A Story of Betrayal: From This Point
Onwards, The Situation Would Go From Bad To Worse
17 September 2012
By Stuart
Littlewood
A
seventeen-year-old girl trembling with grief and rage
told me how she witnessed her teenage cousin being
shot through the head by Israeli soldiers. They had
been walking to school together and the soldiers were
taunting him. In response he had picked up a rock. She
accused me and all Americans of knowing about these
daily abuses against Palestinians but not caring. I
tried to tell her that most Americans do not know
about these tragedies, and that we would never support
those who perpetrate them. But her belief that the
average American is savvy about international politics
was as strong as it was naive. "Of course Americans
know we're suffering over here," she retorted." You're
the most powerful nation on earth. And everyone has a
television. I know you know."
These words are borrowed from
David Hazard's excellent book
Blood Bothers,
which charts the life of Father Elias Chacour, a
remarkable Christian Palestinian who grew up on the
shores of Galilee and saw his beautiful world
shattered by the Israeli occupation
Americans aren't alone in their
ignorance. British people too seem largely unaware of
how tragedy was allowed to overtake the Palestinians,
and how this once-peaceful province of the Ottoman
Empire, renowned for its antiquities and culture,
became a land scarred by conflict, where everyday
humiliation stokes the fires of hatred. You cannot get
in or out, or move around, without running the
gauntlet of Israeli customs, baggage searches,
roadblocks and checkpoints under the sneer of
contemptuous, sunglassed troops. Even in remote
countryside you'll run into one of 700 armed
checkpoints.
The Israeli Defence
Force is largely made up of National
Servicemen and women – teenagers drafted in and
trained to use lethal force. They have a reputation
for being trigger-happy. On the other hand they don't
all wish to play the ‘heavy' or necessarily agree with
their orders. The two pictured here were likable lads
and cracked a smile for the camera. But all the time I
was aware of a third guard nearby with a gun on my
back.
The truth about Palestine doesn't
sit well with Britain's now crumbling reputation for
fair play. Its name has been airbrushed from maps and
purged, like a dirty word, from diplomatic lexicons.
Even today the subject is only haphazardly taught in
our schools. For older generations like mine it was
never on the curriculum.
To understand why, one must at
least dip a toe into the complicated history of the
last 90 years. To help readers over this hurdle, I
offer this ‘potted' version. At least it will explain
why I grabbed my camera and went to see Palestine for
myself.
For centuries long our land enslaved
by Turkish kings with sharpened blade.
We prayed to end the Sultan's curse,
the British came and spoke a verse.
"It's World War One, if you agree
to fight with us we'll set you free."
The war we fought at Britain's side,
our blood was shed for Arab pride.
At war's end Turks were smitten,
our only gain, the lies of Britain.
Stephen Ostrander's simple verse
manages to cut through mountains of rhetoric to the
root cause of the Arab-Israeli conflict. http://www.deiryassin.org/poem2.html
There was a Jewish state in the
Holy Land some 3,000 years ago, but the Canaanites and
Philistines were there first. The Jews, one of several
invading groups, left and returned several times, and
were expelled by the Roman occupation in 70AD and
again in 135AD. Since the 7th century Palestine has
been mainly Arabic. During the First World War the
country was ‘liberated' from Turkish Ottoman rule
after the Allied Powers, in correspondence between Sir
Henry McMahon and Sharif Hussein ibn Ali of Mecca in
1915, promised independence to Arab leaders in return
for their help in defeating Germany's ally.
However, a new-Jewish political
movement called Zionism was finding favour among the
ruling elite in London, and the British Government was
persuaded by the Zionists' chief spokesman, Chaim
Weizman, to surrender Palestine for their new Jewish
homeland. Hardly a thought, it seems, was given to the
earlier pledge to the Arabs, who had occupied and
owned the land for 1,500 years – longer, say some
scholars, than the Jews ever did.
The Zionists, fuelled by the
notion that an ancient Biblical prophecy gave them the
title deeds, aimed to push the Arabs out by populating
the area with millions of Eastern European Jews. They
had already set up farm communities and founded a new
city, Tel Aviv, but by 1914 Jews numbered only 85,000
to the Arabs' 615,000. The infamous
Balfour Declaration of 1917 – actually a letter
from the British foreign secretary, Lord Balfour, to
the most senior Jew in England, Lord Rothschild –
pledged assistance for the Zionist cause with apparent
disregard for the consequences to the native majority.
Calling itself a "declaration of sympathy with Jewish
Zionist aspirations", it said:
His Majesty's
Government view with favour the establishment in
Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people,
and will use their best endeavours to facilitate the
achievement of this object, it being clearly
understood that nothing shall be done which may
prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing
and non-Jewish communities….
But Balfour, a Zionist convert,
later wrote:
In Palestine we do
not propose even to go through the form of consulting
the wishes of the present inhabitants of the country.
The four powers are committed to Zionism and Zionism,
be it right or wrong, good or bad, is rooted in
age-long tradition, in present needs, in future hopes,
of far profounder import than the desires and
prejudices of the 700,000 Arabs who now occupy that
land.
There was opposition, of course.
Lord Sydenham warned: "The harm done by dumping down
an alien population upon an Arab country may never be
remedied. What we have done, by concessions not to the
Jewish people but to a Zionist extreme section, is to
start a running sore in the East, and no-one can tell
how far that sore will extend."
The American King-Crane
Commission of1919 thought it a gross violation of
principle. "No British officers consulted by the
Commissioners believed that the Zionist programme
could be carried out except by force of arms. That, of
itself, is evidence of a strong sense of the injustice
of the Zionist programme."
There were other reasons why the
British were courting disaster. A secret deal, called
the Sykes-Picot Agreement, had been concluded in
1916 between France and Britain, in consultation with
Russia, to re-draw the map of the Middle Eastern
territories won from Turkey. Britain was to take
Jordan, Iraq and Haifa. The area now referred to as
Palestine was declared an international zone. The
Sykes-Picot Agreement, the Balfour Declaration and the
promises made earlier in the McMahon-Hussein letters
all cut across each other. It seems to have been a
case of the left hand not knowing what the right was
doing in the confusion of war.
After the Russian Revolution of
1917 Lenin released a copy of the confidential
Sykes-Picot Agreement into the public domain, sowing
seeds of distrust among the Arabs. Thus the unfolding
story had all the makings of a major tragedy.
Subsequent crimes – on both sides – flow from this
triple-cross. The Zionist organization asked to submit
its proposal for Palestine to the 1919 Paris Peace
Conference, hitching a ride on the British request to
be granted a mandate over Palestine in order to
implement the Balfour Declaration. The Zionist case
included the statement that "the land itself needs
redemption. Much of it is left desolate. Its present
condition is a standing reproach. Two things are
necessary for that redemption – a stable and
enlightened government, and an addition to the present
population which shall be energetic, intelligent,
devoted to the country, and backed by the large
financial resources that are indispensable for
development. Such a population the Jews alone can
supply."
Prominent US Jews opposed to this
move handed President Woodrow Wilson a
counter-statement objecting to the Zionists' plan, and
asked him to submit it to the peace conference. It
said the scheme to reorganise the Jews as a national
unit with territorial sovereignty in Palestine "not
only misrepresents the trend of the history of the
Jews, who ceased to be a nation 2000 years ago, but
involves the limitation and possible annulment of the
larger claims of Jews for full citizenship and human
rights in all lands in which those rights are not yet
secure. For the very reason that the new era upon
which the world is entering aims to establish
government everywhere on principles of true democracy,
we reject the Zionistic project of a national home for
the Jewish people in Palestine."
Foreseeing the future with
uncanny accuracy, it went on to say, "We rejoice in
the avowed proposal of the Peace Congress to put into
practical application the fundamental principles of
democracy.
That principle, which asserts
equal rights for all citizens of a state, irrespective
of creed or ethnic descent, should be applied in such
a manner as to exclude segregation of any kind, be it
nationalistic or other. Such segregation must
inevitably create differences among the sections of
the population of a country. Any such plan of
segregation is necessarily reactionary in its
tendency, undemocratic in spirit and totally contrary
to the practices of free government, especially as
these are exemplified by our own country."
Their statement quoted Sir George
Adam Smith, a noted biblical scholar and the
acknowledged expert on the region, who had said: "It
is not true that Palestine is the national home of the
Jewish people and of no other people… It is not
correct to call its non-Jewish inhabitants ‘Arabs', or
to say that they have left no image of their spirit
and made no history except in the great Mosque… Nor
can we evade the fact that Christian communities have
been [there] as long as ever the Jews were… These are
legitimate questions stirred up by the claims of
Zionism, but the Zionists have not yet fully faced
them".
America, England, France, Italy,
Switzerland and all the most advanced nations of the
world, it said, are composed of representatives of
many races and religions. "Their glory lies in the
freedom of conscience and worship, in the liberty of
thought and custom which binds the followers of many
faiths and varied civilizations in the common bonds of
political union.
"A Jewish State involves
fundamental limitations as to race and religion, else
the term ‘Jewish' means nothing. To unite Church and
State, in any form, as under the old Jewish hierarchy,
would be a leap backward of two thousand years.
"We ask that Palestine be
constituted as a free and independent state, to be
governed under a democratic form of government
recognizing no distinctions of creed or race or ethnic
descent, and with adequate power to protect the
country against oppression of any kind. We do not wish
to see Palestine, either now or at any time in the
future, organized as a Jewish State."
But Wilson apparently failed to
put the document before the Conference.
In 1922 the League of Nations
placed Palestine under British mandate, which
incorporated the principles of the Balfour
Declaration. Jewish immigration would be facilitated
"under suitable conditions" and a nationality law
would allow Jews taking up permanent residence to
acquire Palestinian citizenship (in sharp contrast to
the Jews-only law now operated by a dominant Israel).
But the high commissioner was
soon recommending a halt to Jewish immigration for
fear that it would create a class of landless Arabs.
That same year the British government, aware of Arab
concerns that the Balfour Declaration was being
interpreted in an "exaggerated" way by Zionists and
their sympathisers, issued a White Paper to clarify
the position.
"The terms of the Declaration
referred to," it said, "do not contemplate that
Palestine as a whole should be converted into a Jewish
National Home, but that such a Home should be founded
‘in Palestine'. In this connection it has been
observed with satisfaction that at a meeting of the
Zionist Congress, the supreme governing body of the
Zionist Organization, held at Carlsbad in September,
1921, a resolution was passed expressing as the
official statement of Zionist aims the determination
of the Jewish people to live with the Arab people on
terms of unity and mutual respect, and together with
them to make the common home into a flourishing
community, the upbuilding of which may assure to each
of its peoples an undisturbed national development…
"It is also necessary to point
out that the Zionist Commission in Palestine, now
termed the Palestine Zionist Executive, has not
desired to possess, and does not possess, any share in
the general administration of the country. Nor does
the special position assigned to the Zionist
Organization in Article IV of the Draft Mandate for
Palestine imply any such functions. That special
position relates to the measures to be taken in
Palestine affecting the Jewish population, and
contemplates that the organization may assist in the
general development of the country, but does not
entitle it to share in any degree in its government.
"Further, it is contemplated that
the status of all citizens of Palestine in the eyes of
the law shall be Palestinian, and it has never been
intended that they, or any section of them, should
possess any other juridical status.
"It is necessary," said the White
Paper with masterly ambiguity, "that the Jewish
community in Palestine should be able to increase its
numbers by immigration. This immigration cannot be so
great in volume as to exceed whatever may be the
economic capacity of the country at the time to absorb
new arrivals. It is essential to ensure that the
immigrants should not be a burden upon the people of
Palestine as a whole, and that they should not deprive
any section of the present population of their
employment."
However, the White Paper denied
that a promise had been made to the Arabs ahead of the
Balfour Declaration. "It is not the case, as has been
represented by the Arab Delegation, that during the
war His Majesty's Government gave an undertaking that
an independent national government should be at once
established in Palestine. This representation mainly
rests upon a letter dated the 24th October, 1915, from
Sir Henry McMahon, then His Majesty's High
Commissioner in Egypt, to the Sharif of Mecca, now
King Hussein of the Kingdom of the Hejaz. That letter
is quoted as conveying the promise to the Sharif of
Mecca to recognise and support the independence of the
Arabs within the territories proposed by him. But this
promise was given subject to a reservation made in the
same letter, which excluded from its scope, among
other territories, the portions of Syria lying to the
west of the District of Damascus. This reservation has
always been regarded by His Majesty's Government as
covering the vilayet of Beirut and the independent
Sanjak of Jerusalem. The whole of Palestine west of
the Jordan was thus excluded from Sir Henry McMahon's
pledge.
"Nevertheless,
it is the intention
of His Majesty's government to foster the
establishment of a full measure of self-government in
Palestine. But they are of the opinion that,
in the special circumstances of that country, this
should be accomplished by gradual stages…"
From this point onwards, the
situation would go from bad to worse.
"In view of the unhappy state
of world affairs and the need for ordinary people
to be aware of the issues that threaten peace in the
Middle East and even our own comfy way of life, My
Catbird Seat (MCS) at http://mycatbirdseat.com/author/stuart/,
and Veterans News Now (VNN) at http://www.veteransnewsnow.com/author/littlewood/,
have decided to serialise the opening chapters of
"Radio Free Palestine". These include: A Wake-up Call; A
Story of Betrayal; One Land, Two Peoples, Three
Religions"
Stuart Littlewood's articles
are published widely on the web. He is author of the
book Radio Free Palestine, which tells the plight of
the Palestinians under occupation. For further
information please visit www.radiofreepalestine.org.uk
"Lawlessness must have painful consequences for the
lawless, not their victims." (Stuart Littlewood)