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Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University Marxist sociologist Yehuda Shenhav explains
why the "Palestinian refugees" deserve compassion, but the Jewish
refugees from Arab countries (or what he calls "Arab Jews") do not:
http://normanfinkelstein.com/article.php?pg=11&ar=2020
Arab Jews, Palestinian Refugees and Israel's Folly Politics
October 2006 |
http://cosmos.ucc.ie
By: Yehouda Shenhav
In an article in the
Israeli daily Ha'aretz from 22.10.06, the Reuters Agency reported
that World Jewish groups began a global campaign calling for
recognition of Jews from Arab countries (i.e. Arab Jews) as refugees
in the Middle East conflict. Stanley Urman, executive director of
Justice for Jews from Arab Countries (JJAC) was quoted saying that:
The world sees the plight of Palestinian refugees, and not
withstanding their plight, there must be recognition that Jews from
Arab countries are also victims of the Arab-Israeli conflict.
Justice for Jews from
Arab Countries (JJAC), a U.S.-based coalition of Jewish
organizations, is one of the groups coordinating the campaign which
aims to record testimonies of Jews from Arab countries, list asset
losses and lobby foreign governments on their behalf. Reuters also
reported that JJAC is working in tandem with Israel's Ministry of
Justice, which is collecting and registering testimonials,
affidavits and property claims. The daily internet paper Y-NET
(October 24 2006 under the title: "Jews of Arab Countries prepare
yourself to claim compensation") also reported that the new minister
of justice Meir Shitrit is behind this "new effort."
However this effort
is all but novel. It started 6 years ago in a folly attempt to use
the Arab Jews and their histories to counter-balance the Palestinian
claim for the so called "right of return". The campaign has tried to
create an analogy between Palestinian refugees and Arab Jews, whose
origins are in Middle Eastern countries - depicting both groups as
victims of the 1948 War of Independence. The campaign's Jewish
proponents hope their efforts will prevent conferral of what is
called a "right of return" on Palestinians, and reduce the size of
the compensation Israel is liable to be asked to pay in exchange for
Palestinian property appropriated by the state guardian of "lost"
assets. Whereas in the past, the State of Israel and Jewish
organizations have denied any linkage between the two groups and
argued that the campaign was launched in the interest of the Arab
Jews (see Chapter 3 in my book The Arab Jews, Stanford University
Press, 2006), today all parties involved acknowledge that the main
objective of the campaign is not to secure the interest of the Arab
Jews, but rather to counter-balance the Palestinian political
demands. I would like to argue that the idea of drawing this analogy
constitutes a mistaken reading of history, imprudent politics, and
moral injustice; and that any analogy between Palestinian refugees
and Jewish immigrants from Arab lands is folly in historical and
political terms
Bill Clinton launched
the campaign in July 2000 in an interview with Israel's Channel One,
in which he disclosed that an agreement to recognize Jews from Arab
lands as refugees materialized at the Camp David summit. Ehud Barak,
the Israeli Prime Minister at the time, stepped up and
enthusiastically expounded on his "achievement" in an interview with
Dan Margalit. It should be noted, that past Israeli governments had
refrained from issuing declarations of this sort. There were at
least three reasons for that. First, there has been concern that any
such proclamation will underscore what Israel has tried to repress
and forget: the Palestinians' demand for return. Second, there has
been anxiety that such a declaration would encourage property claims
submitted by Jews against Arab states and, in response, Palestinian
counter-claims to lost property. Third, such declarations would
require Israel to update its school textbooks and history, and
devise a new narrative by which the Arab Jews journeyed to the
country under duress, without being fueled by Zionist aspirations.
At Camp David, Ehud Barak decided that the right of return issue was
not really on the agenda, so he thought he had the liberty to
indulge the analogy between the Palestinian refugees and the Arab
Jews, only rhetorically.
Characteristically,
rather than really dealing with issues as a leader, in a fashion
that might lead to mutual reconciliation, Barak and later prime
ministers Ariel Sharom and Ehud Oulmert acted like shopkeepers.
Furthermore, whereas the article in Ha'aretz mentioned above reports
that the Ministry of Justice has already received thousands of
claims to date, in actuality the campaign's results thus far are
meager. The Jewish organizations involved have not inspired much
enthusiasm in Israel, or among Jews overseas. It has yet to extract
a single noteworthy declaration from any major Israeli politician.
This comes as no surprise: The campaign has a forlorn history whose
details are worth revisiting. Sometimes recounting history has a
very practical effect.
The World
Organization of Jews from Arab Countries (WOJAC) who initiated this
linkage was founded in the 1970s. Yigal Allon, then foreign
minister, worried that WOJAC would become a hotbed of what he called
"ethnic mobilization." But WOJAC was not formed to assist the Arab
Jews; it was invented as a deterrent to block claims harbored by the
Palestinian national movement, particularly claims related to
compensation and the right of return. At first glance, the use of
the term "refugees" for the Arab Jews was not unreasonable. After
all, the word had occupied a central place in historical and
international legal discourses after World War II. United Nations
Security Council Resolution 242 from 1967 referred to a just
solution to "the problem of refugees in the Middle East." In the
1970s, Arab countries tried to fine-tune the resolution's language
so that it would refer to "Arab refugees in the Middle East," but
the U.S. government, under the direction of ambassador to the UN
Arthur Goldberg, opposed this revision. A working paper prepared in
1977 by Cyrus Vance, then U.S. secretary of state, ahead of
scheduled international meetings in Geneva, alluded to the search
for a solution to the "problem of refugees," without specifying the
identities of those refugees. Israel lobbied for this formulation.
WOJAC, which tried to introduce use of the concept "Jewish
refugees," failed.
The Arabs were not
the only ones to object to the phrase. Many Zionist Jews from around
the world opposed WOJAC's initiative. Organizers of the current
campaign would be wise to study the history of WOJAC, an
organization which transmogrified over its years of activity from a
Zionist to a post-Zionist entity. It is a tale of unexpected results
arising from political activity. The WOJAC figure who came up with
the idea of "Jewish refugees" was Yaakov Meron, head of the Justice
Ministry's Arab legal affairs department. Meron propounded the most
radical thesis ever devised concerning the history of Jews in Arab
lands. He claimed Jews were expelled from Arab countries under
policies enacted in concert with Palestinian leaders - and he termed
these policies "ethnic cleansing." Vehemently opposing the dramatic
Zionist narrative, Meron claimed that Zionism had relied on
romantic, borrowed phrases ("Magic Carpet," "Operation Ezra and
Nehemiah") in the description of Mizrahi immigration waves to
conceal the "fact" that Jewish migration was the result of "Arab
expulsion policy." In a bid to complete the analogy drawn between
Palestinians and Mizrahi Jews, WOJAC publicists claimed that the
Arab Jewish immigrants lived in refugee camps in Israel during the
1950s (i.e., ma'abarot or transit camps), just like the Palestinian
refugees.
The organization's
claims infuriated many Arab Jews in Israel who defined themselves as
Zionists. As early as 1975, at the time of WOJAC's formation,
Knesset speaker Yisrael Yeshayahu declared: "We are not refugees.
[Some of us] came to this country before the state was born. We had
messianic aspirations." Shlomo Hillel, a government minister and an
active Zionist in Iraq, adamantly opposed the analogy: "I don't
regard the departure of Jews from Arab lands as that of refugees.
They came here because they wanted to, as Zionists." In a Knesset
hearing, Ran Cohen stated emphatically: "I have this to say: I am
not a refugee." He added: "I came at the behest of Zionism, due to
the pull that this land exerts, and due to the idea of redemption.
Nobody is going to define me as a refugee." The opposition was so
vociferous that Ora Schweitzer, chair of WOJAC's political
department, asked the organization's secretariat to end its
campaign. She reported that members of Strasburg's Jewish community
were so offended that they threatened to boycott organization
meetings should the topic of "Sephardi Jews as refugees" ever come
up again. Such remonstration precisely predicted the failure of the
current organization, Justice for Jews from Arab Countries to
inspire enthusiasm for its efforts.
Also alarmed by
WOJAC's stridency, the Foreign Ministry proposed that the
organization bring its campaign to a halt on the grounds that the
description of Arab Jews as refugees was a double-edged sword.
Israel, ministry officials pointed out, had always adopted a stance
of ambiguity on the complex issue raised by WOJAC. In 1949, Israel
even rejected a British-Iraqi proposal for population exchange -
Iraqi Jews for Palestinian refugees - due to concerns that it would
subsequently be asked to settle "surplus refugees" within its own
borders. The foreign minister deemed WOJAC a Phalangist, zealous
group, and asked that it cease operating as a "state within a
state." In the end, the ministry closed the tap on the modest flow
of funds it had transferred to WOJAC. Then justice minister Yossi
Beilin fired Yaakov Meron from the Arab legal affairs department.
Today, no serious researcher in Israel or overseas embraces WOJAC's
extreme claims.
Moreover, WOJAC,
which intended to promote Zionist claims and assist Israel in its
conflict with Palestinian nationalism, accomplished the opposite: It
presented a confused Zionist position regarding the dispute with the
Palestinians, and infuriated many Mizrahi Jews around the world by
casting them as victims bereft of positive motivation to immigrate
to Israel. WOJAC subordinated the interests of Mizrahi Jews
(particularly with regard to Jewish property in Arab lands) to what
it erroneously defined as Israeli national interests. The
organization failed to grasp that defining Mizrahi Jews as refugees
opens a Pandora's box and ultimately harms all parties to the
dispute, Jews and Arabs alike.
The State of Israel,
the World Jewish Congress and other Jewish rganizations learned
nothing from this woeful legacy. Hungry for a magic solution to the
refugee question, they have adopted the refugee analogy and are
lobbying for it all over the world. It would be interesting to hear
the education minister's reaction to the historical narrative
presented nowadays by these Jewish organizations. Should Yael Tamir
establish a committee of ministry experts to revise school textbooks
in accordance with this new post-Zionist genre?
Any reasonable
person, Zionist or non-Zionist, must acknowledge that the analogy
drawn between Palestinians and Arab Jews is unfounded. Palestinian
refugees did not want to leave Palestine. Many Palestinian
communities were destroyed in 1948, and some 700,000 Palestinians
were expelled, or fled, from the borders of historic Palestine.
Those who left did not do so of their own volition. In contrast,
Arab Jews arrived to Israel under the initiative of the State of
Israel and Jewish organizations. Some arrived of their own free
will; others arrived against their will. Some lived comfortably and
securely in Arab lands; others suffered from fear and oppression.
The history of this
immigration is complex, and cannot be subsumed within a facile
explanation. Many of the newcomers lost considerable property, and
there can be no question that they should be allowed to submit
individual property claims against Arab states (up to the present
day, the State of Israel and WOJAC have blocked the submission of
claims on this basis). The unfounded, immoral analogy between
Palestinian refugees and Mizrahi immigrants needlessly embroils
members of these two groups in a dispute, degrades the dignity of
many Arab Jews, and harms prospects for genuine Jewish-Arab
reconciliation.
Jewish anxieties
about discussing the question of 1948 are understandable. But this
question will be addressed in the future, and it is clear that any
peace agreement will have to contain a solution to the refugee
problem. It's reasonable to assume that as final status agreements
between Israelis and Palestinians are reached, an international fund
will be formed with the aim of compensating Palestinian refugees for
the hardships caused them by the establishment of the State of
Israel. Israel will surely be asked to contribute generously to such
a fund.
In this connection,
the idea of reducing compensation obligations by designating Arab
Jews as refugees might become very tempting. But it is wrong to use
scarecrows to chase away politically and morally valid claims
advanced by Palestinians. The "creative accounting" manipulation
concocted by the refugee analogy only adds insult to injury, and
widens the psychological gap between Jews and Palestinians.
Palestinians might abandon hopes of redeeming a right of return (as,
for example, Palestinian pollster Dr. Khalil Shikai claims); but
this is not a result to be adduced via creative accounting.
Any peace agreement
(which seems now far then ever) must be validated by Israeli
recognition of past wrongs and suffering, and the forging of a just
solution. The creative accounts proposed by the refugee analogy by
the Israeli Ministry of Justice and Jewish organizations turns
Israel into a morally and politically spineless bookkeeper.
Yehouda Shenhav
is a professor at Tel Aviv University and the editor of Theory
Criticism, an Israeli journal in the area of critical theory and
cultural studies. He is the author of The Arab Jews, Stanford
University Press, 2006.
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