My
previous column – "Ethnic
Cleansing: Past, Present and Future" – attracted more
reactions than any other. Some of them were supportive and encouraging,
for which I am grateful. Many were outraged and even offensive,
for which I am even more grateful: not just for enriching my English
vocabulary in certain semantic fields (I have been called everything
from "anti-Semitic renegade" to "stupid dump ass"),
but for reassuring me that I am not wasting my time writing for
those who agree with me anyway.
Almost
all the fire was aimed at my claim regarding the ethnic cleansing
carried out by Israel in 1948. These copious reactions reaffirm
my argument that this is still a taboo in pro-Israeli discourse.
Even when protesting the present "quiet" ethnic cleansing
in the Occupied Territories or warning of future Israeli intentions
is tolerated, saying that Israel owes its existence as a Jewish
State to ethnic cleansing is evidently beyond the pale. As I said,
fighting the present strangulation of the Palestinians should
be the top priority of any peace activity on the ground; but on
the level of consciousness, coming to terms with the ethnic cleansing
of 1948 is an inevitable precondition for reconciliation between
Israelis and Palestinians.
In
spite of the heated tone of many reactions, not many of them were
seriously argumentative. Several readers want me to stop criticising
Israel and to focus on Palestinian terrorism instead. I get this
advice regularly, as if Palestinian terrorism were a never-heard-of
scoop just waiting for me to discover. Sorry, friends: I am convinced
that stopping the occupation, the colonisation and the dispossession
of the Palestinians is the only way to end both the justified
Palestinian resistance and its unjustifiable terrorist actions.
Pointing a finger at the Palestinians may serve the Israeli propaganda,
the settlements and the gigantic American aid to Israel; but all
these make my life in Tel-Aviv neither safer nor more moral.
One
reader claims that I "imply that the Palestinian Arabs who
fled or were driven out […] are in the same boat as the Jews of
Nazi Germany were". I did not imply that at all. The expulsion
of the Palestinians took place within what can be termed a civil
war (a war crime), whereas Hitler’s war on the Jews was an unprovoked
genocide of defenceless civil populations (a crime against humanity).
I used the Nazi case just to show that the way from mass-deportation
to mass-murder is a dangerously short one, and that every Jew,
including those calling for "transfer", should be aware
of that.
Another
reader claimed that Palestinian nationalism was quite young, and
that there was no Palestinian people prior to the twentieth century.
Though this is true – Palestinian nationalism is even younger
than the relatively young Jewish nationalism (a.k.a. Zionism),
and is to some extent a reaction to it – I fail to see why this
justifies an ethnic cleansing. Are human rights applicable to
nationalists only?
Pavlovian
Reaction
One
issue, however, was repeated in many reactions: the so-called
ethnic cleansing of Jews from the Arab countries. This seems to
be the Pavlovian pro-Israeli reply whenever the ethnic cleansing
of 1948 is mentioned. It can be traced back to official Israeli
State propaganda as early as the 1950s. I say Pavlovian, because
it is invoked instinctively and irrationally, just like the saliva
of Pavlov’s dog.
The
argument of my article was that Israel carried out an ethnic cleansing
in 1948, and that it may be prone to repeat it. As a reply, I
am told that the Arab countries carried out an ethnic cleansing.
What does this have to do with my argument? The assertion that
Arab countries may be guilty of a similar crime does not make
Israel’s crime any better; it definitely does not disprove that
Israel is prone to repeat it. Again, the rhetorical trick here
is the same as asking me to talk about Palestinian terrorism:
whenever Israel is criticised, simply change the subject and talk
about Arab or Palestinian faults instead (luckily for Israel,
there are always enough of them). This is demagoguery, not a fair
debate.
However,
irrelevant as it is to the argument of my previous column, the
analogy between the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians in 1948 and
the exodus of Jews from Arab countries is worth relating to in
its own right.
'Arab
Ethnic Cleansing'?
First
let us recall the chronology. The ethnic cleansing of 600.000
to 720.000 Palestinians from Israel preceded the Jewish
exodus from Arab countries. The exodus of some 125.000 Iraqi Jews
to Israel started in 1949; that of about 165.000 North-African
Jews took place as late as 1955-1957. It is therefore somewhat
awkward to claim that Israel had deported its Arabs because of
the exodus of Arab Jews that occurred years later. There is no
doubt, however, that the establishment of the State of Israel
played a major role in the deplorable deterioration of living
conditions for Jews in many Arab countries.
Whereas
Jews had been living in the Arab and Muslim world for more than
a millennium, for better and for worse but under generally more
favourable terms than under Christianity (and with nothing even
slightly comparable to the atrocities of the Crusaders or the
Holocaust), Israel’s ethnic cleansing coincided with the Jewish
State’s birth. And not by chance: the 600.000 Jews living in Palestine
in 1948 could not have achieved a solid majority in the areas
they occupied without getting rid of a similar number of Arabs.
Unlike the Arab countries, that can show a long tradition of coexistence
with Jews (notwithstanding discrimination though), and for which
getting rid of the Jews had no demographic significance whatsoever,
the ethnic cleansing of Palestine was both historically and demographically
the constitutive event of the Jewish State.
Moreover:
even though Jews were indeed harassed (by the people and/or regimes)
in Arab countries following the 1948 war, blaming the Arabs of
ethnic cleansing is shamefully cynical when it is imputed by the
very Zionists who demanded "let my people go", or by
the same Israel that did all it could to force those very countries
to let their Jews leave. The global Zionist pressure on each and
every country, from the Soviet Union to Syria, to let its Jewish
citizens go, was part of Israel’s efforts to consolidate its Jewish
majority; that is why Israel always urged Western countries not
to let those Jewish immigrants in, lest they fail to make Aliya.
So
oriental Jews were pushed out of Arab countries as a result of
the conflict with Israel, and at the same time pulled by Israel,
to consolidate its Jewish majority, and by Zionism, that regarded
the Jewish state as the only proper place for Jews to live in.
It is a major case of hypocrisy to compare those Jewish immigrants
to Palestinians who fled or were driven out of Israel to other
countries during a war, people for whom Palestine was their only
homeland and who found themselves against their will as refugees
in foreign and hostile Arab states, people who were willing but
not allowed to return home, and whose property was dispossessed
by Israel.
Furthermore,
this hypocrisy is symptomatic of the way the Israeli establishment
treated the oriental Jewish immigrants. They were lured to come
to Israel by promises of equality and welfare. They were zionistically
indoctrinated to see Israel as their new homeland, in spite of
their systematic discrimination compared to Jewish immigrants
from European countries. Those who refused this zionisation were
outcasts; those who did become Zionist and consider themselves
as people returning home from a long exile, now have to take the
insult of being described as foreign refugees, just like Palestinians
in Kuwait.
The
cynicism of the Israeli establishment reached its highest peak
when Israel raised the claim that the property of the Palestinian
refugees, confiscated by Israel after 1948, was "balanced"
by Jewish property left behind in Arab countries. This is a further
development of the same manipulative analogy, in which the oriental
immigrants are assigned the role of wretched pawns. The masses
of oriental Jews, who lost their home and property as a direct
result of the establishment of Israel, and then came to Israel
and were housed here in poor slums hired to them by the State,
never got any compensation for their lost property; Now they hear
that the State that they see as their homeland considers them
to be mere refugees, and that their lost property is bargained
off by this State against some Palestinian property it confiscated,
of which they themselves have not seen a cent.
The
State of Israel produces a lot of propaganda which is refuted
by the slightest critical analysis. The analogy drawn between
the Palestinian refugees of 1948 and the Jews from Arab countries
is an especially repulsive example of this. It reveals not only
how absurd Israel’s propaganda can be, but how humiliating, scornful
and dangerous it is for many Israelis. A State that has been unable
to grant its own citizens a day of peace in more than 50 years
cannot be expected to treat them any better in its propaganda.
Supporting Israel’s propaganda and war machines is definitely
not the right way to help both peoples of Israel/Palestine to
peaceful coexistence.
Ran HaCohen
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