People's Democracy

(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist)


Vol. XXVII

No. 25

June 22, 2003

SEETHING WITH RAGE  

The Palestinian Saga

  N D  Jayaprakash

WHILE there is constant harping about micro-violence (suicide bombings) and castigation of the Palestinians for the same, the world at large has practically turned a blind eye to the gross macro-violence (state terror) being perpetrated on them by the Zionist government of Israel with the unstinting support of the US administration. That Israel has been a crypto-fascist state has not been widely recognised as yet, despite the fact that there is no shortage of information on this count. Umpteen UN reports have brought to light the nightmarish existence of the Palestinians under Israeli occupation.

Aren’t such reports themselves ample proof of the fascistic nature of the occupying forces? Of course, there have been many concerned people across the globe who have spoken up forthrightly for the cause of the Palestinians. None other than Mahatma Gandhi was one of the foremost amongst them. Others who were not initially opposed to the creation of Israel soon realised their folly and began to alert the world to the growing fascist tendencies there. Noted scientist and humanist, Albert Einstein, tried to do precisely that. Isn’t it time the world listened to the appeals of Gandhi and Einstein?

CRUX OF THE PROBLEM

It may not take too much time and effort to understand that it was the call for a Jewish national home in Palestine, the subsequent immigration of Jews into that territory and the resulting coercive displacement of the Palestinian population from their land that has resulted in the Palestinian-Israeli imbroglio. In this context it would be appropriate to recall what Mahatma Gandhi had to say regarding the matter. In an article in his journal, the Harijan, on November 26, 1938, he wrote: “It is wrong and inhuman to impose the Jews on the Arabs. What is going on in Palestine today cannot be justified by any moral code of conduct.... Surely it would be a crime against humanity to reduce the proud Arabs so that Palestine can be restored to the Jews partly or wholly as their national home.” [The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi, GOI, 1977, Vol 68, p 137]. Gandhi’s observations are as relevant and valid today as when they were first made over 64 years ago. In other words, it is the forcible occupation of Palestine by Jews emigrating from other parts of the world and the resistance offered by the dispossessed native Palestinians against the humiliating treatment meted out to them in the process that is the crux of the problem. 

Coinciding with the decision of Britain to terminate its “mandate” over Palestine (which was obtained in 1922 by application of article 22 of the Covenant of the League of Nations), the Zionists unilaterally occupied most of the territory and proclaimed it as the “state of Israel” on May 14, 1948. This precipitate action needlessly aborted the move for a peaceful transition of power as envisaged in the UN partition plan for Palestine, which the UN General Assembly had adopted on November 29, 1947.

A UN report later recounted the developments as follows: “One of the two states envisaged in the partition plan proclaimed its independence as Israel and in the 1948 war expanded to occupy 77 per cent of the territory of Palestine. Israel also occupied the larger part of Jerusalem. Over half the indigenous Palestinian population fled or were expelled…. In the 1967 war, Israel occupied the remaining territory of Palestine, until then under Jordanian and Egyptian control (the West Bank and Gaza Strip)”[Overview 1947-1977].

OCCUPATION BY FORCE

The Zionists were able to impose their will over the Palestinians only because of their military superiority. Such superiority was achieved through long-tem planning. To advance their interests, the Zionists methodically went about arming and training their members in large numbers soon after they started immigrating to Palestine from the1880s in an organized manner. Thus, at the time of forcibly establishing the state of Israel in 1948, the Zionist had well-trained and well-armed forces, which were at least 65,000 strong [John Bagot Glubb (British commander of Transjordan’s Arab Legion), A Soldier With the Arabs, New York, 1957].  There was little doubt that the number of armed Zionists in the field in 1948 was far greater than the combined strength of the ill-trained, in-disciplined and poorly armed Arab armies from the neighbouring countries that came to the rescue of the Palestinians.

While the Zionists immigrated to Palestine in a very organised manner, the Palestinian resistance against it was most disorganised. There were several reasons for it. The prospect of a strong, united and committed leadership emerging from amongst the Palestinians was constrained by the social set-up of heir society. Big land-holding families (many of them non-Palestinian Arabs) had largely controlled Palestine. In the 1930s, while about 30 per cent of the Palestinian rural families were landless, 250 families owned the same amount of land as cultivated by 60,000 peasants [Don Perez, The Palestinian State: A Rational Approach, New York, 1977]. 

Palestine was an excellent ground in the 1920s and 1930s for a peasant-led revolution. Large numbers of absentee landlords (mainly from Lebanon and Syria) were ready to surrender to the temptations of selling their estates at generous prices offered by the Jews. The Jewish campaign of dispossessing the natives in favour of immigrants inevitably created an acute sense of economic outrage and helped politicise the Arab peasantry. The British occupation of Palestine on December 9, 1917, thereby ending Turkish rule over the territory since 1517, also kindled the passion for national liberation. As a result, all the objective conditions for a successful peasant revolution existed there, except one: radical leadership [Punyapriya Dasgupta, Cheated by the World: The Palestinian Experience, New Delhi, 1988].                                                           

PARTITION PLAN OF THE UN

While the Zionist movement indulged in organised terror against the Palestinians, Britain (which had promised a national home for Jews in Palestine through its infamous Balfour declaration issued on November 2, 1917) tried to organise a round table conference in 1946 to bring about a rapprochement. After that attempt failed to produce any results, Britain shifted the Palestinian question to the United Nations in April 1947. Palestine’s territorial integrity was formally destroyed when it was partitioned into Arab and Jewish states by the adoption of Resolution 181 (II) of the UN General Assembly on November 29, 1947 [A/RES/ 181 (II) (A+B)]. While the Palestinians rejected the partition plan, the Jews more or less welcomed it. India, Iran and Yugoslavia opposed the partition of Palestine and, instead, proposed the setting up a federal state where both Arabs and Jews could co-exist [see Recommendations (III), Chapter VII, UN Document No. A/364, September 3, 1947].  

The partition plan allocated approximately 43 per cent of the territory of Palestine to the Arab state, while about 56 per cent of the area* to the Jewish state, and less than 1 per cent of area to the city of Jerusalem [UN Document No. A/364, Add.1, September 9, 1947].

[* It included the most fertile land. “The Jews will have the more economically developed part of the country embracing practically the whole of the citrus-producing area which includes a large number of Arab producers” [see Point No. 13 (1), Recommendations (II), Chapter VI, UN Document No. A/364, September 3, 1947]. This ignored the fact that the Jews then constituted only about one-third of the population and the land under their possession, which in 1918 amounted to less than 2 per cent of the total land area of Palestine, had by 1946 increased to just about 6 per cent of the total land area there (UN Document No.A/AC.25/W.85, dated 16 May 1966).]

The population composition in the UN partition plan further revealed the patently discriminatory nature of the plan. In the designated Jewish state nearly half the population consisted of Arabs: 498,000 Jews against 407,000 Arabs, totaling 905,000 in all. On the other hand, in the designated Arab state there were 725,000 Arabs against a mere 10,000 Jews, totaling 735,000 in all, while in the city of Jerusalem there were 100,000 Jews to 105,000 Arabs, totaling 205,000 residents in all [Point No. 5, Justification, Part II, Recommendations (II), Chapter VI, UN Document No. A/364, September 3, 1947, p 54]. Was it not a mischievous move on the part of those who prepared the partition plan to enlarge the boundaries of the Jewish state to include within it such a large number of Arabs, most of whom were driven out from there as soon as the Zionists seized power?

What was the justification for allocating 56 per cent of the land (including the best land) to the Jews who comprised just 33 per cent of the population and who legally owned less than 6 per cent of that land? Is there any unbiased yardstick by which this blatant discrimination could be justified? Strange as it may seem, even the Soviet Union had backed this outrageous plan for partition of Palestine.*

[*The Soviet stand was inexplicable because every communist leader --- from Karl Marx (who was himself of Jewish origin) downward, including Stalin in his early phase --- had opposed the idea of a separate Jewish homeland. For more details, see Dasgupta, op cit., pp 110-126.]

 

EXPULSION OF PALESTINIANS

When the Zionist movement unilaterally proclaimed the “state of Israel” on May 14, 1948, they occupied over 77 per cent of the land in Palestine --- far in excess of the 56 per cent of land allocated to it under the UN partition plan --- and systematically evicted Palestinians from that portion of the land. The facts, as ascertained by the US Library of Congress, are as follows: “According to British Mandate Authority population figures in 1947, there were about 1.3 million Arabs in all of Palestine. Between 700,000 and 900,000 of the Arabs lived in the region eventually bounded by the 1949 Armistice line, the so-called Green Line. By the time the fighting stopped, there were only about 170,000 Arabs left in the new state of Israel. By the summer of 1949, about 750,000 Palestinians were living in squalid refugee camps, set up virtually overnight in territories adjacent to Israel’s borders. About 300,000 lived in Gaza Strip, which was occupied by the Egyptian army. Another 450,000 became unwelcome residents of the West Bank of the Jordan, recently occupied by the Arab Legion of Transjordan” [Israel: A Country Study, Israel: Israeli Arabs, Arab Land and Arab Refugees at http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/iltoc.html].

According to the same report: “The property of the Arabs who were refugees outside the state and the property expropriated from the Arabs who remained in Israel became a major asset to the new state. According to Don Perez, an American scholar, by 1954 more than one-third of Israel’s Jewish population lived on absentee property, and nearly a third of the new immigrants (250,000 people) settled in urban areas abandoned by Arabs. The fleeing Arabs emptied thriving cities such as Jaffa, Acre (Akko), Lydda (Lod), and Ramla, plus 338 towns and villages and large parts of 94 other cities and towns containing nearly a quarter of all the buildings in Israel” [ibid].

The usurpation of power by the Zionists and the expulsion of the Palestinians created a piquant situation for the United Nations, which lost no time in appointing a mediator to find an amicable solution. In pursuance of the decision of the UN General Assembly, a committee composed of representatives of China, France, the USSR, the United Kingdom and the United States met on May 20, 1948, and appointed Count Folke Bernadotte, president of the Swedish Red Cross, as United Nations mediator on Palestine. In his progress report submitted to the UN secretary general on September 16, 1948, Count Bernadotte confirmed that “The majority of these [Palestinian] refugees have come from territory which, under the [UN General] Assembly resolution of 29 November [1947], was to be included in the Jewish state. The exodus of Palestinian Arabs resulted from panic created by fighting in their communities, by rumours concerning real or alleged acts of terrorism, or expulsion…. There have been numerous reports from reliable sources of large-scale looting, pillaging and plundering, and of instances of destruction of villages without apparent necessity” [Paras 6 and 7, Section V - Refugees, Part I, UN Document No A/648, Paris, 1948].

The report further said: “Moreover, while those who had fled in the early days of the conflict had been able to take with them some personal effects and assets, many of the late comers were deprived of everything except the cloths in which they stood, and apart from their homes (many of which were destroyed) lost all furniture and assets, and even their tools of trade” [Para 3, Section I - Nature of the Problem, Part III, ibid].

On September 17, 1948, the day after this report was published in Paris, the Zionists assassinated the 53 years old Count Bernadotte in Jerusalem. It was quite apparent what they thought of his mediatory effort![For more details, see http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/History/folke.html.]

Prior to the deluge, hundreds of Palestinians were systematically massacred; the cold-blooded slaughter of over 350 people (254 according to some other sources) in the village of Deir Yassin on April 9, 1948 stands out as a glaring example of the extensive terror perpetrated by the Zionist gangs.  Jacques de Reynier, member of the Swiss Red Cross and head of the international Red Cross delegation in Palestine during 1948, who got to know of the tragedy and who managed to reach the spot with great difficulty, was a witness to the aftermath of the massacre. Later describing the horrifying act in his memoirs, he said “There had been four hundred people in this village, about fifty of them had escaped and were still alive. All the rest had been deliberately massacred in cold blood for, as I observed for myself, this gang was admirably disciplined and only acted under orders.”

He then went on to add: “The affair of Deir Yassin had immense repercussions. The press and radio spread the news everywhere among Arabs as well as the Jews. In this way a general terror was built up among the Arabs, a terror astutely fostered by the Jews…. Finally, about 700,000 Arabs became refugees, leaving everything behind in their haste, their one hope being to avoid the fate of the people of Deir Yassin” [for more details, see: http://www.moqawama.org/feauters/yassine1.htm].

Menachem Begin was then heading Irgun Zvai Leumi, one of the two Zionist terrorist gangs that had carried out the barbaric attack --- a fact that is readily acknowledged. Begin, who went on to head the right wing Herut (“Freedom”) Party and then the Likud (“Unity”) Party, become Israel’s Prime Minister in 1977 and was awarded --- believe it or not --- the Noble Peace Prize for 1978! But it may also be noted that many eminent intellectuals especially of Jewish origin, including the noted scientist Albert Einstein, had protested against the visit of Begin, while he was in the United States in 1948 on a fund raising campaign, for his role in the Deir Yassin massacre. In their protest letter, they spoke plainly while urging the US citizens not to support Begin or the fascist political movement he represented. 

The letter stated as follows: “Among the most disturbing political phenomena of our time is the emergence in the newly created State of Israel of the “Freedom Party” (Tnuat Haherut), a political party closely akin in its organisation, methods, political philosophy and social appeal to the Nazi and Fascist parties. It was formed out of the membership and following of the former Irgun Zvai Leumi, a terrorist, right-wing, chauvinist organisation in Palestine…. Before irreparable damage is done by way of financial contributions…the American public must be informed as to the record and objectives of Mr Begin’s and his movement.  …Today they speak of freedom, democracy and anti-imperialism, whereas until recently they openly preached the doctrine of the fascist state.

“…. A shocking example was their behaviour in the Arab village of Deir Yassin…. But the terrorists far from being ashamed of their act, were proud of this massacre, publicised it widely, and invited all the foreign correspondents present in the country to view the heaped corpses and the general havoc at Deir Yassin. The Deir Yassin incident exemplifies the character of the Freedom Party….The undersigned therefore take this means of publicly presenting a few salient facts concerning Begin and his party; and of urging all concerned not to support this latest manifestation of fascism”[Albert Einstein and twenty-eight other US intellectuals of Jewish origin, New York Times, December 4, 1948].

It is the same fascist Freedom Party that has re-emerged as the Likud Party, which has been ruling Israel for the last several years. At least three of its members who have occupied the prime ministerial post --- Menachem Begin, Yitzhak Shamir [who had plotted the murder of the UN mediator Count Bernadotte in 1948] and Aerial Sharon --- have blood on their hands. Sharon, the present Israeli prime minister, was directly involved in the massacre of some 75 Palestinians in the Jordanian village of Qibiya in 1953. Efforts are currently on to try Sharon as a war criminal in a Belgian court of law for his role in the massacre of some 3500 Palestinians at the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps in Beirut in September 1982 [for more details, see: http://www.indictsharon.net]. His current role as prime minister is no better.

 

POST-1948 SITUATION

Since its creation, Israel has waged three wars against the Arab states, i e, in 1948, 1956 and 1967, occupying more Arab lands as well as the whole of Palestine. It has waged four wars against the PLO alone in 1978, 1981, 1982 and 2002. Over the last 55 years, the Israeli army has killed several thousands of Palestinians, injured ten times as many, demolished tens of thousands of Palestinian houses in West Bank and Gaza, destroyed standing crops in hundreds of square kilometres of cultivated area and detained hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in Israeli prisons at various times. Selective assassination of key PLO leaders in and outside Palestine is a routine matter for Israel’s secret police, Mossad. 

Following years of desperation, frustration and failure of the UN to solve the Palestinian question, the Palestinian people began in the mid-1950s to organise themselves into a genuine national political movement. Yasser Arafat, the present chairman of the Palestine Liberation organization (PLO), founded the Fatah (Palestinian national liberation movement) in 1958. Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) led by George Habash was established soon after.

Both Fatah and PFLP, along with a few other groups, later became constituents of the PLO. The PLO itself was established at the first session of the Palestine National Council (PNC) convened in Jerusalem on May 28, 1964. The UN recognised the PLO on October 14, 1974 as the sole representative of the Palestinian people [UN Resolution No.A/RES/3210 (XXIX)]. The 18th session of the PNC, held in Algiers in April 1987, brought about the much-needed unity between the different factions within the PLO. As a ripple effect, the first Palestinian intifada (sustained protest) against occupation began on December 9, 1987, bringing back memories of the 1936-39 revolt.

The PLO has repeatedly called for a just, durable and comprehensive settlement of the Palestinian question on the basis of international legitimacy and all UN resolutions supporting the various international efforts and initiatives towards this goal. The Declaration of Independence adopted at the 19th session of the PNC in Algiers on November 15, 1988 has outlined the structure of the future Palestinian State. According to it: “The state of Palestine is the state of Palestinians wherever they may be….Governance will be based on principles of social justice, equality and non-discrimination in public rights of men or women, on grounds of race, religion, colour or sex, and the aegis of a constitution which ensures the rule of law and an independent judiciary. Thus shall these principles allow no departure from Palestine’s age-old spiritual and civil heritage of tolerance and religious coexistence…. The state of Palestine proclaims its commitment to the principles and purposes of the United Nations, and to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. It proclaims its commitment as well to the principles and policies of the Non Aligned Movement”[see http://www.al-bab.com/arab/docs/pal/pal3.htm].

While the PLO began to move forward in a more united manner, a new organisation by the name of Hamas (the Arabic acronym for Harakat al-Muqawamah al-Islamiyya,  i e, the Islamic Resistance Movement) appeared on the scene. The ‘Islamic Covenant’ published by Hamas on August 18, 1988 [see http://www.ict.org.il/documents/documentdet.cfm?docid=14] clearly betrays the objectives of the movement. It purveys hatred; its language is intemperate, vituperative and provocative. It makes extreme demands, which can never be the basis for any amicable settlement of the Palestinian question. It is totally opposed to the moderate and secular approach of the PLO. While subjectively appearing to spew venom at Zionism, objectively the actions of Hamas fit in well with the vile schemes of the Zionists. It appears that Hamas “was at first given some encouragement by Israel, as a means of countering the influence of the PLO.”

Israel perhaps also encouraged Hamas because “the opposition of the Hamas to an international conference that would adjudicate the problem of Palestine, coincided with the policies of the Shamir government” [see http://www.mideastweb.org/hamas.htm]. It is hardly surprising that some among the Palestinians living under trying conditions in the occupied territories flare up under the baneful influence of the Hamas, thereby offering the fig leaf of justification for the inhuman actions of the Israeli armed forces.

(To Be Concluded)