The cover-up of Israel’s genocide of the
Palestinians during the Nakba continues
By Philip Giraldi
December 15, 2022:
Information Clearing House-- Israel’s new government
is planning to give de facto
operational control of the national police
and heavily armed border police to Itamar Ben-Gvir,
the leader of a party of right wing, racist
extremists. It can perhaps be regarded as the
prelude to the last phase in the uprooting and
displacement of the Palestinian people. Those
who resist will be killed and not a single
Israeli soldier or policeman will be punished
for carrying out what the Benjamin Netanyahu
government will frame as a war against
terrorists blessed by Yahweh in support of his
“Chosen” people.
The Zionist view of what
should be done to the indigenous inhabitants of
a place once called Palestine has been
unflinching since the founding of the state of
Israel. The Zionist
historic boast that a Jewish homeland would
be built on “A land without a people for a
people without a land” ignored the fact that
Palestine already had plenty of inhabitants and
a well-established economy where Jews were a
distinct minority,
less than 20% of the population in the
1930s.
The solution to correct
the numbers was to compel the natives to leave
by one means or another. Israel’s founding
father David Ben Gurion early on endorsed a
policy of
removal by force if necessary the Christians
and Muslims. The fighting that followed in 1948
after the United Nations’ partition of the
country into two separate states left the mostly
unarmed Palestinians helpless before the
well-armed Jewish militias, which quickly
expanded their zone of control well into the
area that was granted on paper to the
Palestinians. It is estimated that 15,000
Palestinians were killed outright by the Zionist
forces while 800,000 more were driven from their
homes, to which nearly all were denied any right
to return. Four hundred Palestinian occupied
villages were “ethnically cleansed” and in some
cases physically destroyed.
The de facto
seizure of the remainder of historic Palestine
outside the borders of the Jewish state after
the June 1967 Six Day war gave Israel direct
control of all key strategic areas as well as
land in Syria and Lebanon. Since that time,
successive Israeli governments have pursued an
ethnic cleansing policy both in Israel itself
and on the West Bank consisting of gradually
forcing the remaining Palestinians to leave to
be replaced by all-Jewish towns and settlements.
The Palestinians know that the final push is
indeed coming and have begun to resist, though
having few weapons they are helpless against the
heavily armed Israel Defense Force (IDF), which
has killed 195 Palestinians, mostly
teenagers, in the past eleven months.
A recent killing
captured on surveillance video shows an
Israeli border policeman shooting a young man
dead after an encounter on the main street of a
West Bank town. Far-right Otzma Yehudit Party
leader and incoming National Security Minister
Ben-Gvir,
praised the policeman who did the shooting
as a “hero,” citing his “Precise action, you
really fulfilled the honor of all of us and did
what was assigned to you.”
The Palestinians refer to
their dispossession and killing at the hands of
the Jewish soldiers in 1948 as the Nakba,
meaning “catastrophe,” which has sometimes been
popularized as the Arab version of the so-called
holocaust. I have recently watched a
controversial film called Farha, made
in Jordan by a woman filmmaker of Syrian
descent, which views the Nakba through the eyes
of a fourteen-year-old village girl. She, the
eponymous Farha that gives the film its title,
was preparing to go off to advance her
education, presumably in Jerusalem, when Israeli
soldiers attacked her village. The Israelis used
loudspeakers to announce that all residents must
leave immediately. Anyone seeking to remain
would be killed. In a panic, the girl’s father,
the village chief, locked her into a storage
shed for safety as he tried to figure out what
to do, but he then disappears from the tale and
it might be presumed that both he and the rest
of the family were killed.
Farha has only a crack in
the door to witness what is going on outside. In
a particularly dreadful sequence, a Palestinian
man and his family who are trying to escape but
are apparently confused regarding what way to go
are detained by an Israeli officer and his men.
After some perfunctory questioning, the father,
mother and two children are lined up against a
wall and shot dead. A newborn baby was left
lying on the ground, alive, crying for its
mother. The officer tells one of his men to kill
it, but adds “Don’t waste a bullet on it.” The
soldier prepares to stomp on the baby’s head to
carry out the order, but cannot bring himself to
do it and walks away. The baby continues to wail
until later that day it stops, presumably dead
from exposure or other factors.
Eventually Farha escapes
from her prison and the movie concludes with her
walking away in tears to an uncertain future.
The film is very powerful, with excellent
acting, cinematography and direction and it is
based on a true story as handed down by Director
Darin J. Sallam’s mother’s best friend, but I
ended up wishing that it were stronger in its
depiction of the savagery exercised by the
Israelis, perhaps recreating an actual major
massacre of Palestinian civilians, like occurred
at Deir Yassin, where 107 Arabs, including many
women and children, were shot dead by Israeli
militiamen from the Irgun and Lehi groups.
Other massacres took place in hundreds of
villages across Galilee as well as in cities
like Haifa or Akka, all far worse than what is
revealed by the film. For those who are
interested, Israeli historian Ilan Pappe in
his bookThe Ethnic Cleansing of
Palestine describes, in detail, the
brutality of what Israeli forces unleashed on
the largely unarmed Palestinian people during
the Nakba.
But even though the film
deliberately avoided cliched scenes of mass
violence, it has proven very powerful with
supporters and critics lined up along the
completely predictable political lines. The
Israelis have in particular come down hard on
the film and they and their many friends in the
United States, have reacted in their usual
tribal fashion, attacking Netflix, which is
streaming Farha on its network including in the
United States and Europe. The Israel firsters
are advocating striking back against Netflix for
its temerity by canceling the service and
attacking the decision to air the film at all.
Ironically though not surprisingly, Netflix has
hitherto been a leader in obtaining and
streaming Israeli films and even television
series.
In Israel, the government
has declared war on the film, also a
characteristic of that nation’s circle-the-
wagons paranoid response to anything that might
even suggest that Jews are just as capable of
evil as anyone else. Last month
ultra-nationalist Israeli Finance Minister
Avigdor Lieberman moved to block scheduled
screenings of the film in Jaffa,
saying that “Israel is a place to present
Israeli and international works, but is
certainly not the place to slander IDF soldiers
and the security forces who are acting day and
night to defend and protect all the citizens and
residents living here.”
Lieberman, a Russian Jew
known for his ethnocentric and essentially
racist views, apparently does not believe that
soldiers and security forces should actually
protect Palestinians and afford them at least
some measure of free speech, which is only
allowed to Jews. Israel’s ironically titled
Culture Minister the oddly named Chili Tropper
also
attacked the film for its so-called “false
plots against IDF soldiers” denouncing how their
actions were presented as similar to “behavior
of the Nazis in the Holocaust.”
Former IDF soldier and
current right wing apologist, Yoseph Haddad also
tweeted, “I saw the movie ‘Farha’ and I can
tell you that it is much worse than you think.
The IDF soldiers are presented there as inhuman
with unimaginable evil, all they care about is
murdering and slaughtering without mercy (which
is the exact opposite of the truth). This is a
blood libel that will certainly increase
antisemitism and incitement against Israel. If
you haven’t canceled your Netflix subscription
yet – do it now.”
In an Instagram post,
Israeli model Nataly Dadon also demanded that
Israelis and their supporters internationally
should drop their Netflix subscriptions in an
Instagram post,
claiming that Farha’s “sole purpose is
apparently to increase anti-Semitism against the
Jewish people.” Mondoweiss
also reports how “author and photographer
Laura Ben-David tweeted a photo of her
cancellation message with the streaming app and
wrote, ‘Buh-bye Netflix! Supporting the false
and anti-Israel film Farha is unacceptable.’”
So Israel, which is
passionate about its rejection of the
non-violent pro-Palestinian Boycott, Divestment
and Sanctions (BDS) economic pressure movement,
is united in its desire to punish Netflix’s
bottom line. And the old reliable anti-Semitism
tag is being liberally attached to how the
argument is being framed. Former Al Jazeera
reporter Ahmed Shihab-Eldin suggested to the
Middle East Eye that “The pacing of [all the
negative posts] reveals it was coordinated. With
each passing hour, dozens and dozens of vapid
and vile reviews would appear, making wild
accusations trashing the film. It was clear
people had not seen the film, and only wanted to
damage its reputation.”
Finally, it would not be
about Israel and Jews if there were not space in
The New York Times to twist and spin
the story. A
review of the film by one Beatrice Loayza, a
Peruvian-American film critic based in Brooklyn,
describes the movie oddly as a “brutal
coming-of-age-story.” At one point, Farha
discovers an old handgun wrapped up within a
sack of lentils. She eventually uses it to shoot
the lock and escape the storage room. But this
is how the Times reviewer describes the
sequence: “She finds a gun buried inside a sack
of grains — was the threat present all along?
One day, a scene of great barbarity plays out
before her tiny window.” Aha! So those crafty
Arabs actually were potentially using the old
handgun among the lentils trick to threaten the
friendly Israel soldiers who just happened to
drop by to shoot to death a Palestinian family,
which is dismissed as a “scene of great
barbarity” without any suggestion of what that
might have been. In truth, the garbage being
peddled by the Times as a review of a
story of an atrocity committed by Jews is
actually achieved without having to include any
context or feature any Jews at all. “Remarkable”
is all I have to say in conclusion.
Philip M. Giraldi,
Ph.D., is Executive Director of the Council for
the National Interest, a 501(c)3 tax deductible
educational foundation (Federal ID Number
#52-1739023) that seeks a more interests-based
U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East. Website
is
councilforthenationalinterest.org,
address is P.O. Box 2157, Purcellville VA 20134
and its email is
inform@cnionline.org.
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