Israelis at
Non-Israeli Universities
Ilan Pappe continues the battle for Israel's Annihilation from
the University of Exeter
Pappé's premise is
that the Jews had no moral right to assert their case for national
self-determination in
Palestine because
there were Arabs living there. For the same reason, the Arabs were
justified in rejecting every compromise offered, including the UN's
1947 partition plan, because the Jews were "newcomers."
In Pappé's history,
the Jews "expelled" over 700,000 refugees and inexplicably – never
mind the continuing state of war between
Israel and the Arab
world – refused to let them return.
Pappé's latest polemic
focuses on those Arabs who heeded Jewish leaders and did not flee.
He finds it galling "that those who stayed became the 'Arab minority
of Israel.'"
(He calls them "Palestinian citizens of Israel," since he abhors the
term "Israeli Arabs.")
... Pappé's loathing
of Israel
allows for no such complications. Pity the student assigned his
latest book, and shame on any professor for assigning it.
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Article.aspx?id=235782
Jewish Ideas Daily: Who speaks for Israeli
Arabs?
Pappé's implacable hostility distinguishes him even in the
pantheon of Blame-Israel-First revisionists.
By ELLIOT JAGER
28/08/2011
Historians writing
about Israel's
1948 fight for independence generally place heavy responsibility for
the Palestinian Arab refugee problem on the Arab leaders who urged
their people to flee Palestine until the Zionists were driven into
the sea. But not all historians: in the late 1980s, a revisionist
school of scholars, benefiting from fresh access to Israeli archival
material and politicized by their opposition to Israeli settlement
policies, advanced the thesis that blame for the refugees' flight
was shared heavily by the country's founders. In their
self-criticism and often ostentatious soul-searching, these "New
Historians" exemplified what seems to be an immutable characteristic
of the Jewish psyche.
For Ilan Pappé, a
prominent new historian, soul-searching is beside the point. Best
known for his inflammatory
The Ethnic Cleansing
of Palestine
(2006), Pappé
(Haifa-born, self-exiled to Britain) invests his energies in
promoting the Arab cause in general and the academic boycott of his
former
university
in particular. Now he
is out with a
new book,
The Forgotten
Palestinians: A History of the Palestinians in Israel.
It elaborates on his view that the Jewish state was born in sin.
Pappé's premise is
that the Jews had no moral right to assert their case for national
self-determination in
Palestine because
there were Arabs living there. For the same reason, the Arabs were
justified in rejecting every compromise offered, including the UN's
1947
partition
plan, because the Jews
were "newcomers."
In Pappé's history,
the Jews "expelled" over 700,000 refugees and inexplicably – never
mind the continuing state of war between
Israel and the Arab
world – refused to let them return.
Pappé's latest polemic
focuses on those Arabs who heeded Jewish leaders and did not flee.
He finds it galling "that those who stayed became the 'Arab minority
of Israel.'"
(He calls them "Palestinian citizens of Israel," since he abhors the
term "Israeli Arabs.") True, these Arabs were given Israeli
citizenship
and the right to vote.
But he cannot fathom why they were not treated exactly like Jews –
why their ID cards list them as "members of the minority community,"
and why those in rural and border areas lived under military rule
until 1966.
There are dark
episodes in the history of the Israeli Arabs, such as the calamity
of Kfar Kassem. On the eve of the 1956 Sinai war, amid heightened
fear of Arab fedayeen activity, an awful miscommunication over
wartime curfew orders led to the killing of 47 innocent Arabs. A
number of those responsible were punished. Pappé relishes the
recounting of this and other isolated disasters.
But there are many
more cases that Pappé can place under the thematic umbrella of
Palestinian victimization only by ignoring salient facts. His
account of the 1976 Land Day rioting which left six Israeli Arabs
dead omits the fact that the 6,000 dunams of supposedly "Arab land"
involved, which were expropriated for a development intended to
benefit both Jews and Arabs, were considerably less than
concomitantly expropriated Jewish and state lands. As for the
frightening Arab riots of October 2000, unleashed in solidarity with
the second intifada, Pappé describes them as a mere "gathering of
youths" who were then cold-bloodedly picked off by "police snipers."
Pappé is incensed that the Hebrew press did not provide capsule
obituaries for the Israeli Arab rioters as it did for their Jewish
victims.
The insistence on a
narrative of oppression poses difficulties for Pappé. On the one
hand, he insists that the Jews had no reason to view the Arabs as a
security risk, because "Palestinians by and large accepted
Israel as a fait
accompli." Yet he does not want to portray Israeli Arabs as
comfortable; thus, while some critics outside Israel have accused
them of being too docile, Pappé defends the community's honor. He
reports that some Israeli Arabs have contemplated an "Algerian-like
struggle," citing, without hint of disapproval, the "famous case" of
the 1969 bombing of a Hebrew
University cafeteria
by Arabs from the Galilee.
Even in Pappé's
Israel, life is not
entirely hellish for Arabs. He is buoyed (as if this were something
new) by the "growing spaces of leisure and pastime" –restaurants,
coffee houses,
and parks – that Arabs and Jews enjoy together. He does not – cannot
– deny that Israeli Arabs have achieved success in a wide range of
fields. He himself points out that, despite "latent apartheid," 25%
of Israel's medical students are Israeli Arabs. But the underlying
accusation inevitably, consistently, emerges. (Yes, almost 10% of
the Israeli Knesset is made up of Arabs, but none of them sits on
the intelligence subcommittee!)
Pappé's implacable
hostility distinguishes him even in the pantheon of
Blame-Israel-First revisionists. His friend and mentor, Avi Shlaim,
author of
Collusion Across the
Jordan: King Abdullah and the Zionist Movement
(1988), has claimed
that Jordan never actually planned to push Israel into the sea, and
that David Ben-Gurion declined opportunities to make peace with its
monarch before the latter's 1951 assassination. Shlaim thinks
Israel's right wing hijacked Zionism on behalf of the "illegal
occupation." Yet at least he has described Zionism as the national
liberation movement of the Jewish people, and he opposes anti-Israel
academic boycotts.
Similarly, the late
Simha Flapan, in
The Birth of Israel:
Myths and Realities
(1987), charged that
the Zionists were somehow responsible for Palestinian flight
because, deep down, they did not really want the Palestinians to
stay. Yet even Flapan maintains that he never questioned "the moral
justification and historical necessity of Zionism."
Indeed, one of Pappé's
fellow revisionists has actually reevaluated his position, even if
he can't quite bring himself to recant. Benny Morris, in
The Birth of the
Palestinian Refugee Problem,
1947–1949 (1989), held both
Israel and the Arabs
culpable for the refugees' flight. He called Zionism a "colonizing
and expansionist ideology... intent on politically, and even
physically, dispossessing and supplanting the Arabs." Morris now
says this description referred to the Zionism of the 1930s, before
its leaders embraced multiple plans for partitioning Palestine. His
recent work, One State, Two States, places decisive responsibility
for the continuing conflict on the Arab nations – a stance that has
earned him excommunication by the remaining revisionists.
Pappé's loathing of
Israel allows
for no such complications. Pity the student assigned his latest
book, and shame on any professor for assigning it.
The writer is a former
Jerusalem Post
editorial page editor,
and is now contributing editor to Jewish Ideas Daily (www.jewishideasdaily.com),
where this article was first published.
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