it...” (Simha
Flapan, Zionism and the Palestinians, London: Croom Helm, 1979, p. 263)
Encouraged by the
possibility of establishing a Jewish state as a result of the partition
plan proposed by the Peel Commission in its report published in July
1937, a “Population Transfer Committee” was appointed by the Jewish
Agency to come up with plans to rid the Jewish State of its Palestinian
Arabs. Joseph Weitz, director of the Jewish National Fund, who served
on the Population Transfer Committee, developed a plan for this
purpose. In his report, Weitz wrote that the transfer of the Arab
population from the Jewish areas “does not serve only one aim - to
diminish the Arab population. It also serves a second purpose by no
means less important, which is to evacuate land now cultivated by Arabs
and thus release it for Jewish settlement.” (Michael Palumbo, The
Palestinian Catastrophe, p. 4, citing CZA, Minutes of the Population
Transfer Committee, 22 Nov., 1937)
The Peel Commission’s
partition plan, which proposed to divide the country between the “Jewish
colonists and the indigenous Arab population” was discussed in the
meeting of the Jewish Agency Executive held on 12 June 1938. Partition
as proposed by the Peel Commission would leave over 200,000 Arabs in the
proposed “Jewish State”. The Jewish Agency Executive was discussing the
problem of how best to get rid of these Arabs. The seventy-five year
old Zionist leader, Menahem Ussishkin, stated that “There is no hope
that this new Jewish State will survive, to say nothing of develop, if
the Arabs are as numerous as they are today.” Berl Katznelson of
Ben-Gurion’s Mapai party saw only disaster in a Jewish State with a
large Arab minority and proposed a development plan to eliminate the
Palestinian Arabs. He urged negotiations, with neighboring Arab States
that might be persuaded to receive the expellees. (Michael Palumbo, The
Palestinian Catastrophe, pp. 1-2, citing CZA, Executive Proceedings, 12
June 1938)
Other “Transfer
Committees” were appointed during the 1948 war. An unofficial
“self-appointed” committee, headed by Joseph Weitz, started its
activities as of the end of March 1948. After the creation of the state
of Israel the Provisional Government appointed an official committee the
recommendations of which were submitted to Ben-Gurion in due course and
were being implemented under the cover of war.
One of the key
questions from June 1967 onwards was not whether
Israel
should maintain a presence in the newly acquired territories, but how it
could be maintained without adding over one million Palestinians to the
Arab minority of Israel. The old Zionist dilemma of non-Jews in a
Jewish state had to be resolved. Against this background of Zionist
expansionism, transfer ideas were revived in public debates, in popular
songs, in articles in the Hebrew press and, most importantly, in cabinet
discussions and government schemes and policies. (Nur Masalha, A Land
Without a People:
Israel,
Transfer and the Palestinians 1949 - 96.
London:
Faber and Faber ltd., 1997, pp. 60 - 61)
New proposals for
ethnic cleansing were outlined in an article entitled “A Strategy for
Israel in the 1980s”, which appeared in the World Zionist Organization's
periodical Kivunim in February 1982. The article was written by Oded
Yinon, a journalist and analyst of Middle Eastern affairs and former
senior Foreign Ministry official.
In his article, Yinon
called for Israel to bring about the dissolution and fragmentation of
the Arab states into a mosaic of ethnic groupings. He called for a
policy of Israel
that aims at bringing about “the dissolution of
Jordan; the termination of the problem of the [occupied]
territories densely populated with Arabs west of the [River]
Jordan; and
emigration from the territories, and economic-demographic freeze in
them.” He added, “we have to be active in order to encourage this
change speedily, in the nearest time”.
Yinon believed, like
many advocates of transfer in
Israel,
that “Israel has made a strategic mistake in not taking measures [of
mass expulsion] towards the Arab population in the new territories
during and shortly after the [1967] war.... Such a line would have saved
us the bitter and dangerous conflict ever since which we could have
already then terminated by giving Jordan to the Palestinians.”
Moreover, Yinon
suggested to encompass the whole Arab world, including the imposition of
a Pax Israela on, and the determination of the destiny of, Arab
societies: re invading Sinai and “breaking Egypt territorially into
separate geographical districts.” As for the Arab East: “...the total
disintegration of Lebanon into five regional, localized governments as
the precedent for the entire Arab world...the dissolution of Syria, and
later Iraq, into districts of ethnic and religious minorities....”
(Ibid, pp. 196 - 198, citing Oded Yinon, A Strategy for Israel in the
1980s, [Hebrew], Kivunim, Jerusalem, No. 14, February 1982, pp. 53 - 58)
Failure of the
different efforts to “transfer” all the Palestinians did not mean that
such efforts were abandoned. Benjamin Netanyahu told Bar-Ilan
University students on 16 November 1989 that the government had failed
to exploit internationally favorable situations, to carry out
“large-scale” expulsions at a time when “the damage [to Israel's public
relations] would have been relatively small...” Netanyahu was referring
to the Tiananmen Square massacre in June 1989 when world attention and
the media were focused on China. He added, “I still believe that there
are opportunities to expel many people.” Netanyahu later denied making
the remarks but the Jerusalem Post presented a tape recording of his
speech. (Ibid, p. 190, citing The Jerusalem Post, 19 November, 1989;
Michael Palumbo, Imperial Israel: The History of the Occupation of the
West Bank and Gaza, London: Bloomsbury Publishing Ltd., 1990 pp. 302 -
303)
After decades of
Zionist efforts, Arab “demographic threat” was still haunting Israel. A
conference was held on 19-20 December 2000 at the Interdisciplinary
Center in Herzliya to deal with the issue. The conference was the first
of what became a series of annual conferences dealing with the strength
and security of Israel. A major part of the recommendations was related
with the ‘demographic threat’ posed by the Arab citizens of
Israel.
(For a detailed account on the conference and its recommendations see:
The Herzliya Conference on the Balance of National Strength and Security
in Israel, Journal of Palestine Studies, # 121, Volume XXXI, Number 1,
Autumn 2001, pp. 50-61)