Israel’s
Stolen Babies Remains the State’s Darkest Secret
By Jonathan
Cook
August 13,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- It is Israel’s darkest secret – or so argues one
Israeli journalist – in a country whose short
history is replete with dark episodes.
Last month
Tzachi Hanegbi, minister for national security,
became the first government official to admit that
hundreds of babies had been stolen from their
mothers in the years immediately following Israel’s
creation in 1948. In truth, the number is more
likely to be in the thousands.
For nearly
seven decades, successive governments – and three
public inquiries – denied there had been any
wrongdoing. They concluded that almost all the
missing babies had died, victims of a chaotic time
when Israel was absorbing tens of thousands of new
Jewish immigrants.
But as more
and more families came forward – lately aided by
social media – to reveal their suffering, the
official story sounded increasingly implausible.
Although
many mothers were told their babies had died during
or shortly after delivery, they were never shown a
body or grave, and no death certificate was ever
issued. Others had their babies snatched from their
arms by nurses who berated them for having more
children than they could properly care for.
According
to campaigners, as many as 8,000 babies were seized
from their families in the state’s first years and
either sold or handed over to childless Jewish
couples in Israel and abroad. To many, it sounds
suspiciously like child trafficking.
A few of
the children have been reunited with their
biological families, but the vast majority are
simply unaware they were ever taken. Strict Israeli
privacy laws mean it is near-impossible for them to
see official files that might reveal their
clandestine adoption.
Did Israeli
hospitals and welfare organisations act on their own
or connive with state bodies? It is unclear. But it
is hard to imagine such mass abductions could have
occurred without officials at the very least turning
a blind eye.
Testimonies
indicate that lawmakers, health ministry staff, and
senior judges knew of these practices at the time.
And the decision to place all documents relating to
the children under lock untl 2071 hints at a
cover-up.
Mr Hanegbi,
who was given the task of re-examining the
classified material by prime minister Benjamin
Netanyahu, has been evasive on the question of
official involvement. “We may never know,” he has
said.
By now,
Israel’s critics are mostly inured to the well-known
litany of atrocities associated with the state’s
founding. Not least, hundreds of thousands of
Palestinians were expelled from their homeland in
1948 to make way for Israel and its new Jewish
immigrants.
The story
of the stolen babies, however, offers the shock of
the unexpected. These crimes were committed not
against Palestinians but other Jews. The parents
whose babies were abducted had arrived in the new
state lured by promises that they would find in
Israel a permanent sanctuary from persecution.
But the
kidnapping of the children and the mass expulsion of
Palestinians at much the same time are not unrelated
events. In fact, the babies scandal sheds light not
only on Israel’s past but on its present.
The stolen
babies were not randomly seized. A very specific
group was targeted: Jews who had just immigrated
from the Middle East. Most were from Yemen, with
others from Iraq, Morocco and Tunisia.
The
Arabness of these Jews was viewed as a direct threat
to the Jewish state’s survival, and one almost as
serious as the presence of Palestinians. Israel set
about “de-Arabising” these Middle Eastern Jews with
the same steely determination with which it had just
driven out most of the area’s Palestinians.
Like most
of Israel’s founding generation, David Ben Gurion,
the first prime minister, was from Eastern Europe.
He accepted the racist, colonial notions dominant in
Europe. He regarded European Jews as a civilised
people coming to a primitive, barbarous region.
But the
early European Zionists were not simply colonists.
They were unlike the British in India, for example,
who were interested chiefly in subduing the natives
and exploiting their resources. If Britain found
“taming” the Indians too onerous, as it eventually
did, it could pack up and leave.
That was
never a possibility for Ben Gurion and his
followers. They were coming not only to defeat the
indigenous people, but to replace them. They were
going to build their Jewish state on the ruins of
Arab society in Palestine.
Scholars
label such enterprises – those intending to create a
permanent homeland on another people’s land – as
“settler colonialism”. Famously, European settlers
took over the lands of North America, Australia and
South Africa.
The Israeli
historian Ilan Pappe has observed that settler
colonial movements are distinguished from ordinary
colonialism by what he terms the “logic of
elimination” that propels them.
Such groups
have to adopt strategies of extreme violence towards
the indigenous population. They may commit genocide,
as happened to the Native American peoples and to
the Australian Aborigines. If genocide is not
possible, they may instead forcefully impose
segregation based on racial criteria, as happened in
apartheid South Africa. Or they may commit
large-scale ethnic cleansing, as Israel did in 1948.
They may adopt more than one strategy.
Ben Gurion
needed not only to destroy Palestinian society, but
to ensure that “Arabness” did not creep into his new
Jewish state through the back door.
The large
numbers of Arab Jews who arrived in the first decade
were needed in his demographic war against the
Palestinians and as a labour force, but they posed a
danger too. Ben Gurion feared that, whatever their
religion, they might “corrupt” his Jewish state
culturally by importing what he called the “spirit
of the Levant”.
Adult Jews
from the region, he believed, could not be schooled
out of their “primitiveness”. But the Zionist
leadership hoped the next generation – their
offspring – could. They would be reformed through
education and the cultivation of a loathing for
everything Arab. The task would be made easier still
if they were first detached from their biological
families.
Israeli
campaigners seeking justice for the families of the
stolen babies point out that the forcible transfer
of children from one ethnic group to another
satisfies the United Nation’s definition of
genocide.
Certainly,
the theft of the Arab Jewish children and their
reallocation to European Jews chimed neatly with
settler colonialism’s logic of elimination. Such
abductions were not unique to Israel. Australia and
Canada, for example, seized babies from their
surviving native populations in a bid to “civilise”
them.
The
“re-education” of Israel’s Arab Jews has been
largely a success. Mr Netanyahu’s virulently
anti-Palestinian Likud party draws heavily on this
group’s backing. In fact, it was only because he
dares not alienate such supporters that Mr Netanyahu
agreed to a fresh examination of the evidence
concerning the stolen babies.
But if
there is a lesson to be drawn from the government’s
partial admission about the abductions, it is not
that Mr Netanyahu and Israel’s European elite are
now ready to change their ways.
Rather, it
should alert Israel’s Arab Jews to the fact that
they face the same enemy as the Palestinians: a
European Jewish establishment that remains
resolutely resistant to the idea of living in peace
and respect with either Arabs or the region.
Jonathan
Cook is a Nazareth- based journalist and winner of
the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism
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