How
Britain dresses up crimes in Israel as
'charitable acts'
By
Jonathan Cook
December 17, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
- When is a war crime not a
war crime? When, according to British
officials, that war crime has been given a
makeover as a “charitable act”.
The
British state is being asked to account for
its financial and moral support for a UK
organisation accused of complicity in the
ethnic cleansing of hundreds of thousands of
Palestinians from their homeland. So far, it
appears determined to evade answering those
questions.
The
target of the campaign is the Jewish
National Fund UK (JNF UK), which describes
itself as “Britain’s oldest Israel charity”.
Noting its role in “building
Israel for
over a century”, the organisation boasts:
“Every penny raised by JNF UK is sent to a
project
in Israel.”
In
fact, donations to JNF UK were used to buy
some of the 250 million
trees
planted across Israel since 1948, the year
when 750,000 Palestinians were forced out at
gunpoint from their homes by the new Israeli
army. Those expulsions were an event
Palestinians call their Nakba, or
“catastrophe”.
Afterwards, the Israeli army laid waste to
many hundreds of Palestinian villages,
turning them into rubble. Forests planted
over the villages were then promoted as
efforts to “make the desert bloom”.
Subsidised by taxpayers
In
fact, the trees were intended primarily to
block Palestinian refugees from ever being
able to
return
to their villages and rebuild their homes.
As a result, millions of Palestinians today
languish in refugee camps across the Middle
East, evicted from their homeland with the
help of the forests.
JNF
UK raised the funds for a parent
organisation in Israel, the Keren Kayemeth
LeIsrael Jewish National Fund (KKL-JNF),
which enforced the expulsions by using the
donations to plant the forests. The Israeli
state’s ethnic cleansing of the native
Palestinian population was effectively
disguised as a form of environmentalism.
Britain and other Western states appear to
have accepted that barely concealed
deception. They have long treated their
local JNF fundraising arms as charities. JNF
UK received charitable status
in 1939,
nearly a decade before Israel was created as
a Jewish state on the ruins of Palestinians’
homeland.
The
forests are still managed with money raised
through tax-deductible donations in Britain
and elsewhere. Since 1990, donations to JNF
UK have been eligible for Gift Aid, meaning
that the British government tops up
donations by adding its own 25 percent
contribution.
In
effect, the ethnic cleansing of Palestinian
villages has been subsidised by the British
public.