During the
past decade or so, the actual elimination of the Jewish state has become a
cause célèbre among many
of these educated Westerners. The “one-state solution,” as it is called, is a
euphemistic formula proposing the replacement of Israel by a state,
theoretically comprising the whole of historic Palestine, in which Jews will be
reduced to the status of a permanent minority. Only this, it is said, can
expiate the “original sin” of Israel’s founding, an act built (in the words of
one critic) “on the ruins of Arab Palestine” and achieved through the
deliberate and aggressive dispossession of its native population.
This claim
of premeditated dispossession and the consequent creation of the longstanding
Palestinian “refugee problem” forms, indeed, the central plank in the bill of
particulars pressed by Israel’s alleged victims and their Western supporters.
It is a charge that has hardly gone undisputed. As early as the mid-1950’s, the
eminent American historian J.C. Hurewitz undertook a systematic refutation, and
his findings were abundantly confirmed by later generations of scholars and
writers. Even Benny Morris, the most influential of Israel’s revisionist “new
historians,” and one who went out of his way to establish the case for Israel’s
“original sin,” grudgingly stipulated that there was no “design” to displace
the Palestinian Arabs.
The recent
declassification of millions of documents from the period of the British
Mandate (1920-1948) and Israel’s early days, documents untapped by earlier
generations of writers and ignored or distorted by the “new historians,” paint
a much more definitive picture of the historical record. They reveal that the
claim of dispossession is not only completely unfounded but the inverse of the
truth. What follows is based on fresh research into these documents, which
contain many facts and data hitherto unreported.
_____________
Far from
being the hapless objects of a predatory Zionist assault, it was Palestinian
Arab leaders who from the early 1920’s onward, and very much against the wishes
of their own constituents, launched a relentless campaign to obliterate the
Jewish national revival. This campaign culminated in the violent attempt to
abort the UN resolution of November 29, 1947, which called for the establishment
of two states in Palestine. Had these leaders, and their counterparts in the
neighboring Arab states, accepted the UN resolution, there would have been no
war and no dislocation in the first place.
The simple
fact is that the Zionist movement had always been amenable to the existence in
the future Jewish state of a substantial Arab minority that would participate
on an equal footing “throughout all sectors of the country’s public life.” The
words are those of Ze’ev Jabotinsky, the founding father of the branch of
Zionism that was the forebear of today’s Likud party. In a famous 1923 article,
Jabotinsky voiced his readiness “to take an oath binding ourselves and our
descendants that we shall never do anything contrary to the principle of equal
rights, and that we shall never try to eject anyone.”
Eleven
years later, Jabotinsky presided over the drafting of a constitution for Jewish
Palestine. According to its provisions, Arabs and Jews were to share both the
prerogatives and the duties of statehood, including most notably military and
civil service. Hebrew and Arabic were to enjoy the same legal standing, and “in
every cabinet where the prime minister is a Jew, the vice-premiership shall be
offered to an Arab and vice-versa.”
If this
was the position of the more “militant” faction of the Jewish national
movement, mainstream Zionism not only took for granted the full equality of the
Arab minority in the future Jewish state but went out of its way to foster
Arab-Jewish coexistence. In January 1919, Chaim Weizmann, then the upcoming
leader of the Zionist movement, reached a peace-and-cooperation agreement with
the Hashemite emir Faisal ibn Hussein, the effective leader of the nascent
pan-Arab movement. From then until the proclamation of the state of Israel on
May 14, 1948, Zionist spokesmen held hundreds of meetings with Arab leaders at
all levels. These included Abdullah ibn Hussein, Faisal’s elder brother and
founder of the emirate of Transjordan (later the kingdom of Jordan), incumbent
and former prime ministers in Syria, Lebanon, Egypt, and Iraq, senior advisers
of King Abdul Aziz ibn Saud (founder of Saudi Arabia), and Palestinian Arab
elites of all hues.
As late as
September 15, 1947, two months before the passing of the UN partition
resolution, two senior Zionist envoys were still seeking to convince Abdel
Rahman Azzam, the Arab League’s secretary-general, that the Palestine conflict
“was uselessly absorbing the best energies of the Arab League,” and that both
Arabs and Jews would greatly benefit “from active policies of cooperation and
development.” Behind this proposition lay an age-old Zionist hope: that the
material progress resulting from Jewish settlement of Palestine would ease the
path for the local Arab populace to become permanently reconciled, if not
positively well disposed, to the project of Jewish national self-determination.
As David Ben-Gurion, soon to become Israel’s first prime minister, argued in
December 1947:
If the Arab citizen will feel at home in our state, . . . if
the state will help him in a truthful and dedicated way to reach the economic,
social, and cultural level of the Jewish community, then Arab distrust will
accordingly subside and a bridge will be built to a Semitic, Jewish-Arab
alliance.
_____________
On the
face of it, Ben-Gurion’s hope rested on reasonable grounds. An inflow of Jewish
immigrants and capital after World War I had revived Palestine’s hitherto
static condition and raised the standard of living of its Arab inhabitants well
above that in the neighboring Arab states. The expansion of Arab industry and
agriculture, especially in the field of citrus growing, was largely financed by
the capital thus obtained, and Jewish know-how did much to improve Arab
cultivation. In the two decades between the world wars, Arab-owned citrus
plantations grew sixfold, as did vegetable-growing lands, while the number of
olive groves quadrupled.
No less
remarkable were the advances in social welfare. Perhaps most significantly,
mortality rates in the Muslim population dropped sharply and life expectancy
rose from 37.5 years in 1926-27 to 50 in 1942-44 (compared with 33 in Egypt).
The rate of natural increase leapt upward by a third.
That
nothing remotely akin to this was taking place in the neighboring British-ruled
Arab countries, not to mention India, can be explained only by the decisive
Jewish contribution to Mandate Palestine’s socioeconomic well-being. The
British authorities acknowledged as much in a 1937 report by a commission of
inquiry headed by Lord Peel:
The general beneficent effect of Jewish immigration on Arab
welfare is illustrated by the fact that the increase in the Arab population is
most marked in urban areas affected by Jewish development. A comparison of the
census returns in 1922 and 1931 shows that, six years ago, the increase percent
in Haifa was 86, in Jaffa 62, in Jerusalem 37, while in purely Arab towns such
as Nablus and Hebron it was only 7, and at Gaza there was a decrease of 2
percent.
Had the
vast majority of Palestinian Arabs been left to their own devices, they would
most probably have been content to take advantage of the opportunities afforded
them. This is evidenced by the fact that, throughout the Mandate era, periods
of peaceful coexistence far exceeded those of violent eruptions, and the latter
were the work of only a small fraction of Palestinian Arabs. Unfortunately for
both Arabs and Jews, however, the hopes and wishes of ordinary people were not
taken into account, as they rarely are in authoritarian communities hostile to
the notions of civil society or liberal democracy. In the modern world,
moreover, it has not been the poor and the oppressed who have led the great
revolutions or carried out the worst deeds of violence, but rather militant
vanguards from among the better educated and more moneyed classes of society.
So it was
with the Palestinians. In the words of the Peel report:
We have found that, though the Arabs have benefited by the
development of the country owing to Jewish immigration, this has had no
conciliatory effect. On the contrary . . . with almost mathematical precision
the betterment of the economic situation in Palestine [has] meant the
deterioration of the political situation.
In
Palestine, ordinary Arabs were persecuted and murdered by their alleged betters
for the crime of “selling Palestine” to the Jews. Meanwhile, these same betters
were enriching themselves with impunity. The staunch pan-Arabist Awni Abdel
Hadi, who vowed to fight “until Palestine is either placed under a free Arab
government or becomes a graveyard for all the Jews in the country,” facilitated
the transfer of 7,500 acres to the Zionist movement, and some of his relatives,
all respected political and religious figures, went a step further by selling
actual plots of land. So did numerous members of the Husseini family, the
foremost Palestinian Arab clan during the Mandate period, including Muhammad
Tahir, father of Hajj Amin Husseini, the notorious mufti of Jerusalem.
It was the
mufti’s concern with solidifying his political position that largely underlay
the 1929 carnage in which 133 Jews were massacred and hundreds more were
wounded—just as it was the struggle for political preeminence that triggered
the most protracted outbreak of Palestinian Arab violence in 1936-39. This was
widely portrayed as a nationalist revolt against both the ruling British and
the Jewish refugees then streaming into Palestine to escape Nazi persecution.
In fact, it was a massive exercise in violence that saw far more Arabs than
Jews or Englishmen murdered by Arab gangs, that repressed and abused the
general Arab population, and that impelled thousands of Arabs to flee the
country in a foretaste of the 1947-48 exodus.
Some
Palestinian Arabs, in fact, preferred to fight back against their inciters, often
in collaboration with the British authorities and the Hagana, the largest
Jewish underground defense organization. Still others sought shelter in Jewish
neighborhoods. For despite the paralytic atmosphere of terror and a ruthlessly
enforced economic boycott, Arab-Jewish coexistence continued on many practical
levels even during such periods of turmoil, and was largely restored after
their subsidence.
_____________
Against
this backdrop, it is hardly to be wondered at that most Palestinians wanted nothing
to do with the violent attempt ten years later by the mufti-led Arab Higher
Committee (AHC), the effective “government” of the Palestinian Arabs, to
subvert the 1947 UN partition resolution. With the memories of 1936-39 still
fresh in their minds, many opted to stay out of the fight. In no time, numerous
Arab villages (and some urban areas) were negotiating peace agreements with
their Jewish neighbors; other localities throughout the country acted similarly
without the benefit of a formal agreement.
Nor did
ordinary Palestinians shrink from quietly defying their supreme leadership. In
his numerous tours around the region, Abdel Qader Husseini, district commander
of Jerusalem and the mufti’s close relative, found the populace indifferent, if
not hostile, to his repeated call to arms. In Hebron, he failed to recruit a
single volunteer for the salaried force he sought to form in that city; his
efforts in the cities of Nablus, Tulkarm, and Qalqiliya were hardly more
successful. Arab villagers, for their part, proved even less receptive to his
demands. In one locale, Beit Safafa, Abdel Qader suffered the ultimate
indignity, being driven out by angry residents protesting their village’s
transformation into a hub of anti-Jewish attacks. Even the few who answered his
call did so, by and large, in order to obtain free weapons for their personal
protection and then return home.
There was
an economic aspect to this peaceableness. The outbreak of hostilities
orchestrated by the AHC led to a sharp drop in trade and an accompanying spike
in the cost of basic commodities. Many villages, dependent for their livelihood
on the Jewish or mixed-population cities, saw no point in supporting the AHC’s
explicit goal of starving the Jews into submission. Such was the general lack
of appetite for war that in early February 1948, more than two months after the
AHC initiated its campaign of violence, Ben-Gurion maintained that “the
villages, in most part, have remained on the sidelines.”
Ben-Gurion’s
analysis was echoed by the Iraqi general Ismail Safwat, commander-in-chief of
the Arab Liberation Army (ALA), the volunteer Arab force that did much of the
fighting in Palestine in the months preceding Israel’s proclamation of
independence. Safwat lamented that only 800 of the 5,000 volunteers trained by
the ALA had come from Palestine itself, and that most of these had deserted
either before completing their training or immediately afterward. Fawzi
Qawuqji, the local commander of ALA forces, was no less scathing, having found
the Palestinians “unreliable, excitable, and difficult to control, and in
organized warfare virtually unemployable.”
This view
summed up most contemporary perceptions during the fateful six months of
fighting after the passing of the partition resolution. Even as these months
saw the all but complete disintegration of Palestinian Arab society, nowhere
was this described as a systematic dispossession of Arabs by Jews. To the
contrary: with the partition resolution widely viewed by Arab leaders as
“Zionist in inspiration, Zionist in principle, Zionist in substance, and
Zionist in most details” (in the words of the Palestinian academic Walid
Khalidi), and with those leaders being brutally candid about their
determination to subvert it by force of arms, there was no doubt whatsoever as
to which side had instigated the bloodletting.
Nor did
the Arabs attempt to hide their culpability. As the Jews set out to lay the
groundwork for their nascent state while simultaneously striving to convince
their Arab compatriots that they would be (as Ben-Gurion put it) “equal
citizens, equal in everything without any exception,” Palestinian Arab leaders
pledged that “should partition be implemented, it will be achieved only over
the bodies of the Arabs of Palestine, their sons, and their women.” Qawuqji
vowed “to drive all Jews into the sea.” Abdel Qader Husseini stated that “the
Palestine problem will only be solved by the sword; all Jews must leave
Palestine.”
_____________
They and
their fellow Arab abetters did their utmost to make these threats come true,
with every means at their disposal. In addition to regular forces like the ALA,
guerrilla and terror groups wreaked havoc, as much among noncombatants as among
Jewish fighting units. Shooting, sniping, ambushes, bombings, which in today’s
world would be condemned as war crimes, were daily events in the lives of
civilians. “[I]nnocent and harmless people, going about their daily business,”
wrote the U.S. consul-general in Jerusalem, Robert Macatee, in December 1947,
are picked off while riding in buses, walking along the
streets, and stray shots even find them while asleep in their beds. A Jewish
woman, mother of five children, was shot in Jerusalem while hanging out clothes
on the roof. The ambulance rushing her to the hospital was machine-gunned, and
finally the mourners following her to the funeral were attacked and one of them
stabbed to death.
As the
fighting escalated, Arab civilians suffered as well, and the occasional
atrocity sparked cycles of large-scale violence. Thus, the December 1947 murder
of six Arab workers near the Haifa oil refinery by the small Jewish underground
group IZL was followed by the immediate slaughter of 39 Jews by their Arab
co-workers, just as the killing of some 100 Arabs during the battle for the
village of Deir Yasin in April 1948 was “avenged” within days by the killing of
77 Jewish nurses and doctors en route to the Hadassah hospital on Mount Scopus.
Yet while
the Jewish leadership and media described these gruesome events for what they
were, at times withholding details so as to avoid panic and keep the door open
for Arab-Jewish reconciliation, their Arab counterparts not only inflated the
toll to gigantic proportions but invented numerous nonexistent atrocities. The
fall of Haifa (April 21-22), for example, gave rise to totally false claims of
a large-scale slaughter, which circulated throughout the Middle East and
reached Western capitals. Similarly false rumors were spread after the fall of
Tiberias (April 18), during the battle for Safed (in early May), and in Jaffa,
where in late April the mayor fabricated a massacre of “hundreds of Arab men
and women.” Accounts of Deir Yasin in the Arab media were especially lurid,
featuring supposed hammer-and-sickle tattoos on the arms of IZL fighters and
accusations of havoc and rape.
This
scare-mongering was undoubtedly aimed at garnering the widest possible sympathy
for the Palestinian plight and casting the Jews as brutal predators. But it
backfired disastrously by spreading panic within the disoriented Palestinian
society. That, in turn, helps explain why, by April 1948, after four months of
seeming progress, this phase of the Arab war effort collapsed. (Still in the
offing was the second, wider, and more prolonged phase involving the forces of
the five Arab nations that invaded Palestine in mid-May.) For not only had most
Palestinians declined to join the active hostilities, but vast numbers had
taken to the road, leaving their homes either for places elsewhere in the
country or fleeing to neighboring Arab lands.
_____________
Indeed,
many had vacated even before the outbreak of hostilities, and still larger
numbers decamped before the war reached their own doorstep. “Arabs are leaving
the country with their families in considerable numbers, and there is an exodus
from the mixed towns to the rural Arab centers,” reported Alan Cunningham, the
British high commissioner, in December 1947, adding a month later that the
“panic of [the] middle class persists and there is a steady exodus of those who
can afford to leave the country.”
Echoing
these reports, Hagana intelligence sources recounted in mid-December an
“evacuation frenzy that has taken hold of entire Arab villages.” Before the
month was over, many Palestinian Arab cities were bemoaning the severe problems
created by the huge influx of villagers and pleading with the AHC to help find
a solution to the predicament. Even the Syrian and Lebanese governments were
alarmed by this early exodus, demanding that the AHC encourage Palestinian
Arabs to stay put and fight.
But no
such encouragement was forthcoming, either from the AHC or from anywhere else.
In fact, there was a total lack of national cohesion, let alone any sense of
shared destiny. Cities and towns acted as if they were self-contained units,
attending to their own needs and eschewing the smallest sacrifice on behalf of
other localities. Many “national committees” (i.e., local leaderships) forbade
the export of food and drink from well-stocked cities to needy outlying towns
and villages. Haifa’s Arab merchants refused to alleviate a severe shortage of
flour in Jenin, while Gaza refused to export eggs and poultry to Jerusalem; in
Hebron, armed guards checked all departing cars. At the same time there was
extensive smuggling, especially in the mixed-population cities, with Arab
foodstuffs going to Jewish neighborhoods and vice-versa.
The lack
of communal solidarity was similarly evidenced by the abysmal treatment meted
out to the hundreds of thousands of refugees scattered throughout the country.
Not only was there no collective effort to relieve their plight, or even a
wider empathy beyond one’s immediate neighborhood, but many refugees were
ill-treated by their temporary hosts and subjected to ridicule and abuse for
their supposed cowardice. In the words of one Jewish intelligence report: “The
refugees are hated wherever they have arrived.”
Even the
ultimate war victims—the survivors of Deir Yasin—did not escape their share of
indignities. Finding refuge in the neighboring village of Silwan, many were
soon at loggerheads with the locals, to the point where on April 14, a mere
five days after the tragedy, a Silwan delegation approached the AHC’s Jerusalem
office demanding that the survivors be transferred elsewhere. No help for their
relocation was forthcoming.
Some
localities flatly refused to accept refugees at all, for fear of overstraining
existing resources. In Acre (Akko), the authorities prevented Arabs fleeing
Haifa from disembarking; in Ramallah, the predominantly Christian population
organized its own militia—not so much to fight the Jews as to fend off the new
Muslim arrivals. Many exploited the plight of the refugees unabashedly,
especially by fleecing them for such basic necessities as transportation and
accommodation.
Yet still
the Palestinians fled their homes, and at an ever growing pace. By early April
some 100,000 had gone, though the Jews were still on the defensive and in no
position to evict them. (On March 23, fully four months after the outbreak of
hostilities, ALA commander-in-chief Safwat noted with some astonishment that
the Jews “have so far not attacked a single Arab village unless provoked by
it.”) By the time of Israel’s declaration of independence on May 14, the
numbers of Arab refugees had more than trebled. Even then, none of the 170,000-180,000
Arabs fleeing urban centers, and only a handful of the 130,000-160,000
villagers who left their homes, had been forced out by the Jews.
The
exceptions occurred in the heat of battle and were uniformly dictated by ad-hoc
military considerations—reducing civilian casualties, denying sites to Arab
fighters when there were no available Jewish forces to repel them—rather than
political design. They were, moreover, matched by efforts to prevent flight
and/or to encourage the return of those who fled. To cite only one example, in
early April a Jewish delegation comprising top Arab-affairs advisers, local
notables, and municipal heads with close contacts with neighboring Arab
localities traversed Arab villages in the coastal plain, then emptying at a staggering
pace, in an attempt to convince their inhabitants to stay put.
_____________
What makes
these Jewish efforts all the more impressive is that they took place at a time
when huge numbers of Palestinian Arabs were being actively
driven from their homes
by their own leaders and/or by Arab military forces, whether out of military
considerations or in order to prevent them from becoming citizens of the
prospective Jewish state. In the largest and best-known example, tens of
thousands of Arabs were ordered or bullied into leaving the city of Haifa on
the AHC’s instructions, despite strenuous Jewish efforts to persuade them to
stay. Only days earlier, Tiberias’ 6,000-strong Arab community had been
similarly forced out by its own leaders, against local Jewish wishes. In Jaffa,
Palestine’s largest Arab city, the municipality organized the transfer of
thousands of residents by land and sea; in Jerusalem, the AHC ordered the
transfer of women and children, and local gang leaders pushed out residents of
several neighborhoods.
Tens of
thousands of rural villagers were likewise forced out by order of the AHC,
local Arab militias, or the ALA. Within weeks of the latter’s arrival in
Palestine in January 1948, rumors were circulating of secret instructions to
Arabs in predominantly Jewish areas to vacate their villages so as to allow
their use for military purposes and to reduce the risk of becoming hostage to
the Jews.
By
February, this phenomenon had expanded to most parts of the country. It gained
considerable momentum in April and May as ALA and AHC forces throughout
Palestine were being comprehensively routed. On April 18, the Hagana’s
intelligence branch in Jerusalem reported a fresh general order to remove the
women and children from all villages bordering Jewish localities. Twelve days
later, its Haifa counterpart reported an ALA command to evacuate all Arab
villages between Tel Aviv and Haifa in anticipation of a new general offensive.
In early May, as fighting intensified in the eastern Galilee, local Arabs were
ordered to transfer all women and children from the Rosh Pina area, while in
the Jerusalem sub-district, Transjordan’s Arab Legion likewise ordered the
emptying of scores of villages.
As for the
Palestinian Arab leaders themselves, who had placed their reluctant
constituents on a collision course with Zionism in the 1920’s and 1930’s and
had now dragged them helpless into a mortal conflict, they hastened to get
themselves out of Palestine and to stay out at the most critical moment. Taking
a cue from these higher-ups, local leaders similarly rushed en masse through
the door. High Commissioner Cunningham summarized what was happening with
quintessential British understatement:
You should know that the collapsing Arab morale in Palestine
is in some measure due to the increasing tendency of those who should be
leading them to leave the country. . . . For instance, in Jaffa the mayor went
on four-day leave 12 days ago and has not returned, and half the national
committee has left. In Haifa the Arab members of the municipality left some
time ago; the two leaders of the Arab Liberation Army left actually during the
recent battle. Now the chief Arab magistrate has left. In all parts of the
country the
effendi
class has been evacuating in large numbers over a considerable period and the
tempo is increasing.
Arif
al-Arif, a prominent Arab politician during the Mandate era and the doyen of
Palestinian historians, described the prevailing atmosphere at the time:
“Wherever one went throughout the country one heard the same refrain: ‘Where
are the leaders who should show us the way? Where is the AHC? Why are its
members in Egypt at a time when Palestine, their own country, needs them?’”
_____________
Muhammad
Nimr al-Khatib, a Palestinian Arab leader during the 1948 war, would sum up the
situation in these words: “The Palestinians had neighboring Arab states which
opened their borders and doors to the refugees, while the Jews had no
alternative but to triumph or to die.”
This is
true enough of the Jews, but it elides the reason for the refugees’ flight and
radically distorts the quality of their reception elsewhere. If they met with
no sympathy from their brethren at home, the reaction throughout the Arab world
was, if anything, harsher still. There were repeated calls for the forcible
return of the refugees, or at the very least of young men of military age, many
of whom had arrived under the (false) pretense of volunteering for the ALA. As
the end of the Mandate loomed nearer, the Lebanese government refused entry
visas to Palestinian males between eighteen and fifty and ordered all “healthy
and fit men” who had already entered the country to register officially or be
considered illegal aliens and face the full weight of the law.
The Syrian
government took an even more stringent approach, banning from its territory all
Palestinian males between sixteen and fifty. In Egypt, a large number of
demonstrators marched to the Arab League’s Cairo headquarters and lodged a
petition demanding that “every able-bodied Palestinian capable of carrying arms
should be forbidden to stay abroad.” Such was the extent of Arab resentment
toward the Palestinian refugees that the rector of Cairo’s al-Azhar institution
of religious learning, probably the foremost Islamic authority, felt obliged to
issue a ruling that made the sheltering of Palestinian Arab refugees a
religious duty.
Contempt
for the Palestinians only intensified with time. “Fright has struck the
Palestinian Arabs and they fled their country,” commented Radio Baghdad on the
eve of the pan-Arab invasion of the new-born state of Israel in mid-May. “These
are hard words indeed, yet they are true.” Lebanon’s minister of the interior
(and future president) Camille Chamoun was more delicate, intoning that “The
people of Palestine, in their previous resistance to imperialists and Zionists,
proved they were worthy of independence,” but “at this decisive stage of the
fighting they have not remained so dignified.”
No wonder,
then, that so few among the Palestinian refugees themselves blamed their
collapse and dispersal on the Jews. During a fact-finding mission to Gaza in
June 1949, Sir John Troutbeck, head of the British Middle East office in Cairo
and no friend to Israel or the Jews, was surprised to discover that while the
refugees
express no bitterness against the Jews (or for that matter
against the Americans or ourselves) they speak with the utmost bitterness of
the Egyptians and other Arab states. “We know who our enemies are,” they will
say, and they are referring to their Arab brothers who, they declare, persuaded
them unnecessarily to leave their homes. . . . I even heard it said that many
of the refugees would give a welcome to the Israelis if they were to come in
and take the district over.
_____________
Sixty
years after their dispersion, the refugees of 1948 and their descendants remain
in the squalid camps where they have been kept by their fellow Arabs for
decades, nourished on hate and false hope. Meanwhile, their erstwhile leaders
have squandered successive opportunities for statehood.
It is
indeed the tragedy of the Palestinians that the two leaders who determined
their national development during the 20th century—Hajj Amin Husseini and Yasir
Arafat, the latter of whom dominated Palestinian politics since the mid-1960’s
to his death in November 2004—were megalomaniacal extremists blinded by
anti-Jewish hatred and profoundly obsessed with violence. Had the mufti chosen
to lead his people to peace and reconciliation with their Jewish neighbors, as
he had promised the British officials who appointed him to his high rank in the
early 1920’s, the Palestinians would have had their independent state over a
substantial part of Mandate Palestine by 1948, and would have been spared the
traumatic experience of dispersion and exile. Had Arafat set the PLO from the
start on the path to peace and reconciliation, instead of turning it into one
of the most murderous terrorist organizations in modern times, a Palestinian
state could have been established in the late 1960’s or the early 1970’s; in
1979 as a corollary to the Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty; by May 1999 as part
of the Oslo process; or at the very latest with the Camp David summit of July
2000.
Instead,
Arafat transformed the territories placed under his control in the 1990’s into
an effective terror state from where he launched an all-out war (the “al-Aqsa
intifada”) shortly after
being offered an independent Palestinian state in the Gaza Strip and 92 percent
of the West Bank, with East Jerusalem as its capital. In the process, he
subjected the Palestinian population in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip to a
repressive and corrupt regime in the worst tradition of Arab dictatorships and
plunged their standard of living to unprecedented depths.
What makes
this state of affairs all the more galling is that, far from being unfortunate
aberrations, Hajj Amin and Arafat were quintessential representatives of the
cynical and self-seeking leaders produced by the Arab political system. Just as
the Palestinian leadership during the Mandate had no qualms about inciting its
constituents against Zionism and the Jews, while lining its own pockets from
the fruits of Jewish entrepreneurship, so PLO officials used the billions of
dollars donated by the Arab oil states and, during the Oslo era, by the
international community to finance their luxurious style of life while ordinary
Palestinians scrambled for a livelihood.
And so it
goes. Six decades after the mufti and his henchmen condemned their people to
statelessness by rejecting the UN partition resolution, their reckless
decisions are being reenacted by the latest generation of Palestinian leaders.
This applies not only to Hamas, which in January 2006 replaced the PLO at the
helm of the Palestinian Authority (PA), but also to the supposedly moderate
Palestinian leadership—from President Mahmoud Abbas to Ahmad Qureia (negotiator
of the 1993 Oslo Accords) to Saeb Erekat to prime minister Salam Fayad—which
refuses to recognize Israel’s very existence as a Jewish state and insists on
the full implementation of the “right of return.”
And so it
goes as well with Western anti-Zionists who in the name of justice (no less)
call today not for a new and fundamentally different Arab leadership but for
the dismantlement of the Jewish state. Only when these dispositions change can
Palestinian Arabs realistically look forward to putting their self-inflicted
“catastrophe” behind them.