The art of peace (2)
By Khaled Diab
Last
week, I invited
Arabs to come out of their trenches and explore the no-man’s-land of the Arab-Israeli
conflict. Now it's the turn of the Israelis.
September 2007
In my article last week, I explored the neglected
backwoods of the history of Zionism to try to build understanding and to
challenge some of the misperceptions widely held by Arabs. The ensuing heated
debate – which I followed closely – was both inspiring and depressing.
Many of the posters applauded my modest attempt
to promote mutual understanding and I thank everyone who joined the effort to
carry “candles lighting a way through darkness”, as one reader put it. In the
midst of these admirable efforts to find common ground, a pitched battle ensued
in which both sides’ partisans engaged in an ugly ideological exchange of fire
for the moral high ground – which wound up instead in the unforgiving valley of
demonisation.
Now it’s time to turn to the Palestinian story
and the parts of it that are overlooked or distorted. The aspirations of Jews
to establish their own homeland are understandable when set against the
backdrop of persecution, pogroms and the Holocaust. But, sadly, the indigenous
Palestinian population has never featured very highly – except as an obstacle – in Zionist
calculations or those of the great powers.
The British occupiers generously offered “a
national home for the Jewish people” that wasn't theirs to give. The Zionist
movement managed to buy up around 7% of the land, largely thanks to so-called
‘land reforms’ introduced by the Ottomans in the mid-19th century to enable the
Sultan to profit from Palestine's lucrative output of grain, cotton and Jaffa oranges which were becoming all the rage in Europe.
This effectively re-feudalised Palestinian land and concentrated land ownership.
In fact, some 250 families owned half the arable land in
The early trickle of “pioneer” Zionists was
easily absorbed into
These pioneers lived largely at peace with
their Palestinian neighbours and locals often worked on their kibbutzim.
I met one such trailblazer who was part of the so-called third wave and he
recalled fondly how well his kibbutz got on with the local population
and how they worked the land together.
Nevertheless, the early pioneers believed they
had a “civilising” mission to play. Perhaps they were inspired to hold this
view based on Theodor Herzl's
observation in Der Judenstaat that: “We should there [in
However, it is arrogant to assume that
Palestinian society was backward and unable to modernise of its own accord. In
fact, Palestine, particularly in the urban areas, had a highly evolved culture
and society, and indigenous economic and industrial development efforts were in
full swing, partly inspired by Muhammad Ali’s earlier modernisation efforts and
the “Egyptian renaissance” going on next door. Its press was
also one of the freest in the region.
Jewish immigrants learned a lot from the indigenous Palestinians, borrowing
freely from their agricultural practices, cuisine, music and words, both
colloquial and classical. The revival and modernisation of Hebrew owes a lot to
the highly developed Arabic grammarian tradition.The relatively benign relationship between
Zionists and Palestinians began to change with the rise of European fascism in
the 1930s and the arrival of a more strident breed of Zionists who were
determined to speed up the colonisation of
What had been a quiet and tranquil backwater
was about to be transformed into one of the bitterest conflict zones in the
world. The 1947 partition came about in the early days of the UN when it was a
US- and western-dominated instrument of the post-war new world order.
Today, 60 years on, many Israelis criticise the
Palestinians for not accepting the partition - and perhaps in retrospect they
would have been better off had they acquiesced. However, at the time, they saw
it as hugely unjust. The UN plan left the indigenous population with only 45%
of the land, while the Jews – who only made up 8% of the population in 1914 and
about a third in 1947 – got the rest. Most of
Before Israelis rush to condemn the Palestinian
rejection, they should ask themselves whether they would accept a forced
partition along the 1947 lines today to resolve the never-ending conflict and
would Israel go to war if the outside world decided to impose such an
arrangement, even though the Palestinians living in Israel and under Israeli
control outnumber the Jews living in mandate Palestine 60 years ago?
Although most ordinary Arabs felt enormous and
genuine solidarity for the Palestinian cause, many of the Arab leaders who
launched the 1948 war had their own selfish designs. For instance, King Abdullah I – who was actually from the Hejaz in Arabia – had expansionist dreams for his Hashemite
dynasty after it was muscled out of
The 1948 war was an indelible moment in the
Palestinian, Israeli and Arab psyches. For Israelis, it marked the birth of
their nation so soon after the collective trauma of the Holocaust and the
coming of age of the tough new Jews who would not go off to face their fate
“like lambs to the slaughter”.
For Palestinians, it marked the death of their
nation – the nakba (“catastrophe”) – and their
physical dispossession. Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish wrote in his famous poem, Passport:
Stripped of a name, an identity
On a soil I nourished with my
own hands!
Job's cry fills the sky:
Don't make me an example twice!
For the wider region, the Palestinians became a
symbol because the nakba marked the first visible
defeat for the dream of Arab independence and cast into stark relief the extent
of Arab weakness. In fact, Zionism was the rallying call of the pan-Arabism
adopted by the secular Arab regimes of the 1950s and 1960s. “Pan-Arabism can in
many senses be read as a response to the idea championed by Zionism of an
ethnically pure state for the Jews in the midst of the Arab region,” Andrew
Hammond writes in Popular Culture in the Arab World.
In addition, many Arabs see in the Palestinians
an expression of their own oppression at the hands of corrupt elites who took
over control from the colonial powers without empowering their people.
In a moving account of her childhood in
pre-partition
It was not to be so, although her family was
the last in her street to flee in 1948 and her mother had only packed a few
summer clothes for them in the expectation that they would soon return once the
violence died down. But they were never able to go back.
Instead, Karmi's
family wound up in
It is one of the great ironies of history that
the people who suffered centuries of exile should bring the same upon their
“cousins” and then construct a narrative that refuses the Palestinians the
right even to grieve their loss – as if the keys many Palestinian families
treasure as their most valuable possession are to non-existent doors in an
imaginary land.
This denial has toned down in recent times, but
even today one hears from ardent Zionists and their supporters
dismissals that claim “
But just because the Palestinians lived under
the yoke of the Ottoman and British empires does not mean that they had no
sense of national identity, as the pre-partition international press amply
demonstrates. My own native
Before the Palestinian exodus, Palestinian
national aspirations were fairly straightforward: self-determination for all
the people who lived on the land, free of foreign domination and interference.
Some saw this in the context of a broader union of all the Arabised
Canaanite peoples (ahl
el-sham, in Arabic). The most idealistic wanted
Palestinian historian Rashid Khalidi argues in Palestinian Identity: The
Construction of Modern National Consciousness that the modern national identity of
Palestinians has its roots in nationalist discourses that emerged among the
peoples of the
This has changed over the past six decades, as
Palestinian identity lost its geographic anchor and Palestinian nationalism
began defining itself in terms of how it relates to Zionism.
After six decades of dispossession, the lot of
Palestinians is growing increasingly to resemble the historical lot of the
Jews: a people without a homeland dependent on the whims and largesse of their
host countries – distrusted, feared, respected and pitied, all at once. This
homelessness has become a great motivator for success, with the Palestinian diaspora among the most successful minority groups in the
world. Perhaps it is time for Israel-Palestine to become the tolerant and
inclusive home for both these long-suffering peoples.
This column appeared
in The Guardian Unlimited’s Comment is Free section on 7
September 2007. Read the related
discussion.
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