Israelis at
Non-Israeli Universities
University of Exeter – Another Israel-Bashing Quote
Cited by Ilan Pappe (Dept of Israel Bashing) Has Been Shown to be
Source-less
Well, it is time for Pappé to provide the source for yet another
quote, this one attributed to Sir Walter Shaw, chairman of the
commission charged with investigating the 1929 riots.
…
On page 248 of The Rise & Fall of A Palestinian Dynasty: The
Husaynis 1700-1948, Pappé reports the following: "'The
principal cause [of the riots]", Shaw wrote after leaving the
country, 'was twelve years of pro-Zionist policy.'"
Again, historian Benny Morris has challenged
this quote…
CAMERA has inspected the record for the 46th meeting
of the Shaw Commission (included in volume two) and looked for the
quote in question.
…
The quote Pappé attributed to Sir Walter Shaw is not in any of these
locations… Did Sir Walter Shaw actually write the words attributed
to him, or is this another invention similar to the quote
Pappé falsely attributed to David Ben-Gurion in 2006?
http://www.camera.org/index.asp?x_context=2&x_outlet=118&x_article=2196
Did Pappé Invent Another Quote?
by Dexter Van Zile
February 24, 2012
It took several years for historian Ilan Pappé to respond to a
challenge about a quote he attributed to Israel's first Prime
Minister, David Ben-Gurion.
In 2006, historian Benny Morris declared that a quote that Pappé
had broadcast ("The Arabs will have to go, but one needs an
opportune moment for making it happen, such as war") was "an
invention, pure and simple."
It took several years,
and a direct challenge to the Ethics Committee at the University of
Exeter, where Pappé teaches, but eventually the truth came out.
In 2006, Pappé provided a total of three sources for the quote,
none of which checked out.
In 2012, he provided a fourth citation, and that source says
exactly the opposite of what Pappé says it does.
The conclusion is inescapable. Benny Morris was right. The quote
Pappé attributed to Ben-Gurion, was an invention, pure and
simple.
Another Quote, Another Invention?
Well, it is time for Pappé to provide the source for yet another
quote, this one attributed to Sir Walter Shaw, chairman of the
commission charged with investigating the 1929 riots.
The full title of this body, typically referred to as "The Shaw
Commission," is the "Commission on the Palestine Disturbances of
August, 1929." This commission issued its report in 1930.
On page 248 of The Rise & Fall of A Palestinian Dynasty: The
Husaynis 1700-1948, Pappé reports the following: "'The
principal cause [of the riots]", Shaw wrote after leaving the
country, 'was twelve years of pro-Zionist policy.'"
Again, historian Benny Morris has challenged this quote.
In 2011 Morris
wrote:
It is unclear what Pappe is quoting
from. I did not find this sentence in the commission's report.
Pappe's bibliography refers, under "Primary Sources," simply to "The
Shaw Commission." The report? The deliberations? Memoranda by or
about? Who can tell? The footnote attached to the quote, presumably
to give its source, says, simply, "Ibid." The one before it says,
"Ibid., p. 103." The one before that says, "The Shaw Commission,
session 46, p. 92." But the quoted passage does not appear on page
103 of the report. In the text of Palestinian Dynasty, Pappe states
that "Shaw wrote [this] after leaving the country [Palestine]." But
if it is not in the report, where did Shaw "write" it?
Looking at the citation Pappé provides and the Shaw Commission's
report, it appears that Pappé is referring to the deliberations
of the Shaw Commission, not the report itself.
"Session 46," appears to be a reference to a meeting of the Shaw
Commission that heard testimony from leaders in Palestine. This
meeting took place on December 26, 1929, where the commission heard
the closing speech from the Palestine Arab Executive.
A list of these meetings was included in an appendix to the Shaw
Commission's report. According to this list, there were a total of
47 public meetings of the Shaw Commission, so this was the
second-to-last public meeting.
As stated in
a previous CAMERA article, the record of a proceeding held in
Palestine would be an odd place to find a quote from Sir Walter Shaw
written sometime "after leaving the country."
Nevertheless, it's important to let the historical record speak
for itself.
The proceedings of these meetings were compiled and issued in two
volumes by the British government in 1930.
The first volume contains the proceedings of the first 29 public
meetings of the Shaw Commission.
The second volume contains the proceedings of the last 17
meetings of the commission and some of the other evidence gathered
by the commission.
An index to the first two volumes was compiled in a third.
CAMERA has inspected the record for the 46th meeting
of the Shaw Commission (included in volume two) and looked for the
quote in question.
The document in question includes both the morning and afternoon
sessions of the Shaw Commission's meetings for Dec. 26, 1929.
CAMERA also inspected pages 92 and 103 of the first volume of the
Shaw Commission's evidence, just in case Pappé got confused as to
where the quote actually appeared.
The quote Pappé attributed to Sir Walter Shaw is not in any of
these locations.
We are confronted with some familiar questions:
What is the correct source for this quote?
Did Sir Walter Shaw actually write the words attributed to him,
or is this another invention similar to the quote Pappé
falsely attributed to David Ben-Gurion in 2006?
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