|
Home
About IsraCampus
Search
עברית
Русский
Ben Gurion U
Hebrew U
Tel Aviv U
U of Haifa
Other Schools
A-C
D-G
H-K
L-N
O-R
S-V
W-Z
Israeli Academic Extremism
Israeli Academic Extremists outside
Israel
Anti-Israel Petitions Signed by Israeli
Academics
ALEF Watch
IDI Watch
IsraCampus Essays
How to Complain
Contact Us |
Israelis at
Non-Israeli Universities
UCLA - Gabriel Piterberg (Dept. of
History) Invents "Ethnic Cleansing" of Arabs by Israel, even if
history proves otherwise
But there is a danger that debate could become too narrowly
focused on the single issue of whether or not there was an Israeli
master plan to effect a comprehensive expulsion of the Palestinian
Arabs from their homes in 1948. [2] The moral pressure behind this
obsessive question is understandable, and should be respected. But
it is also true that it takes for granted that what matters is the
framework of the perpetrators, not the perspective of the victims.
The existence or otherwise of an explicit Zionist intention to
unleash ethnic cleansing, under cover of war, poses problems that
Israelis certainly need to confront....
The reality is that the eventuality of massive expulsions was
inherent in the nature of Zionist colonization in Palestine long
before war broke out in 1948.
http://www.newleftreview.org/A2331
ERASURES
How the founding myths of Israel dictated conceptual removal of
Palestinians, during and after physical removal. The invention of
'retroactive transfer' and 'present absentees' as the glacial
euphemisms of ethnic cleansing.
GABRIEL PITERBERG
New Left Review 10, July-August 2001
Three foundational myths underlie Israeli culture
to this day. These are the 'negation of exile' (shelilat ha-galut),
the 'return to the land of Israel' (ha-shiva le-Eretz Yisrael),
and the 'return to history' (ha-shiva la-historia). They are
inextricably intertwined in the master-narrative of Zionism, the
story that explains 'how we got to where we are and where we should
go henceforth'. The negation of exile establishes a continuity
between an ancient past, in which there existed Jewish sovereignty
over the land of Israel, and a present that renews it in the
resettlement of Palestine. Between the two lies no more than a kind
of interminable interim. Depreciation of the period of exile is
shared by all Zionists, if with differing degrees of rigidity, and
derives from what is, in their outlook, an uncontestable
presupposition: from time immemorial, the Jews constituted a
territorial nation. It follows that a non-territorial existence must
be abnormal, incomplete and inauthentic. In and of itself, as a
historical experience, exile is devoid of significance. Although it
may have given rise to cultural achievements of moment, exile could
not by definition have been a wholesome realization of the nation's
Geist. So long as they were condemned to it, Jews—whether as
individuals or communities—could lead at best a partial and
transitory existence, waiting for the redemption of 'ascent' (aliyah)
once again to the land of Israel, the only site on which the
nation's destiny could be fulfilled. Within this mythical framework,
exilic Jews always lived provisionally, as potential or
proto-Zionists, longing 'to return' to the land of Israel.
[1]
Here the second foundational myth complements the
first. In Zionist terminology, the recovery by the people of its
home promised to deliver the normalization of Jewish
existence; and the site designated for the re-enactment of Exodus
would be the territory of the Biblical story, as elaborated in the
Protestant culture of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
Zionist ideology defined this land as empty. This did not
mean Zionist leaders and settlers were ignorant of the presence of
Arabs in Palestine, or mulishly ignored them. Israel was 'empty' in
a deeper sense. For the land, too, was condemned to an exile as long
as there was no Jewish sovereignty over it: it lacked any meaningful
or authentic history, awaiting redemption with the return of the
Jews. The best-known Zionist slogan, 'a land without a people to a
people without a land', expressed a twofold denial: of the
historical experience both of the Jews in exile, and of Palestine
without Jewish sovereignty. Of course, since the land was not
literally empty, its recovery required the establishment of the
equivalent of a colonial hierarchy—sanctioned by Biblical
authority—of its historic custodians over such intruders as might
remain after the return. Jewish settlers were to be accorded
exclusive privileges deriving from the Pentateuch, and Palestinian
Arabs treated as part of the natural environment. In the macho
Hebrew culture of modern times, to know a woman, in the Biblical
sense, and to know the land became virtually interchangeable as
terms of possession. The Zionist settlers were collective subjects
who acted, and the native Palestinians became objects acted upon.
The third foundational myth, the 'return to
history', reveals, more than any other, the extent to which Zionist
ideology was underpinned by the emergence of Romantic nationalism
and German historicism in nineteenth-century Europe. Its premise is
that the natural and irreducible form of human collectivity is the
nation. From the dawn of history peoples have been grouped into such
units, and though they might at one time or another be undermined by
internal divisions or oppressed by external forces, they are
eventually bound to find political self-expression in the shape of
sovereign nation-states. The nation is the autonomous historical
subject par excellence, and the state is the telos of
its march toward self-fulfillment. According to this logic, so long
as they were exiles, the Jews remained a community outside history,
within which all European nations dwelt. Only nations that occupy
the soil of their homeland, and establish political sovereignty over
it, are capable of shaping their own destiny and so entering history
by this logic. The return of the Jewish nation to the land of
Israel, overcoming its docile passivity in exile, could alone allow
it to rejoin the history of civilized peoples.
Cleansing Palestine
Metaphorically empty, factually inhabited by
Arabs, how was Palestine 'emptied' to enable the creation of Israel?
Recently, long overdue controversies have broken out over the
origins of the present state, prompted by the work of historians who
are not committed to its founding myths. This is a welcome
development: much hallowed mystification has been cleared away. But
there is a danger that debate could become too narrowly focused on
the single issue of whether or not there was an Israeli master plan
to effect a comprehensive expulsion of the Palestinian Arabs from
their homes in 1948. [2] The moral pressure
behind this obsessive question is understandable, and should be
respected. But it is also true that it takes for granted that what
matters is the framework of the perpetrators, not the perspective of
the victims. The existence or otherwise of an explicit Zionist
intention to unleash ethnic cleansing, under cover of war, poses
problems that Israelis certainly need to confront. But to
Palestinians who lost their homes, their goods, their rights and
their identities, it matters little whether the disaster that befell
them resulted from decisions taken by military commanders and local
bureaucrats on the spot, or from an implicit understanding that this
was the wish of the Zionist political leadership, or through a
diffuse atmosphere and ideology that treated massive expulsions as
desirable—or any combination of the above. What counted for the
Arabs driven off their lands was the fact of their dispossession and
transformation into refugees. Retrospective rituals of bad
conscience risk becoming luxuries that only the victor can afford,
without consequence for the victims who have had to live with the
results.
The reality is that the eventuality of massive
expulsions was inherent in the nature of Zionist colonization in
Palestine long before war broke out in 1948. Consideration of
notions of population 'transfer' ceased to be just an abstract idea
after the report of the Peel Commission in the late 1930s. After
all, as Zeev Sternhell correctly observes, Zionism was in many ways
a typical example of the 'organic'—as distinct from
'civic'—nationalism of Central and Eastern Europe.
[3] This kind was feral in its demand for ethnic homogeneity,
ruling out from the beginning any possibility of the Zionist
movement accepting a bi-national state in Palestine. Given the
demography of Palestine in 1947, the establishment of a Jewish state
inexorably required the removal of Palestinians from their farms and
towns. However, the form that this 'population transfer' was to take
did not need a premeditated plan of expulsion by the Israeli
government (as distinct from the calculation of individual officials
and bureaucratic agencies). Rather, the crucial decision was to
prevent Palestinian Arabs at all costs from returning to their homes,
regardless of the circumstances in which they had 'left' them, and
no matter how plainly their 'departure' had been envisaged as a
temporary move made under duress, in the midst of war. There were,
of course, deliberate and massive expulsions. The infamous Operation
Danny of July 10–14, 1948, which resulted in a massacre at Lydda and
the forcible transfer of the entire population of the townships of
Ramlah and Lydda—ten miles south-east of Tel Aviv—to Jordan, is a
well-known case in point. [4] But the really
crucial decision, which was fully conscious and explicit, was to
make sure that the collapse of the Palestinian community that
unfolded under the pressures of all-out war between Israel and the
Arab states would be irreversible.
For what followed, we are indebted to outstanding
recent research by Haya Bombaji-Sasportas of Ben-Gurion University
in the Negev. [5] In April 1948, Haifa fell
to an Israeli assault. In June, Foreign Minister Moshe Sharett—a
darling of Israeli 'moderates' to this day—said to his colleagues:
To my mind this is the most surprising thing: the emptying of the
country by the Arab community. In the history of the land of Israel
this is more surprising than the establishment of the Hebrew State
itself... This has happened amidst a war that the Arab nation
declared against us, because the Arabs fled of their own accord—and
their departure is one of those revolutionary changes after which
history does not revert to its previous course, as we see from the
outcome of the war between Greece and Turkey. We should be willing
to pay for land. This does not mean that we should buy holdings from
each and every [Arab]. We shall receive assets and land, which can
be used to help settle Arabs in other countries. But they do not
return. And this is our policy: they do notreturn.
[6]
A day before, in a letter to an important
official in the Jewish Agency, Sharett defined the emptying of the
land of its Arab inhabitants as 'a wonderful thing in the history of
the country and in a sense even more wonderful than the
establishment of the State of Israel.' [7]
'Retroactive transfer'
Bureaucrats everywhere have particular ways of
thought and forms of expression, which sometimes produce chillingly
apt terms. Yosef Weitz, the director of the Jewish National Fund's
Lands Department, and one of the most relentless proponents of
transfer, serves as an outstanding example. As early as May 28,
1948, when he headed the semi-official three-member Transfer
Committee, he noted in his diary a meeting with Sharett. On this
occasion, Weitz asked Sharett whether he thought orderly action
should be taken to ensure that the flight of Arabs from the war zone
was an irreversible fact, and described the aim of such action as a
'retroactive transfer' (transfer be-di 'avad). Sharett said
yes. [8]
Weitz's term underlay the confidential discourse
of Israeli officials and politicians of the time. Probably from the
seizure of Haifa, and with increasing intensity and ferocity during
the autumn of 1948, Palestinian territories conquered by Israeli
arms were voided of Arabs, without a master plan being needed to
remove them. There was a range of ways in which the land became 'Arabless':
flight of the wealthy; temporary escape of civilians from areas
under threat of heavy fighting; encouragement of panic by Israeli
military violence, terror and propaganda; and full-fledged
expulsion. [9] What is amply documented and
demonstrable is the cold deliberation of the policy of 'retroactive
transfer' which issued from these movements. This was the
fundamental decision that was systematized, bureaucratized and
legalized in the 1950s, with far-reaching consequences for both
Palestinians and Jews, within Israel and without. To this day, what
structurally defines the nature of the Israeli state is the return
of Jews and the non-return of Arabs to Palestine. If this dynamic of
return/non-return were to disappear, the Zionist state would lose
its identity.
Official narratives
The physical implementation of the policy of
non-return meant the brutal wartime demolition of occupied villages,
and in some cases of urban neighbourhoods; the confiscation of lands
and properties; the settlement of Jews in places rendered Arab-free.
The results were completed with systematic legal measures in the
1950s, affecting both refugees outside Israel and those within, whom
the state defined as its (second-class) citizens. But the erasure of
Arab existence in Palestine was not just physical. It was also
discursive. A group of officials in command of what was considered
expert knowledge of 'the Arab question' was responsible for this
side of the operation. It comprised two distinct types of
functionary. One had come through the foreign-policy department of
the Jewish Agency or the intelligence unit of Haganah, in the
pre-state period. These could speak Arabic, had experience of
dealing with Arabs, took pride in being field-experts, and were
known as Arabists (Arabistim). The other contingent were the
better educated products of European—mostly German—universities,
and/or the Hebrew University in Jerusalem; they knew written Arabic
(fusha), believed they had a wider and deeper understanding
of the enemy than their field counterparts, and were known as
Orientalists (mizrahanim). Once the state was established,
most of them held posts in its intelligence machinery, or in the
research and Middle East departments of the Foreign Office, or were
advisers on 'Arab affairs' to the Prime Minister.
[10]
After the war, an early key move of this
apparatus was to define the plight of Palestinian refugees as a
'humanitarian' issue tied inextricably to an overall resolution of
the Arab–Israeli conflict, in the full knowledge that such a
resolution would not be forthcoming. Bombaji-Sasportas correctly
observes that this strategy was instrumental in cancelling the
subjectivity of the victims of Israeli expansion: ignoring their
identity, memory and aspirations in favour of a deliberately
constructed Gordian knot that has been accepted as a fact of life
ever since by Israeli scholarship, whether mainstream or critical.
[11] In his own way, Asher Goren—an official in the Israeli
Foreign Office—also noticed this. In a memorandum of September 27,
1948, summarizing the refugee problem, he concluded, after
reiterating that it was pendant on the conflict with the Arab states
as a whole: 'The compromise-seekers [among Arab statesmen] want
return [of the refugees to their homes]. The warmongers object to
it. The will of the refugees is unknown nor does anyone ask them.'
[12]
It was the semi-official Transfer Committee
headed by Weitz, which submitted its first report in November 1948,
that formulated what would later become the official Israeli
narrative of the 'refugee problem'. [13] The
Committee's main function was to execute and oversee the policy of
non-return by systematic demolition and erasure of Palestinian
villages and neighbourhoods, and then the systematic seizure of land
and property owned by Palestinians. The report was a massive
document containing much detailed information on the Palestinians
and the activities of the Committee. Its textual purpose was to
enforce the conclusion, laid out with every appearance of authority
and objectivity, that the only solution for the refugees was their
resettlement in Arab countries. In hindsight this report may be seen
as the Ur-text of all Israeli discourse—academic, bureaucratic,
political—on the fate of 'those who left', at least until the
publication of Benny Morris's work in the 1980s and 1990s. It
supplied the account that became the standard version of history for
propaganda and foreign-policy purposes.
The narrative was fraudulent, and there is reason
to believe that it was consciously fraudulent.
[14] Its burden was that the Palestinians themselves, their
leaders, and accomplices in the Arab states bore sole responsibility
for the creation of the 'refugee problem'. The Mufti of Jerusalem,
Hajj Amin al-Husayni, had advised the Palestinians to leave their
homes in order to return with the victorious Arab armies, and claim
not only their property but also that of the defeated Jews. It was
therefore the responsibility of the Arab states to see that the
refugees were resettled there—not just because they had incited
their displacement but also because it was a 'scientific fact' that
Arab societies were now the only appropriate home for such people,
since the map of Palestine had been transformed and Israel had its
hands full with the absorption of Jewish refugees driven out of the
Arab world.
The disappearance of Shaykh Mu'nis
A logical concomitant of this schema was a
sustained campaign to wipe out any traces of the Palestinian past on
conquered soil. A striking example of how this policy worked in
practice is offered by the recent memoir of Zvi Yavetz, Professor
Emeritus of Roman History, a founder of Tel Aviv University and a
powerful kingmaker in its Faculty of Humanities for three decades.
Reminiscing about his role in the early negotiations with academics,
politicians and bureaucrats to set up the university, he describes
how a decision was taken to move the nascent campus from provisional
quarters in the heart of Tel Aviv to Shaykh Mu'nis.
[15] It so happens that Golda Meir (then Myerson) also mentioned
Shaykh Mu'nis, in early May 1948—just after the fall of Haifa.
Speaking to the Central Committee of Mapai, she said she wished to
raise the question of what was to be done with locations that had
become substantially Arab-less. A distinction, she told her
colleagues, should be drawn between 'hostile' and 'friendly'
villages. 'What do we do with the villages that were deserted...
without a battle by [Arab] friends?' she asked. 'Are we willing to
preserve these villages so that their inhabitants may return, or do
we wish to erase any trace [limhok kol zekher] that there was
a village in a given place?' [16] Meir's
answer was unequivocal. It was unthinkable to treat villages 'like
Shaykh Mu'nis', which had fled because they did not want to fight
the Yishuv, in the way that hostile villages had been treated—ie,
subjected to 'retroactive transfer'.
But the inhabitants of Shaykh Mu'nis did not gain
much from their classification as 'friendly'. Until late March 1948,
the leaders of this large village north of Tel Aviv had prevented
Arab irregulars from entering it, and even loosely collaborated with
the Haganah. Then, however, the Irgun abducted five of the village
notables. Thereupon the population fled en masse, and Shaykh
Mu'nis literally vanished—a disappearance confirmed three months
later by IDF intelligence. Golda Meir's seemingly poignant question
in early May, in other words, was asked in the full knowledge that
it had ceased to exist at the end of March—a typical soul-searching
in the manner of Labour Zionism: crocodile tears over a fait
accompli. What was once Shaykh Mu'nis became part of an affluent
neighbourhood in northern Tel Aviv, which took the name of Ramat
Aviv. There, in the 1960s, the University of Tel Aviv was built on
the site where Shaykh Mu'nis had been less than twenty years before.
Yavetz, a well-known 'leftist' veteran of the war of 1948, not to
say an eminent historian, utters not a word of this. Shaykh Mu'nis
was no longer there, and for thirty years it could not be
remembered. But eventually there was one twisted, colonial
exception. In the 1990s, as the university grew larger and
wealthier, a luxurious VIP club was built on the campus, called the
Green House. Its architecture is an Orientalist Israeli version of
an 'Arab mansion', and its location is the hill where the house of
the mukhtar of Shaykh Mu'nis once stood (it is a VIP club,
after all). The information on the site's past, and who owned it,
may be found in the menu of the Green House.
From the start, Israeli officials were well aware
of the significance of memory and the need to erase it. Repression
of what had been done to create the state was essential among the
Jews themselves. It was still more important to eradicate
remembrance among Palestinians. Shamai Kahane composed one of the
most striking documents of the official campaign to this end. A
high-ranking functionary in the Foreign Office, Kahane served as
personal and diplomatic secretary to Sharett in 1953–54, and was
instrumental in the creation of the huge bureaucratic archive known
as 'Operation Refugee File'. [17] On March
7, 1951, he made a proposal to the Acting Director of the Middle
East Department of the Foreign Office, Divon. Here is the text of
his memorandum:
PROPAGANDA AMONG THE REFUGEES IN ORDER TO SOBER THEM FROM
ILLUSIONS OF RETURN TO ISRAEL
You should be efficiently assisted by propaganda of photos that
would very tangibly illustrate to them [the refugees] that they have
nowhere to return. The refugees fancifully imagine that their homes,
furniture and belongings are intact, and they only need to return
and reclaim them. Their eyes must be opened to see that their homes
have been demolished, their property has been lost, and Jews who are
not at all willing to give them up have seized their places. All
this can be conveyed in an indirect way that would not provoke
feelings of vengeance unnecessarily, but would show reality as it
is, however bitter and cruel.
Ways of infiltrating such material: a brochure or a series of
articles accompanied by photos published in Israel or abroad, in a
limited circulation that would not make waves in the non-Arab world,
but would find its way to Arab journalists who by prearrangement
would bring the pertinent materials within it to the notice of the
refugees. Another way: to print the photos with appropriate headings
(the headings are what matters!) in a brochure that was supposedly
published in one of the Arab countries. The photographic material
should draw a contrast between Arab villages in the past and how
they look today, after the war and the settlement of Jews in the
abandoned sites. These photos ought to prove that the Jewish
settlers found everything in ruins and have put a great deal of work
into restoring the deserted villages, that they tie their future to
these places, look after them and are not at all willing to give
them up.
There is a certain risk in this proposal, but I think that its
benefits would be greater than any damage it could do, and we should
consider very carefully how to carry it out efficiently.
[18]
Kahane's memorandum is a faithful illustration of
the ruthless state of mind of the Israeli establishment as it set
out to transform the consciousness and memory of its victims. It can
be seen as a preamble to a thorough report on every imaginable
aspect of 'the refugee problem' that Kahane prepared later that
year, with an eye to the activities of the UN Appeasement Committee
and a conference it was sponsoring in Paris.
[19] This is a remarkable document in a number of ways: evidence
of how swiftly the Arab heritage of Palestine had become a transient
episode in the official mind; and of how completely any return by
the refugees was now presented as an objective impossibility, rather
than as an eventuality that the state itself was resolved at any
cost to block. Reaffirming the familiar thesis that Arabs were the
culprits of their own displacement, Kahane revealed the extent to
which Palestine had already become Arab-less for him. 'Nationally',
he wrote, 'the growth of an Arab minority will hinder the
development of the state of Israel as a homogeneous state.'
Repatriation, he added altruistically, would be a misfortune for the
refugees themselves:
If the refugees had returned to Israel they would have found
themselves in a country whose economic, social and political
structures differed from those of the country they left behind. The
cities and most of the deserted Arab villages have since been
settled by Jews who are leaving their ineradicable imprint on
them... If the refugees had come back to the realities that have
developed in Israel, they would have certainly found it difficult to
adjust to them. Urban professionals, merchants and officials would
have had to wage a desperate battle for survival in a national
economy within which all the key positions are held by Jews.
Peasants would have been unable, in most cases, to return to their
lands.
Here Kahane was rehearsing the argument of an
earlier Foreign Office report, of March 16, 1949, also composed with
a view to the Appeasement Committee which had just been set up under
UN Resolution 194. Its authors seem to have been Michael Comay,
director of the Commonwealth Department in the Foreign Office, and
Zalman Lifshitz, former member of the Transfer Committee and adviser
to Ben-Gurion on land issues. Written in English and entitled 'The
Arab Refugee Problem', this document too emphasizes the
impossibility of any Palestinian 'repatriation' in a detached,
reality-has-changed, rhetorical register. [20]
It adds, however, a tragic emplotment. In this narrative the plight
of the refugees is depicted as if it were the result of a natural
disaster, whose outcome is mournful, but inevitable and irrevocable.
The perpetrator of expatriation, the state for which the document
speaks, and which the authors serve, has nothing to do with it. Note
the use of impersonal constructions and of the passive voice:
During the war and the Arab exodus, the basis of their [the
refugees'] economic life crumbled away. Moveable property which was
not taken away with them has disappeared. Livestock has been
slaughtered or sold. Thousands of town and village dwellings have
been destroyed in the course of the fighting, or in order to deny
their use to enemy forces, regular or irregular; and of those which
remain habitable, most are serving as temporary homes for [Jewish]
immigrants... But even if repatriation were economically feasible,
is it politically desirable? Would it make sense to recreate that
dual society, which has bedevilled Palestine for so long, until it
led eventually to open war? Under the happiest of circumstances, a
complex and uncertain situation is created where a single state must
be shared by two or more people who differ in race, religion,
language and culture.
'Present absentees'
Weitz's chillingly precise administrative term,
'retroactive transfer', tells the story of the Israeli drive to
transform Palestine into an unreturnable and irrecollectible country
for the external refugees who lost their homes during or after the
war. Another term, of similar administrative and legal effect, and
moral bearing, was coined for internal refugees within the borders
of the state. These became known as 'present absentees' (nokhehim
nifkadim). [21] Of course, as
Bombaji-Sasportas amply demonstrates, in this context 'external' and
'internal' are further markers of the determination of the Israeli
establishment to objectify, control and dispossess the refugees.
[22] If we use them here, it is to show the realities behind
them. What the term 'present absentees' designates is the history of
the dispossession and displacement of those Palestinians—their
number is estimated at 160,000—who found themselves within the state
of Israel between 1948 and 1952. It tells of the tacit axis of
apartheid that defines the state of Israel to this day: the
interplay between the formal inclusion of Palestinians as citizens
and their structural exclusion from equal rights within the state.
This is the particular dialectic of oppression—of a population
formally present but in so many crucial ways absent—that makes the
legal-administrative definition of these Palestinians so coldly
accurate.
The category of 'absentees' was originally a
juridical term for those refugees who were 'absent' from their homes
but 'present' within the boundaries of the state as defined by the
Armistice Agreements of 1949. The vast majority of the Palestinians
so classified were not allowed to return to their homes, to reclaim
their property, or to seek compensation. Instead the state
promulgated the Law of Absentees' Properties in 1950, which
legalized the plundering of their possessions. The looting of Arab
property was given the guise of a huge land transaction that the
state had conducted with itself. A thinly disguised official entity
called 'The Custodian' was authorized to sell absentees' land
(defined in Clause 1[b] of the Law) to the Development Agency, a
government body created specifically to acquire it. This agency then
sold it on to the Jewish National Fund. At the end of the chain
these lands were privately farmed out to Jews only (this was the
procedural significance of the JNF), and gradually became de
facto private property, while remaining de jure in the
keeping of the state. [23]
Cultural obliteration
If such was the outcome of the legal status of
absentee, the fully dialectical notion of 'present absentees' was
devised in more literary fashion by yet another high-ranking
bureaucrat in the Foreign Office, Alexander Dotan. In the early
summer of 1952 he was working in its Department for International
Institutions when UNRWA wound up its activities in the country and
passed responsibility for 'internal' refugees to the Israeli
government. In July, Dotan was appointed inter-ministerial
coordinator and chair of the Advisory Committee on Refugees. After
some research, he then wrote a series of memoranda that offered
background briefing and solutions for 'the refugee problem'. The
first document, dated November 9, 1952, was specifically concerned
with those refugees within Israel who had not been allowed to return
to their homes, and many of whom dwelt in other Palestinian villages
and towns. Dotan identified and defined these people—for the first
time, it would seem—as 'present absentees'. [24]
The literary features of the memorandum are striking. Tragic
emplotment, ostensible empathy and anthropological detachment are
all deployed to generate a Realist depiction of the way 'present
absentees' are likely to remember the past:
The fundamental problem of the refugee, who is wholly dependent
on government policy, is land. The current position is that a
refugee will often live in a village in Galilee, adjacent to his
deserted lands and village, as if at an observation post. The
distance is usually just a few kilometres and, in most cases, the
refugees would have been able to cultivate their land from their
present place of residence, if they had been allowed to do so, even
without returning to the deserted and destroyed village. From his
place of observation and present shelter the refugee follows what is
happening on his land. He hopes and yearns to return to it, but he
sees the new [Jewish] immigrants who are trying to strike roots in
the land, or those who have farmed it out from the Custodian, or the
way the orchards are gradually deteriorating because no one looks
after them. The refugee desires to return to his land, if only to
some of it when it is mostly already settled by Jews, and he
therefore usually seeks to farm it out from the Custodian, something
that is denied to him.
Dotan was adamant that prolongation of these
conditions was politically and culturally impossible. His
conclusion, however, was not to return the properties and grant real
citizenship to the 'internal' refugees, at least. The foundational
myths of Zionism made—as they still do—any conjunction of the words
'return' and 'Arabs' or 'Palestinians' unthinkable. What Dotan had
in mind was something else: a comprehensive assimilation (hitbolelut)
of these Palestinians into the Jewish state and society of Israel by
obliterating their memory, identity and culture. Dotan deliberately
used the very term that was pivotal in the self-justification of the
Zionist movement: hitbolelut was the disaster that recovery of the
land of Israel would prevent—the disappearance of the Jewish people
through assimiliation in the Diaspora. Such was the future now to be
benignly extended to the Arabs within Israel. In a second
memorandum, of November 12, 1952, Dotan warned that current state
policies could induce the Palestinians within Israel to feel that
they were 'a persecuted national minority that identifies with the
Arab nation.' [25] To avert this risk, he
proposed a new strategy that would aim on the one hand 'to integrate
the Arabs into the state' by 'opening the gates of assimilation to
them', while on the other it would 'fiercely combat those who are
unwilling or unable to adapt to the [Jewish] state'. Dotan was aware
of the likely objections to such a policy, and met them head on. 'It
may rightly be asked: what are the prospects that the Arabs would
assimilate? This can be answered only through experience, but if one
wished to draw a lesson from history one could say that assimilation
has been a very common feature in the Middle East since time
immemorial.'
The colonial logic of this conception was spelt
out with arresting clarity, as Dotan went on to explain how an
irreversible obliteration of Palestinian identity might be achieved:
The realization of such a new policy requires a comprehensive
onslaught upon the Arab minority by both the state and the Jewish
public in the country, and it seems that an important instrument of
it might be the formation of a secular Jewish cultural mission. The
mission would act as the emissary of the Jewish people and Israeli
progress in the Arab village. Under no circumstances should party
politics be allowed within or through it. This mission would
establish special training seminars for Jewish counsellors to
operate in Arab villages, on the lines of our counsellors in the
ma'abarot or in the new settlements, and like the missions to
the Indian villages in Mexico. [26]
These counsellors would infiltrate the villages together with the
refugees, who would begin to settle them, and would accompany the
refugees from the first day of their installation... Missions of two
to three male and female counsellors for every twenty to thirty
villages should suffice to effect agrarian changes within them. Such
a mission would reside in a village; teach Hebrew; offer
agricultural instruction, medical assistance and welfare; supply
social guidance; act as natural mediator between the village and the
authorities and the Hebrew community; and keep a security check on
everything that happens in and around the village. Such a mission
could acquire influence on all village matters and fundamentally
alter them within a few years.
Dotan's proposal incurred the wrath of
Ben-Gurion's powerful and ruthless adviser on Arab affairs, Josh
Palmon, who favoured the continuation of a notoriously oppressive
military government in the hope that this would extend the process
of 'retroactive transfer'—ie, de facto expulsion—to the
'internal' refugees as well. But Dotan reiterated his argument
undeterred. His next report, of November 23, 1952, warning that
outside powers might otherwise try to impose 'cultural autonomy' for
the Palestinian minority on Israel, pressed home his scheme for an
Arab hitbolelut. There could hardly be a more tangible
example of the deliberate attempt to erase the very memory of an
Arab Palestine than the final brick of Dotan's assimilationist
edifice. This is what he wrote to the Foreign Minister:
An important tool for us is accelerated reconstruction of ancient
geographical names and Hebraicization [shi 'abur] of Arabic
toponyms. In this respect the most important task is to disseminate
the practical use of the new names, a process that has run into
difficulties among Jews too. In Jaffa the name 'Jibaliyya' is still
current, although 'Giv'at Aliya' is gradually disinheriting it. By
contrast, a Hebrew name has not been found yet for 'Ajami', and some
new immigrants still incorrectly call the Arab neighbourhood within
it the 'Ghetto' or 'Arab Ghetto'. It is possible, by being strictly
formal and with adequate indoctrination, to make the Arab
inhabitants of 'Rami' [in the Upper Galilee] get used to calling
their village, in speech and writing, 'Ha-Rama' (Ramat Naftali), or
to make the inhabitants of 'Majd al-Krum' [also in the Upper
Galilee] become used to calling their village 'Beit ha-Kerem'. From
the inhabitants of what the Arabs called 'Shafa'amer [near Haifa], I
have already heard the [Hebraicized] name 'Shefar'am'.
[27]
Dotan described his second memorandum as a 'Final
Solution of the Refugee Problem in Israel'. The easy use of the term
is striking. Here lie the historical roots of the obsessive refusal
to concede to the Palestinians the right of return, which—more than
the unity of Jerusalem—is the widest consensual basis of Israeli
politics today. It is this which explains the
genuine—preposterous—belief that withdrawal from the territories
occupied in 1967 and dismantling of the settlements would be a
painful compromise.
========================================
Op-Ed articles appearing on IsraCampus.Org.il are those of the writer and
do not necessarily represent the opinion of IsraCampus.Org.il
|