Tragic Consequences
In 1947, there were 630,000 Jews and
1,300,000 Palestinian Arabs. Thus, by the time of the United Nations partition
of Palestine in 1947, the Jews were 31% of the population.[38]
The decision to partition Palestine,
promoted by the leading imperialist powers and Stalin's Soviet Union, gave 54%
of the fertile land to the Zionist movement. But before the state of Israel was
established, the Irgun and Haganah seized three-quarters of the land and
expelled virtually all the inhabitants.
In 1948, there were 475 Palestinian
villages and towns. Of these, 385 were razed to the ground, reduced to rubble.
Ninety remain, stripped of their land.
Removing the Mask
In 1940, Joseph Weitz, the head of the
Jewish Agency's Colonization Department, which was responsible for the actual
organization of settlements in Palestine, wrote:
"Between ourselves it must be clear
that there is no room for both peoples together in this country. We shall not
achieve our goal if the Arabs are in this small country. There is no other way
than to transfer the Arabs from here to neighboring countries - all of them.
Not one village, not one tribe should be left." [39]
Joseph Weitz elaborated upon the
practical meaning of rendering Palestine "Jewish:"
"There are some who believe that the
non-Jewish population, even in a high percentage, within our borders will be
more effectively under our surveillance; and there are some who believe the
contrary, i.e., that it is easier to carry out surveillance over the
activities of a neighbor than over those of a tenant. [I] tend to support the
latter view and have an additional argument: ...the need to sustain the
character of the state which will henceforth be Jewish ...with a non-Jewish
minority limited to fifteen percent. I had already reached this fundamental
position as early as 1940 [and] it is entered in my diary." [40]
The "Koenig Report" stated this policy
even more bluntly:
"We must use terror, assassination,
intimidation, land confiscation and the cutting of all social services to rid
the Galilee of its Arab population." [41]
Chairman Heilbrun of the Committee for
the Re-election of General Shlomo Lahat, the mayor of Tel Aviv, declaimed: "We
have to kill all the Palestinians unless they are resigned to live here as
slaves." [42]
These are the words of Uri Lubrani,
Israeli Prime Minister David Ben Gurion's special adviser on Arab Affairs, in
1960: "We shall reduce the Arab population to a community of woodcutters and
waiters." [43]
Raphael Eitan, Chief of Staff of the
Israeli Armed Forces stated:
"We declare openly that the Arabs have
no right to settle on even one centimeter of Eretz Israel. ...Force is all
they do or ever will understand. We shall use the ultimate force until the
Palestinians come crawling to us on all fours." [44]
Eitan elaborated before the Knesset's
Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee:
"When we have settled the land, all
the Arabs will be able to do will be to scurry around like drugged roaches in
a bottle." [45]
Ben Gurion and the Final Aim
The territorial ambitions of Zionism
were clearly spelled out by David Ben Gurion in a speech to a Zionist meeting on
October 13, 1936: "We do not suggest that we announce now our final aim which is
far reaching - even more so than the Revisionists who oppose Partition. I am
unwilling to abandon the great vision, the final vision which is an organic,
spiritual and ideological component of my ... Zionist aspirations." [46]
In the same year, Ben Gurion wrote in a
letter to his son:
"A partial Jewish State is not the
end, but only the beginning. I am certain that we can not be prevented from
settling in the other parts of the country and the region."
In 1937, he declaimed:
"The boundaries of Zionist aspirations
are the concern of the Jewish people and no external factor will be able to
limit them." [47] In 1938, he was more explicit: "The boundaries of Zionist
aspiration," he told the World Council of Poale Zion in Tel Aviv, "include
southern Lebanon, southern Syria, today's Jordan, all of Cis-Jordan [West
Bank] and the Sinai." [48]
Ben Gurion formulated Zionist strategy
very clearly:
"After we become a strong force as the
result of the creation of the state, we shall abolish partition and expand to
the whole of Palestine. The state will only be a stage in the realization of
Zionism and its task is to prepare the ground for our expansion. The state
will have to preserve order - not by preaching but with machine guns." [49]
In May of 1948 he presented his
strategic aims to the General Staff. "We should prepare to go over to the
offensive. Our aim is to smash Lebanon, Trans-Jordan, and Syria. The weak point
is Lebanon, for the Moslem regime is artificial and easy for us to undermine. We
shall establish a Christian state there, and then we will smash the Arab Legion,
eliminate Trans-Jordan; Syria will fall to us. We then bomb and move on and take
Port Said, Alexandria, and Sinai." [50]
When General Yigal Allon asked Ben
Gurion, "What is to be done with the population of Lydda and Ramle?" - some
50,000 inhabitants - Ben Gurion, according to his biographer, waved his hand and
said, "Drive them out!" [51]
Yitzhak Rabin, the current Defense
Minister, carried out this edict. In Lydda and Ramle, no remnants of Palestinian
dwellings remain. Today this area is occupied entirely by the Jewish settler
population. Michael Bar Zohar, in his biography of David Ben Gurion, describes
Ben Gurion's first visit to Nazareth. "Ben Gurion looked around in astonishment
and said, 'Why are there so many Arabs, why didn't you drive them out?"'
The Palestinians were indeed driven out.
Between November 29, 1947, when the United Nations partitioned Palestine, and
May 15, 1948, when the State was formally proclaimed, the Zionist army and
militia had seized 75% of Palestine, forcing 780,000 Palestinians out of the
country.
The Butchery Begins: Deir Yasin
The process was one of sustained
slaughter as village after village was wiped out. The killing was intended to
cause people to flee for their lives.
The commander of the Haganah, Zvi Ankori,
described what happened: "I saw cut off genitalia and women's crushed stomachs.
...It was direct murder." [52]
Menachem Begin gloated over the impact
throughout Palestine of the Nazi-like operations he commanded at Deir Yasin.
Lehi and IZL Commandos stormed the village of Deir Yasin on April 9, 1948,
slaughtering 254 men, women and children.
"A legend of terror spread amongst
Arabs who were seized with panic at the mention of our Irgun soldiers. It was
worth half a dozen battalions to the forces of Israel. Arabs throughout the
country ... were seized with limitless panic and started to flee for their
lives. This mass flight soon developed into a maddened, uncontrollable
stampede. Of the 800,000 Arabs who lived on the present territory of the state
of Israel, only some 165,000 are still there. The political and economic
significance of this development can hardly be overestimated." [53]
The implementation of this program was
carried out in part by Menachem Begin and in part by his future successor as
Prime Minister, Yitzhak Shamir, as military commanders of the Irgun and the
Lohamei Herut Israel (Lehi), i.e., Fighters for the Freedom of Israel.
Inhabitants were force marched in blood-soaked clothing through the streets of
Jerusalem to jeering on-lookers, before disappearing.
Eyewitness Accounts
The eyewitness accounts of these events
foreshadowed the fate of the Palestinian people.
"It was noon when the battle ended and
the shooting stopped. Things had become quiet, but the village had not
surrendered. The IZL (Irgun) and Lehi (Stern Gang) irregulars left the places
in which they had been hiding and started carrying out clean-up operations in
the houses. They fired with all the arms they had, and threw explosives into
the buildings. They also shot everyone they saw in the houses, including women
and children - indeed the commanders made no attempt to check the disgraceful
acts of slaughter. I myself and a number of inhabitants begged the commanders
to give orders to their men to stop shooting, but our efforts were
unsuccessful. In the meantime, some twenty-five men had been brought out of
the houses: they were loaded into a freight truck and led in a 'victory
parade,' like a Roman triumph, through to Mahaneh Yehudah and Zikhron Yosef
quarters [of Jerusalem]. At the end of the parade they were taken to a stone
quarry between Giv'at Shaul and Deir Yasin and shot in cold blood. The
fighters then put the women and children who were still alive on a truck and
took them to the Mandelbaum Gate."54
The director of the International Red
Cross in Palestine, Jacques de Reynier, attempted to intervene as word of the
slaughter spread. His personal testimony is as follows:
"... The Commander of the Irgun
detachment did not seem willing to receive me. At last he arrived, young,
distinguished, and perfectly correct, but there was a peculiar glitter in his
eyes, cold and cruel. According to him the Irgun had arrived twenty-four hours
earlier and ordered the inhabitants by loudspeaker to evacuate all houses and
surrender: the time given to obey the order was a quarter of an hour. 'Some of
these miserable people had come forward and were taken prisoner, to be
released later in the direction of the Arab lines. The rest, not having obeyed
the order, had met the fate they deserved. But there was no point in
exaggerating things, there were only a few dead, and they would be buried as
soon as the 'clean-up' of the village was over. If I found any bodies, I could
take them, but there were certainly no wounded.'
"This account made my blood run cold.
I went back to the Jerusalem road and got an ambulance and a truck that I had
alerted through the Red Shield. ...I reached the village with my convoy, and
the firing stopped. The gang (Irgun) was wearing uniforms with helmets. All of
them were young, some even adolescents, men and women, armed to the teeth:
revolvers, machine-guns, hand grenades, and also cutlasses in their hands,
most of them still blood-stained. A beautiful young girl with criminal eyes
showed me hers, still dripping with blood; she displayed it like a trophy.
This was the 'clean-up' team, that was obviously performing its task very
conscientiously.
"I tried to go into a house. A dozen
soldiers surrounded me, their machine-guns aimed at my body, and their officer
forbade me to move. The dead, if any, would be brought to me, he said. I then
flew into one of the most towering rages of my life, telling these criminals
what I thought of their conduct, threatening them with everything I could
think of, and then pushed them aside and went into the house.
"The first room was dark, everything
was in disorder, but there was no one. In the second, amid disembowelled
furniture and all sorts of debris, I found some bodies, cold. Here the
'clean-up' had been done with machine guns, then hand grenades. It had been
finished off with knives, anyone could see that. The same thing in the next
room, but as I was about to leave, I heard something like a sigh. I looked
everywhere, turned over all the bodies, and eventually found a little foot,
still warm. It was a little girl of ten, mutilated by a hand grenade, but
still alive ...everywhere it was the same horrible sight ...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.
"After another visit to Deir Yasin I
went back to my office where I was visited by two gentlemen, well-dressed in
civilian clothes, who had been waiting for me for more than an hour. They were
the commander of the Irgun detachment and his aide. They had prepared a paper
which they wanted me to sign. It was a statement to the effect that I had been
very courteously received by them, and obtained all the facilities I had
requested, in the accomplishment of my mission, and thanking them for the help
I had received. As I showed signs of hesitation and even started to argue with
them, they said that if I valued my life, I had better sign immediately. The
only course open to me was to convince them that I did not value my life in
the least." [55]
The Slaughter at Dueima
If the Deir Yasin massacre was carried
out by the "rightist" Revisionist Zionist underground organizations, IZL and
Lehi, like massacres occurred on a similar scale throughout the country. The
massacre at Dueima in 1948 was perpetrated by the official Labor Zionist Israeli
army, the Israel Defense Forces (Tzeva Haganah le-Israel or ZAHAL). The account
of the massacre, as described by a soldier who participated in the horror, was
published in Davar, the official Hebrew daily newspaper of the Labor-Zionist-run
Histadrut General Federation of Workers:
"... They killed between eighty to one
hundred Arab men, women and children. To kill the children they [soldiers]
fractured their heads with sticks. There was not one home without corpses. The
men and women of the villages were pushed into houses without food or water.
Then the saboteurs came to dynamite them.
"One commander ordered a soldier to
bring two women into a building he was about to blow up. ...Another soldier
prided himself upon having raped an Arab woman before shooting her to death.
Another Arab woman with her newborn baby was made to clean the place for a
couple of days, and then they shot her and the baby. Educated and
well-mannered commanders who were considered 'good guys' ...became base
murderers, and this not in the storm of battle, but as a method of expulsion
and extermination. The fewer the Arabs who remain, the better." [56]
The strategic value of the Deir Yasin
massacre would be propounded widely over the years by Zionist leaders such as
Eldad [Scheib] who, with Yitzhak Shamir and Nathan Yalin-Mor [Feldman], were in
charge of Lehi. Speaking at a meeting in July 1967, his remarks were published
in the well-known journal of opinion, De'ot, in Winter 1968:
"I have always said that if the
deepest and profoundest hope symbolizing redemption is the rebuilding of the
[Jewish] Temple ...then it is obvious that those mosques [al-Haram al-Sharif
and al-Aqsa] will have, one way or another, to disappear one of these days.
...Had it not been for Deir Yasin, half a million Arabs would be living in the
state of Israel [in 1948]. The state of Israel would not have existed. We must
not disregard this, with full awareness of the responsibility involved. All
wars are cruel. There is no way out of that. This country will either be Eretz
Israel with an absolute Jewish majority and a small Arab minority, or Eretz
Ishmael, and Jewish emigration will begin again if we do not expel the Arabs
one way or another" [57]
Murder in Gaza
The program of massacre did not end with
the formation of the state. Meir Har Tzion's diary describes the massacres in
the refugee camps and villages of Gaza during the early 1950's:
"The wide, dry riverbed glitters in
the moonlight. We advance, carefully, along the mountain slope. Several houses
can be seen. ...In the distance we can see three lights and hear the sounds of
Arab music coming out of the homes immersed in darkness. We split up into
three groups of four men each. Two groups make their way to the immense
refugee camp (AI Burj) to the south of our position. The other group marches
toward the lonely house in the flat area north of Wadi Gaza. We march forward,
trampling over green fields, wading through water canals as the moon bathes us
in its scintillating light. Soon, however, the silence will be shattered by
bullets, explosions, and the screams of those who are now sleeping peacefully.
We advance quickly and enter one of the houses - 'Mann Haatha?' [Arabic for
'Who's there?']
"We leap towards the voices. Fearing
and trembling, two Arabs are standing up against the wall of the building.
They try to escape. I open fire. An ear-piercing scream fills the air. One man
falls to the ground while his friend continues to run. Now we must act - we
have no time to lose. We make our way from house to house as the Arabs
scramble about in confusion.
"Machine guns rattle, their noise
mixed with a terrible howling. We reach the main thoroughfare of the camp. The
mob of fleeing Arabs grows larger. The other group attacks from the opposite
direction. The thunder of our hand-grenades echoes in the distance. We receive
an order to retreat. The attack has come to an end. " [58]
Kibya and Commando Unit 101
Prime Minister Moshe Sharett (1954-55)
gave the following account of the massacre at the village of Kibya in 1953
(October 18, 1953). Ariel Sharon personally commanded the action in which men,
women and children were slaughtered in their homes.
"[In the cabinet meeting] I condemned
the Kibya Affair that exposed us in front of the whole world as a gang of
blood-suckers capable of massacres. ...I warned that this stain will stick to
us and will not be washed away for years to come.
"It was decided that a communique on
Kibya will be published and Ben Gurion was to write it. It is really a
shameful deed. I inquired several times and each time I was solemnly assured
that people would not find out how it had been done." [59]
Sharett noted in his Diary details of
further massacres in Palestinian villages in 1955: "Public opinion, the army and
the police have concluded that Arab blood can be freely shed. It must make the
state appear in the eyes of the world as a savage state." [60]
Kafr Qasim: The Slaughter Continues
The massacre at Kafr Qasim followed the
Zionist pattern. In October 1956, Israeli Brigadier Shadmi, the commander of a
battalion on the Israeli-Jordanian border, ordered a night curfew imposed on the
"minority" [Arab] villages under his command. These villages were inside the
Israeli borders; thus, their inhabitants were Israeli citizens. Shadmi told the
commander of a Frontier Guard unit, Major Melinki, that the curfew must be
"extremely strict" and that "it would not be enough to arrest those who broke it
- they must be shot." He added:
"A dead man is better than the
complications of detention." [61]
"He [Melinki] informed the assembled
officers that ...their task was to impose the curfew in the minority villages
from 1700 to 0600 [5 p.m. to 6 a.m.]. ...Anyone leaving his home, or anyone
breaking the curfew should be shot dead. He added that there were to be no
arrests and that if a number of people were killed in the night this would
facilitate the imposition of the curfew during succeeding nights.
"Lieutenant Frankanthal asked him:
'What do we do with the wounded?' Melinki replied: 'Take no notice of them.'
"A section leader, then asked: 'What
about women and children?' to which Melinki replied: 'No sentimentality.' When
asked: 'What about people returning from their work'?' Melinki answered: 'It
will be just too bad for them, as the Commander said."'
The perpetrators of the Kafr Qasim
massacre - a commando unit of Ariel Sharon-Commando Unit 101 - were all rewarded
with medals and with promotions in the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF).
The genocidal methods needed to impose
the colonial settler state within the pre-1967 borders of Israel are regarded as
the model for dealing ultimately with the Palestinians in the post-1967 occupied
territories. Aharon Yariv, former military intelligence chief and Minister of
Information, stated at a public seminar in the Leonard Davis Institute for
International Relations at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem that:
"There are opinions which advocate
that a war situation be utilized in order to exile 700,000 to 800,000 Arabs.
These opinions are widespread. Statements have been voiced on the matter and
also instruments [apparatuses] have been prepared." [62]
NOTES
38-Hadawi, pp. 43-44.
39-Joseph Weitz, " A Solution to the
Refugee Problem," Dal'ar, September 29, 1967. Cited in Uri Davis and Norton
Mezvinsky, eds, "Document!" from Israel, 1967-1973, p. 21.
40-Davis, Israel: An Apartheid .State,
p" -" "
41-Al Hamishmar (Israeli newspaper),
September 7, 1976.
42-Cited by Fouzi EI-Asmar and Salih
Baransi during discussions with the author, October 1983.
43-Sabri Jiryis, The Arab!" in Israel,
(New York: Monthly Review Press, 1976).
44-Gad Becker, Yediot Ahronot, April 13,
1983, and The New York Times, April 14, 1983.
45-Ibid.
46-David Ben Gurion, Memoirs Volume III,
p. 467.
47-Ben Gurion, from a 1937 speech cited
in his Memoirs.
48-David Ben Gurion, "Report to the
World Council of Poale Zion (the forerunner of the Labor Party), Tel Aviv, 1938.
Cited by Israel Shahak, Journal of Palestine Studies, Spring 1981.
49-Ben Gurion in a 1938 speech.
50-Michael Bar Zohar, Ben Gurion: A
Biography, (New York: Delacorte, 1978)
51-Ben Gurion, July 1948, as cited by
Bar Zohar.
52-Brenner, The Iron Wall, p. 52.
53-Ibid., p. 143.
54-Meir Pa'il, Yediot Aharanot, April 4,
1972. Cited by David Hirst, The Gun and the Olive Branch,(Great Britain: Faber &
Faber Ltd., 1977), pp. 126-127.
55-Jacques de Reynier, A Jerusalem un
Drapeau Flottait Sur La Ligne de Feu, pp. 71-76. Cited by Hirst, pp. 127-8.
56-Davar, June 9, 1979.
57-Eldad, "On the Spirit That Was
Revealed in the People," De'ot, Winter 1968. Davis and Mezvinsky, pp. 186-7.
58-Meir Har Tzion, Diary, (Tel Aviv:
Levin-Epstein Ltd., 1969). Cited in Livia Rokach, Israel's Sacred Terrorism,
(Belmont, Mass.: Association of Arab American University Graduates Inc. Press,
1980) p. 68.
59-Rokach, p. 16.
60-Ibid.
61-From the court records: Judgments of
the District Court: The Military Prosecutor vs. Malor Melinki et. al., Rokach,
p. 66.
62-Ha'aretz, May 23, 1980.
5. The Seizure of
the Land
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