For nearly 20 years Israeli Arabs lived under military rule – not
because they were a Fifth Column but to prevent them returning to the land that
had stolen been from them
Haganah terrorists expelling Palestinian refugees from Haifa |
Israel
is a state that has been built on myths – whether it is that ‘god’ gave the
settlers the land of the Palestinians or the fiction that in 1948, the Palestinians
miraculously ran away on the orders of the Arab states in order that a Jewish state
could be created. As Ilan
Pappe, Benny
Morris and other historians have demonstrated, the Palestinians left
because they were forced to do so.
I
have previously
covered the topic of the desperate efforts of the Israeli state to prevent
the truth emerging. This has taken the form of reclassifying documents that
have been released to historians, presumably on the assumption that they were
not copied and therefore any one quoting from them can’t prove that what they
said is true.
At the end of this article
in Ha’aretz, Adam Raz quotes the cynical comments of Yehiel
Horev, the former director of the Malmab, the secretive Defence Ministry unit
which is dedicated to rewriting the history of the Israeli military’s deeds. In
an interview he made his purposes crystal clear:
“When the
state imposes confidentiality, the published work is weakened… If someone writes
that the horse is black, if the horse isn’t outside the barn, you can’t prove
that it’s really black.”
Of
course all nations based their identity on myths such as the tales of King
Arthur and his knights. Israel’s national myths are not just about ancient
tales of kings but about recent events where the evidence is crystal
clear. Myths that are national lies with
the sole purpose of legitimising the theft of land.
Before and after - the Palestinian Al Hambra cinema in 1937 and today a Church of Scientology centre |
From
1949 to 1966 Israel’s Arab population was kept under military government. They
could not leave their villages without permission. As is the case with
everything in Israel the excuse was that the Arabs were a fifth column, a
security threat.
We
now know, as the article by Adam Raz explains, that this was never true and was
not believed by the military establishment either. The purpose of military rule
was in order to prevent Israel’s Arabs, who had often been displaced by the
fighting from their villages, from returning to their land.
A law, the Absentee Property Law was
passed in 1950 with the specific purpose of defining the property of persons who were expelled, fled or left
the country after 29 November 1947 as well as their property (land, houses, bank
accounts etc.), as “absentees”.
Property belonging to absentees was placed under the control of the Custodian for Absentees’ Property. The Absentees’ Property Law 1950 was the main legal instrument used by Israel to take possession of the land belonging to the internal and external Palestinian refugees.
Property belonging to absentees was placed under the control of the Custodian for Absentees’ Property. The Absentees’ Property Law 1950 was the main legal instrument used by Israel to take possession of the land belonging to the internal and external Palestinian refugees.
Zionists loot a sofa from a Palestinian house (left) and today (right) |
An Orwellian category Present-Absentees
was created. You could be present in Israel, having not been expelled, and
still be absent. Even if you left your
house in 1948 because of the fighting or you were forced out by the Haganah you
were still counted as an Internally Displaced Person. Of course Israeli Jews who
were forced to leave their homes faced no such prohibition.
It is estimated today that 1
in 4 Israeli Palestinians are Internally Displaced Persons. That lies at the
root of inequality in Israel, an inequality emphasised by the Jewish Nation State
Law that made ‘Jewish settlement’ into a national virtue.
Palestinians are not
permitted to live in the homes they formerly lived in, even if they were in
the same area, the property still exists, and they can show that they own it. [Tom
Segev, 1949: The First Israelis, pp. 68-91].
However
it was one thing to pass a racist law but it was another thing to implement
that law. Israeli Palestinians desired nothing more than to return to where
they were living but for Zionism, all wings of the Zionist movement including
the ‘left’ Mapam, it was an article of
faith that no Palestinian should ever return to their home even if they only
moved a mile away for safety.
Thus
it was that military rule was instituted over Israel’s Palestinian population. By forbidding them to leave their villages
without permission it made it that much easier to prevent unauthorised access
to their previous homes. This was necessary because although Zionist settlers
moved into their former villages this took time, not least because at that time
there weren’t enough Zionist settlers.
Thus
Israel was born in a fit of ethnic cleansing and today the job of Malmad and
the Ministry of Defence is to keep documents of the time secret and hidden and
to perpetuate the myth that the Palestinian refugees left of their own accord.
We should bear this in mind when Israel's racist Ambassador to London, Tzipi Hotoveli, states that the Nakba and the forcible expulsion and dispossession of the Palestinians in 1948 was an 'Arab lie'. It is a Zionist lie that there was no expulsion and the fact that that lie is written into Israeli law makes no difference whatsoever.
Tony
Greenstein
A document
unsealed after 60 years reveals the Israeli government’s secret intentions
behind the imposition of a military government on the country’s Arab citizens
in 1948: not to enhance security but to ensure Jewish control of the land
Jan 31, 2020
11:50 AM
Arabs awaiting a security check in Kfar Qasem, during the War of
Independence.GPO
Israel’s defense establishment has for years endeavored to conceal
historical documentation in various archives around the country, as was
revealed in an article in Haaretz last July.
That article, which followed up on a study by the Akevot Institute for
Israeli-Palestinian Conflict Research, noted that for closed to 20 years, the
staff at Malmab – the Defense Ministry’s secretive security department (the
name is a Hebrew acronym for “director of security of the defense
establishment”) – had
been visiting public and private archives and forcing their directors to
mothball documents relating to Israeli history, with special emphasis on
the Arab-Israeli conflict. This was done without legal authority. The article
sparked a furor, and dozens of researchers and historians urged the defense
minister at the time, Benjamin Netanyahu, to halt the clandestine illegal
activity. Their appeal received no response.
When the state imposes
confidentiality, the published work is weakened… If someone writes that the
horse is black, if the horse isn’t outside the barn, you can’t prove that it’s
really black.
What sort of documents did Malmab order the directors to hide away in
their archives’ safes? The many and varied examples include: thick files kept
by the military government under which Israel’s Arab citizens lived for 18
years; testimony about the looting and destruction of Arab villages during the
Independence War; cabinet ministers’ comments on the Arab refugee situation,
following that war; evidence of acts of expulsion and testimony about camps set
up for captives; information about Israel’s nuclear project; documents relating
to various foreign policy issues; and even a letter sent by the poet and
Holocaust survivor Abba Kovner about his own anti-Arab sentiments.
It’s not clear whether Malmab has reduced its activity in the archives
since the article was published. However, it can be said that during the past
six months, files earlier ordered closed by Malmab have been reopened, adding
to our knowledge of the history of the two peoples who share this land. Though
none are earth-shattering in historical significance, these are important
documents that shed light on significant aspects of various events.
One such document is a secret codicil to a report drawn up by the
government-appointed Ratner Committee in early 1956. The document, restored
from oblivion in a safe at the Yad Yaari Research and Documentation Center at
Givat Haviva, is titled, “Security Settlement and the Land Question.”
The importance of the information included in the codicil can be seen
within the context of the history of the military government imposed on
Israel’s Arabs in 1948, just months after independence, and abolished only in
1966. There were about 156,000 Arabs in Israel at the war’s end. Following the
armistice agreement with Jordan (April 1949) and the annexation of the Triangle
– a concentration of Arab locales in central Israel – 27 villages, from Kafr
Qasem in the south to Umm al-Fahm in the north, also fell under the
jurisdiction of the military government.
Administratively, the latter was divided into three regions: north,
center (Triangle) and Negev. Sixty percent of Israel’s Arab citizens lived in
Galilee, 20 percent in the Triangle and the rest in the Negev and in various
so-called mixed cities, such as Haifa and Acre. In practice, about 85 percent
of all Arab citizens were under the rule of the military government, subject to
night-time curfews and regulations requiring them to obtain a travel permit
before leaving their area of residence.
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The military government was based on the Defense (Emergency)
Regulations, promulgated in 1945 by British mandatory authorities, and invoked
by Israel to facilitate supervision of the movement and settlement of its Arab
citizens, and to prevent their return to the areas captured by Jewish forces in
the Independence War. The Jewish public was told that the purpose of the
military government was to deter hostile actions against the state by its Arab
citizens. In practice, however, it only exacerbated the enmity between the two
peoples.
The secret addendum. Described the military government as a tool in the struggle against Arab "trespassers.
The military government, an ugly episode in Israeli history, was the
subject of severe criticism at the time, not least by certain members of the
Jewish community. Various parties on both the left and the right – Ahdut
Ha’avodah, Mapam, the Communist Party and Herut (precursor of Likud) – objected,
each for its own reasons, to its imposition. One reason for the opposition was
that, as early as the early 1950s, the Shin Bet security service had concluded
that the country’s Arab citizens did not pose any sort of security risk.
Opinion was also divided in Mapai, the ruling party (precursor of
Labor). The state committee that was headed by Prof. Yohanan Ratner, a retired
general and architect, was the second body appointed to consider whether the
military government was necessary. The first, convened by Prime Minister David
Ben-Gurion, in 1949, had decided to leave the status quo in place. In February
1956, the three members of the Ratner Committee reached the unanimous
conclusion that “the military government has been reduced as much as it can be,
and there is no place for a further reduction.” That this was probably a
foregone conclusion is attested to by a remark made in public by a member of
that panel, Daniel Auster (mayor of Jerusalem until 1950): “Of 200,000 Arabs
and other minorities now residing in Israel, we did not find one who is loyal
to the state.”
Secret action
A few years later, in the early 1960s, when pressure mounted to abolish
the military government, Ben-Gurion explained that it was still essential in
order to prevent an insurrection by the country’s Arabs. The state’s existence
depends on the presence of the military government, he maintained, although he
did not mention the opposition to it of the security establishment. However, it
gradually became clear that what truly interested the advocates of the
government was not security but control over land. That had been facilitated by
Article 125 of the Defense (Emergency) Regulations (1945), under which a
military commander can issue an order to close “any area or place.”
In a closed meeting of the Mapai leadership, in 1962, Ben-Gurion stated
that without article 125, “we would not have been able to do what we did” in
the Negev and Galilee. “Northern Galilee is Judenrein [empty of Jews],” he
warned.
“We will find ourselves in that situation for many years if we do not prevent – by means of Article 125, by administrative force and military force – entry into forbidden areas. And in the eyes of the Arabs these forbidden areas are theirs. Because the land of Ayalon [Valley] is Arab land.”
Despite the inherent logic of this argument, few testimonies exist about
the military government’s latent nationalist motivations. For one thing, there
was a tacit understanding, rarely violated, that this was not a subject for
public discussion. The secret appendix to the Ratner Committee’s report, found
in the Yaari Archives and in the State Archives, and being published here for
the first time, is highly illuminating about the true motives that guided the
country’s leaders.
According to the panel, the army alone could not safeguard state lands:
only Jewish settlement – “security settlement,” as it was called – could do
that in the long run. It was thus essential to establish Jewish settlements in
the three geographical zones overseen by the military government. Such a
process, however, would be lengthy, the committee members agreed, and in the
meantime Arab citizens uprooted in the war wanted to return to their homes –
something that could not be prevented through legislation. In the view of the
codicil’s framers, “The laxness [by the Arabs] in seizing these areas is due
mainly to the fact these areas were closed by the military government or under
its supervision.” They added that only “the vigilance of the military
government’s representatives largely prevented more serious lawlessness in
regard to land seizure.” In other words, it was that government that prevented
the Arabs from returning to their lands.
The report’s authors also objected to a decision made by Pinhas Lavon, a
senior Mapai figure who opposed the military government and who replaced
Ben-Gurion as defence minister in early 1954 (but resigned a year later during
the so-called Lavon affair, which involved a covert operation in Egypt that
went wrong). Lavon cancelled the prior decision to divide Galilee into 46
separate, closed areas in which Arabs needed a permit to move from one to
another. A division into three or four zones would be enough, to his mind, and
would ease life for Arab citizens. The committee members were adamantly against
this, arguing that it had led to excessively free movement by the Arabs,
because of which “the takeover of the state’s lands increased.”
The Ratner Committee exceeded the official mandate it received upon its
appointment in late 1955. Its secret codicil also includes detailed
recommendations for amending property laws, particularly an Ottoman statute
from 1858. The latter stipulated that anyone, Jew or Arab, who resided on land
for 10 years consecutively was entitled to retain it permanently. Now, eight years
after Israel’s founding, the committee was worried that within two years, much
land would be lost and transferred to Arab citizens. Its recommendation, then,
was to abolish the time frame in regard to remaining on these lands.
The text of the secret codicil shows unequivocally that a major task of
the military government was to act as a means to control the state’s lands
until their permanent status could be regularised and until, with state
support, Jewish settlement could begin in formerly Arab areas. Hence, one of
the committee’s conclusions:
“Until the stabilisation of security settlement in the few reserve areas that can still be settled, it is essential to maintain the military government in these places and to strengthen its apparatus… so that the military government can ensure, directly and indirectly, that the lands are not lost to the state.”
The panel described the military government as a tool in the struggle
against Arab “trespassers,” and added that without the military government,
“many more areas are liable to be lost to the state.” In a reprimand to the
state, the committee noted that the military government was suffering from
“known laxness… as a result of the criticism being levelled at it.”
Published in part at the time (without the secret section), the Ratner
Committee’s recommendations provoked considerable public and governmental
criticism. Ben-Gurion, who received a copy of the report in February 1956,
blocked discussion of it for months because of disagreements within the
government. The Sinai War, which erupted in October 1956, meant that it stayed
off the agenda for an even longer period. Ultimately, the report was never
submitted to the government for approval, but nevertheless served as the basis
for policy in the coming years. In 1958, another committee, headed by Justice
Minister Pinhas Rosen, suggested far-reaching changes in the military
government, effectively proposing its almost total abolition. Not surprisingly,
the cabinet held lengthy discussions in 1959 about whether to publish the
recommendations of the Rosen committee.
Why did the state continue to conceal a report that was written more
than six decades ago? The explanation might lie in a cabinet session in July
1959, in which Education Minister Zalman Aranne stated that “among the
conclusions are some that are political.” In other words, security had nothing
to do with it. He added, “The thing must be done, but not revealed, such as
Judaizing Galilee, for example.”
Perhaps it’s appropriate here to recall the words of Yehiel Horev, the
former director of the Malmab, who admitted in an interview to Haaretz last
July that the defense establishment is simply trying to hamper historians.
“When the state imposes confidentiality, the published work is weakened… If someone writes that the horse is black, if the horse isn’t outside the barn, you can’t prove that it’s really black.”
Adam Raz, a historian, is a researcher at the Akevot Institute for
Israeli-Palestinian Conflict Research and author of the book “Kafr Qasem
Massacre: A Political Biography,” published in both Hebrew and Arabic.
To compound the Zionist atrocities of1948 and since, we have our own Labour Party atrocity in Keir Starmer declaring he gives Zionism his unqualified support. Surrounding him on his front bench and in the cheap seats, are openly declared Zionists with the integrity of rats, who are Socialists in name only and a disgrace to the Labour Party.
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