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WSWS : News
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East
Zionism's legacy of ethnic cleansing
Part 2Israeli expansion creates more Palestinian refugees
By Jean Shaoul
23 January 2001
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this version to print
At the heart of the breakdown of the Middle East talks lies
the refusal of the Zionist state to accept the right of return
for the Palestinians who lost their homes and country after the
establishment of the state of Israel in 1948. The first of a two-part
article on this subjectIsrael and the Palestinian
right of returnappeared yesterday. The following is
the concluding part.
While Israel continues to deny Palestinians the right of return,
one of the first pieces of legislation passed by the new state
was the Law of Return, enabling Jews from all over
the world to come and live in Israel.
In the aftermath of the Second World War there were hundreds
of thousands of Jews living in desperate conditions in displaced
persons camps throughout Europe, as well as many others facing
rampant anti-Semitism and discrimination. With few countries willing
to take them, Israel provided their only possibility of a home.
The Israeli legislation was not simply a humanitarian measure
aimed at providing a refuge for Jews facing persecution, however.
Immigration to provide manpower was vital if the fledgling state
was to survive and its businesses were to have access to cheap
labour. The Zionist state therefore actively encouraged the immigration
of Jews to Israel and between 1948 and 1952 the Jewish population
doubled.
After an initial huge influx of Jews from Eastern Europe, Stalin
initiated a vicious anti-Semitic campaign; Jews faced frame-up
trials and the doors were closed to Jewish emigration from the
Soviet Union. So Israel turned to the Jews living in the Middle
East and North Africa for new sources of immigration.
It used all means at its disposal to achieve this, going far
beyond what would generally be considered encouragement.
The case of the Iraqi Jews is the most well known, and is documented
in several books (see Moshe Gat's The Jewish Exodus from Iraq
1948-1951 and Shlomi Hillel's Operation Babylon). The
Zionist underground, backed by Mossad le-Aliya, the forerunner
of the Israeli security service, sent agents provocateurs
abroad to create conditions whereby Jews would leave their homes
and come to Israel. As a result of Mossad activities, in the space
of a few weeks more than 120,000 Jewsalmost the entire community
in Iraqwere forced to leave their homes and possessions
for Israel. Until the onset of Zionist-Palestinian conflict and
the inflaming of political tensions by Britain's stooge regime
under King Feisal and Prime Minister Nuri Said in Iraq, Jews had
lived there without incident for 2,500 years, since the Babylonian
exile from biblical Palestine.
Israel was not the destination of choice for the Iraqi Jews.
A privileged few, those with money and connections, went to the
West. But the majority lived in Israeli camps, where food and
medicines were in short supply, until homes in development
towns could be built on the ruins of Palestinian villages.
In subsequent years, entire communities of Jews from all over
the Middle East and North Africa, who had had no interest in Zionism
and had not faced discrimination or the anti-Semitism so prevalent
in Europe, came to Israel They now form the majority in Israel.
Both the size and speed of this exodus gives rise to the suspicion
that in some cases at least, deals were done. Morocco's King Hassan
was subsequently able to call on Mossad's services in Paris to
dispose of Ben Barka, a political opponent, in circumstances that
have never been clarified. The Royalist forces in Yemen received
support from the Israeli Defence Force in their murderous civil
war against the Republicans who were backed by Egypt's Nasser.
Thus, irrespective of their stated motives and intentions,
and despite their anti-Israeli rhetoric, the viability of the
Zionist state was crucially dependent upon the actions of the
Arab bourgeoisie.
Today the population of Israel has grown to over 6 million,
including more than 1 million Russians who left after the collapse
of the Soviet Union. It is widely believed that many of these
are non-Jews, who were desperate to escape the widespread poverty
and misery that followed Russia's economic collapse. This in turn
has infuriated the religious authorities, who fear the diminution
of their power.
At the very least, the enormous expansion of Israel's population
refutes any claim that there was not enough room in Israel-Palestine
or the means to support an enlarged Palestinian citizenry. The
crucial question for Zionism was that the expansion has been Jewish
and at the expense of the Palestinians. Those Palestinians who
continued to live inside Israel have been treated as second-class
citizens: Israeli Palestinians do not have the same rights as
Israeli Jews. Ninety-three percent of the land is now characterised
as Jewish land, meaning that no non-Jew is allowed to lease, sell
or buy it. Thus the Land Rules have not just made the Palestinians
into refugees, they have also worked to dispossess them of their
property within Israel itself. Furthermore until 1966, Palestinian
Israelis were ruled by military ordinance.
The Six-Day War and Israeli military occupation
After the Six-Day War in June 1967, when Israel seized East
Jerusalem, the West Bank, Gaza and the Golan Heights in Syria,
many Palestinians became refugees for a second time. They were
forced to leave their homes and flee to Jordan and the Lebanon.
Palestinian resistance to the military occupation that followed
the war provoked a brutal response from the Israeli army. Whole
villages were razed to the ground and families expelled. This
vicious sequence was repeated over and over again as the Israelis
drove the Palestinians further away from their original homes.
The Palestinian-Israeli scholar Nur Masalha details how the
Zionists planned and implemented programmes to rid the Promised
Land of its native people in his book A Land without
a People: Israel, Transfer and the Palestinians, 1949-96.
He explains that this policy continued well after the 1948-49
war and involved not just the politicians and military forces,
but also Israeli intellectuals. It included transfer, massacresas
in the case of Kfir Qasimhousing demolitions and expulsions.
Jewish settlements were established in the newly occupied lands
within weeks of the war, not by right-wing zealots but by the
party of government, the Labour Party. As Israeli historian Zeev
Sternhell explains in his book The Founding Myths of Israel,
Despite the impression that some of the founders of the
labour movement, motivated by internal political struggles, have
attempted to create, everyone in the coalitionboth the founders
and their successorswere united in pursuing a policy of
fait accompli in the occupied territories. Despite the divisions
in the Mapai [Labour] since the mid-1940s, the family of Mapai
remained true to the doctrine of never giving up a position or
a territory unless one is compelled by a superior force.
As Sternhell explains, while the then Prime Minister Levi Eshkol
feared the consequences of such a move, he had no ideological
alternative to offer. His failure to prevent the colonising of
the Occupied Territories stemmed not from personal weaknesses,
but from the fact that he had no response to the Zionist argument
that if Jews could live in the Arab towns and neighbourhoods of
Jaffa and Haifa and consider them their legitimate homes, there
was no reason to prevent them living in Palestinian Nablus or
Hebron.
According to Sternhell, Golda Meir, who followed Eshkol as
prime minister, was chosen precisely because she wholeheartedly
embraced the nationalist perspective of the Labour Zionists and
appealed to history as proof of the legitimacy, morality and exclusivity
of the Jewish people's right to the country. For her, there was
room for only one national movement in Palestinea Jewish
one. This was why she prohibited the use of terms such as Palestinian
national movement and Palestinian state'' on Israeli
state radio and television.
The promulgation by the government of literally hundreds of
occupiers' laws directly contravened not only the
tenets of the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights
but the Geneva Conventions as well. These violations of basic
democratic rights included administrative detention, mass land
expropriations, forced movement of populations, and torture.
Palestinians were made homeless and whole areas were ethnically
cleansed so that Israelis, often new immigrants, could be housed.
Initially it was only the right-wing zealots, determined to colonise
the West Bank (known as Judea and Samaria in biblical Palestine),
who came to the new settlements. But it was only possible to populate
them by offering financial inducements, in the form of subsidies
and tax rebates, to encourage poor Israelis to settle there who
otherwise had no chance of obtaining decent, affordable housing.
Even after talks to reach a negotiated resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict resulted in the 1993 Oslo Accords, settlement building
did not abate. The opposite occurred, it increased, transforming
the demography of the West Bank and Jerusalem.
As a result of the 1967 Six-Day War and Israeli reprisals against
those suspected of supporting the Palestine Liberation Organisation
(PLO), many Palestinians fled to Jordan. Three years later, many
were hounded out of Jordan in a military campaign by King Hussein,
aided by Israel, in what became known as Black September, and
fled to Lebanon.
The Israeli invasions of Lebanon in 1978 and 1982 created further
displacements as the Palestinians left their homes in southern
Lebanon and moved to Beirut to avoid Israeli air raids. Many Palestinians
thus became refugees several times over. Israel's 18-year occupation
of southern Lebanon was accompanied by frequent aerial bombardments
that destroyed countless Arab homes and villages. The Palestinians,
despite their expulsion from their homes in 1948 and 1967, were
never safe from the extended arm of Israel's military and secret
service, even in their place of refuge.
Palestinian homes were no more sacrosanct in Jerusalemthe
eternal and undivided capital of Israel, according to the
Zionists. Under vaguely defined and discriminatory rules, Palestinians
who live there lose their residency rights if they are unable
to prove that Jerusalem is the centre of their life.
The loss of residency rights means expulsion from Jerusalem and
exile to a village in the West Bank, where access to Jerusalem
is denied.
The 1993 Oslo Accords
The Labour politicians Shimon Pereswho played a major
role in securing the Oslo agreement in 1993and Yitzhak Rabinwho
signed the accordsdid not do so because of some Damascene
conversion to the legitimacy of Palestinian national rights. An
agreement offered the most rational solution to the conflict from
the perspective of Israel's own national interests. They postponed
the resolution of the most difficult issuesthe refugee
question and the status of Jerusalemto later talks,
in the hope of first getting agreement on borders and land transfers.
The right-wing opposition within Israel has obstructed every
step of the protracted Israeli-Palestinian negotiations. In the
final analysis, despite the majority of Israelis supporting an
end to the conflict, the Labour Party and its liberal and secular
supporters have been unable to oppose the right-wing fundamentalists.
The relationship between the secular Labourites, the peace movement
and the religious nationalists is much closer than might appear
on the surface. All share a perspective based on upholding claims
to an historical and religious Jewish right to Palestine, which
dictated the Palestinian expulsions and precludes the recognition
of similar rights for the Palestinians.
The liberal historian Benny Morris, who has quite correctly
exposed the way Israel forcibly ejected the Palestinians from
their homes in order to establish the Zionist state, exemplifies
this outlook. His nationalist perspective renders him blind to
the logical implications of his own work. He wrote in Britain's
Guardian newspaper: The spectacle of Palestinian
rejection of the reasonable terms offered by President
Clinton and the Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak (Israeli withdrawal
from 95 percent of the West Bank and the Arab half of Jerusalem,
and Palestinian statehood), and the insistence on the refugees'
right of return to their homes, towns and villages in pre-1967
Israel, is alienating most Israelis and undermining the sympathy
that the past decades of suffering and peace negotiations have
engendered.
He concluded his article by saying, Almost all Israeli
Jews, including myself, believe that whatever the rights
and wrongs of 1948, and whoever was to blame for the creation
of the Palestinian refugee problem, a solution based on their
repatriation to Israel would spell the destruction of the Jewish
state (emphasis added throughout).
United Socialist States of the Middle East
This brief review of the history of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict shows that any recognition of the Palestinians' right
of return, however circumscribed, immediately raises the undemocratic
character of the Zionist regime and its essential inviability.
As this article has sought to show, it is a myth to say that
the state of Israel was established in a land without people.
On the contrary, the state of Israel was created as a result of
the planned and systematic expulsion of the Palestinian people.
Moreover, Israel cannot be regarded as any kind of progressive
society, committed to social equality and the advancement of all
its peoples. The Zionist state enshrines discrimination on the
basis of religious beliefs. It is a society riven from top to
bottom with social and political divisions of a most explosive
character.
Despite posturing as a new form of society, founded on equality
and quasi-socialist principles, from its origins Israel has been
a garrison state, surrounded by hostile neighbours, with the army
serving as the central pillar of society.
The tragic irony of the Zionist solution to the oppression
of the Jewish peopletraditionally and historically connected
with a struggle for tolerance and freedomhas been the brutal
suppression of another oppressed people. In consequence, the right-wing
forces cultivated by the Zionist state now threaten to reproduce
within Israel the same conditions of dictatorship and civil war
from which an earlier generation of Jews fled.
The only way out of the current dead end is the development
of a political movement to unite Arab and Jewish workers and intellectuals
in a common struggle against capitalism and for the building of
a socialist society. This also offers the only means of genuinely
redressing the historic iniquities suffered by the Palestinian
workers and peasants, and ending the twin evils of oppression
and war that are fuelled by the profit drive of international
capital and the native ruling elites. The creation of a United
Socialist States of the Middle East would remove the artificial
borders that presently divide the peoples and economies of the
region, enabling its plentiful resources to be utilised in order
to fulfil the social, economic and democratic aspirations of all
its peoples.
See Also:
Zionism's legacy of ethnic cleansing
Part 1Israel and the Palestinian right of return
[22 January 2001]
Israeli right wing demands no compromise
with the Palestinians
[12 January 2001]
Israel's war measures
and the legacy of Zionism
[16 October 2000]
Israel
& Palestine
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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