Palestinian and Jewish Voices Must Challenge
Israel’s Past Together
By
Ramzy Baroud
Israel
has resorted to three main strategies to
suppress Palestinian calls for justice and human
rights, including the Right of Return for
refugees.
One is
dedicated to rewriting history; another attempts
to distract from present realities altogether
and a third aims at reclaiming the Palestinian
narrative as essentially an Israeli one.
The rewriting of history happened much earlier
than some historians would assume. The Israeli
hasbara machine went into motion almost
simultaneously with
Plan Dalet
(Plan D), which saw the military conquest of
Palestine and the ethnic cleansing of its
inhabitants.
But the
actual discourse regarding the ‘Nakba’ – or the
‘Catastrophe’ – that has befallen Palestinian
people in 1947-48 was constituted in the 1950s
and 60s.
In an article entitled: “Catastrophic Thinking:
Did Ben-Gurion Try to Rewrite History?”
Shay Hazkani revealed
the fascinating process of how Israel’s first
Prime Minister, Ben Gurion, worked closely with
a group of Israeli Jewish scholars to develop a
version of events to describe what had taken
place in 1947-48: the founding of Israel and the
destruction of Palestine.
Ben-Gurion wanted to propagate a version of
history that was consistent with Israel’s
political position. He needed ‘evidence’, to
support that position.
The
‘evidence’ eventually became ‘history’, and no
other narrative was allowed to challenge
Israel’s take on the ‘Nakba’.
“Ben-Gurion probably never heard the word ‘Nakba,’
but early on, at the end of the 1950s, Israel’s
first Prime Minister grasped the importance of
the historical narrative,” Hazkani wrote.
The
Israeli leader assigned scholars in the Civil
Service to the task of fashioning an alternative
history that continues to permeate Israeli
thinking to this day.
Distracting from history – or the current
reality of the horrific Occupation of Palestine
– has been in motion for nearly 70 years.
From
the early myths of Palestine being a ‘land with
no people for a people with no land’ to today’s
claim that Israel is an icon of civilization,
technology and democracy surrounded by Arab and
Muslim savages, Israel’s official distortions
are relentless.
So
while Palestinians are gearing up to commemorate
the war of June 5, 1967, which led to the,
thus-far, 50-year military occupation, Israel is
throwing a big party, a major ‘celebration’ of
its military occupation of Palestinians.
The
absurdity is not escaping all Israelis, of
course.
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“A state that celebrates 50 years of occupation
is a state whose sense of direction has been
lost, its ability to distinguish good from evil,
impaired,”
wrote Israeli commentator Gideon Levy
in the ‘Haaretz’.
“What
exactly is there to celebrate, Israelis? Fifty
years of bloodshed, abuse, disinheritance and
sadism? Only societies that have no conscience
celebrate such anniversaries.”
Levy
argues that Israel has won the war of 1967 but
has “lost nearly everything else.”
Since
then, Israel’s arrogance, detestation of
international law, “ongoing contempt for the
world, the bragging and bullying” have all
reached unprecedented heights.
Levy’s
article is entitled: ‘Our Nakba’.
Levy is
not attempting to reclaim the Palestinian
narrative, but is succinctly registering that
Israel’s military triumphs was an affliction,
especially as it was not followed by any sense
of national reflection or attempt at correcting
the injustices of the past and the present.
However, the process of claiming the term
‘Nakba’ has been pursued cunningly by Israeli
writers for many years.
For
those scholars, ‘the Jewish Nakba’ refers to the
Arab Jews who arrived in the newly independent
Israel, largely based on the urgings of Zionist
leaders for Jews worldwide to ‘return’ to the
biblical homeland.
A
‘Jerusalem
Post’ editorial
complained that “Palestinian propaganda
juggernaut has persuaded world public opinion
that the term ‘refugee’ is synonymous with the
term ‘Palestinian.'”
By
doing so, Israelis attempting to hijack the
Palestinian narrative hope to create an
equilibrium in the discourse, one that is, of
course, inconsistent with reality.
The
editorial puts the number of ‘Jewish refugees’
of the ‘Jewish Nakba’ at 850,000, slightly above
the number of Palestinian refugees who were
expelled by Zionist militias upon the founding
of Israel.
Luckily, such disingenuous claims are
increasingly challenged by Jewish voices, as
well.
A few –
but significant – voices among Israeli and
Jewish intellectuals around the world are daring
to re-examine Israel’s past.
They
are rightly confronting a version of history
that has been accepted in Israel and the West as
the uncontested truth behind Israel’s birth in
1948, the military occupation of what remained
of Palestine in 1967, and other historical
junctures.
These
intellectuals are leaving a mark on the
Palestine-Israel discourse wherever they go.
Their voices are particularly significant in
challenging official Israeli truisms and
historical myths.
Writing in the ‘Forward’,
Donna Nevel refuses to accept that the
discussion of the conflict in Palestine starts
in the war and occupation of 1967.
Nevel
is critical of the so-called ‘progressive
Zionists’ who insist on positioning the
conversation only on the question of occupation,
thus limiting any possibility of resolution to
the ‘two-state solution.’
Not
only is such a ‘solution’ defunct and
practically not possible, but the very
discussion precludes the ‘Nakba’, or the
Catastrophe, of 1948.
The
“Nakba doesn’t enter these conversations because
it is the legacy and clearest manifestation of
Zionism”, Nevel wrote.
“Those
who ignore the ‘Nakba’ – which Zionist and
Israeli institutions have consistently done –
are refusing to acknowledge Zionism as
illegitimate from the beginning of its
implementation.”
This is precisely why the Israeli police have
recently blocked
the ‘March of Return’, conducted annually by
Palestinians in Israel.
For
years, Israel has been wary that a growing
movement among Palestinians, Israelis and others
around the world have been pushing for a
paradigm shift in order to understand the roots
of the conflict in Palestine.
This
new thinking has been a rational outcome of the
end of the ‘peace process’ and the demise of the
‘two-state’ solution.
Incapable of sustaining its founding myths, yet
unable to offer an alternative, the Israeli
government is now using coercive measures to
respond to the budding movement:
punishing those
who insist on commemorating the ‘Nakba’, fining
organizations that participate in such events
and even perceiving as traitors any Jewish
individuals and groups that deviate from its
official thinking.
In
these cases, coercion hardly works.
“The March (of Return) has rapidly grown in size
over the past few years, in defiance of
increasingly repressive measures from the
Israeli authorities,”
wrote Jonathan Cook
in ‘Al-Jazeera’.
It
seems that 70 years after the founding of
Israel, the past is still looming large.
Fortunately, the Palestinian voices that have
fought against the official Israeli narrative
are now joined by a growing number of Jewish
voices.
It is
through a new common narrative that a true
understanding of the past can be attained, all
with the hope that the peaceful vision for the
future can replace the current one – one which
can only be sustained through military
domination, inequality and sheer propaganda.
–
Dr. Ramzy Baroud has been writing about the
Middle East for over 20 years. He is an
internationally-syndicated columnist, a media
consultant, an author of several books and the
founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His books
include “Searching Jenin”, “The Second
Palestinian Intifada” and his latest “My Father
Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story”. His
website is
www.ramzybaroud.net.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.