Israel calls the Nakba a lie. So why do its leaders threaten a second one?
14 June 2022
Here
is a puzzle. What did Israel Katz, an Israeli legislator and until
recently a senior government minister, mean when he threatened
Palestinian students last month with another “Nakba” if they continued
to wave the Palestinian flag? He urged them to “remember 1948” and speak
to their “grandfathers and grandmothers”.
“If you don’t calm down,” he told the Israeli parliament, “we’ll teach you a lesson that won’t be forgotten.”
Nakba denial was the Israeli state’s default position
And
similarly, what was in the mind of Uzi Dayan, a former army general who
is also a member of the Israeli parliament, when he warned Palestinians
two months earlier “to be careful”? They would face “a situation you
know, which is Nakba”, if they refused to passively submit to Israel’s
dictates.
Both threats - and similar ones from senior Israeli
politicians over the years - fly in the face of long-held claims by
successive Israeli governments that the Palestinian narrative of the
Nakba, the Arabic word for “catastrophe”, constitutes a vile distortion
of the region’s history.
According to Israeli officials,
Palestinian accusations that they were violently and willfully expelled
from their homeland in 1948 are a slur against Israel’s character and
its army, supposedly “the most moral in the world”. It is even suggested
that commemorating the Nakba equates to antisemitism.
And yet
paradoxically, Israeli politicians seem only too ready to echo these
supposed calumnies against the founding of the self-declared “Jewish
state”. In 2017, Tzachi Hanegbi, while serving as a senior cabinet
minister, warned Palestinians that they faced a “third Nakba” - after
the mass expulsions of 1948 and 1967 - if they resisted the occupation.
“You’ve
already paid that crazy price twice for your leaders,” he wrote in a
Facebook post. “Don’t try us again, because the result won’t be any
different. You have been warned!”
Nakba denial
According
to Palestinians and a growing number of scholars researching Israel’s
archives, Zionist leaders and their militias waged a violent,
premeditated campaign of ethnic cleansing in 1948 in which four-fifths
of all Palestinians were driven off their lands and into exile. As a
consequence, the Zionist movement was able to declare a Jewish state on
most of their homeland.
Today, many millions of Palestinian
refugees are dispersed across the Middle East and much of the rest of
the world, unable to return. Israeli officials have been so adamant that
this narrative is a lie to demonise Israel that back in 2011 the
government of Benjamin Netanyahu passed a law to erase from the public
space any commemoration of the Nakba.
The
so-called Nakba Law threatens to strip Israeli institutions - including
schools, universities, libraries and municipalities - of state funding
if they allow any such commemoration. In its original form, the law
would have led to a three-year jail term for anyone taking part in such
an event.
But even before the legislation, Nakba denial was the Israeli state’s default position.
In
contrast to the Palestinian narrative, Israel denies any premeditation
or malicious violence by its leaders and soldiers, and instead blames
the Palestinian exodus in 1948 on other factors.
It claims that
most Palestinians left on the orders of Arab leaders, rather than that
they were ethnically cleansed by the new Israeli state’s army. Officials
argue too that the Israeli army attacked Palestinian communities
largely in response to violence from Palestinian fighters and units of
Arab soldiers from neighbouring countries that came to their aid.
Noted
Israeli historians like Benny Morris continue to argue that “at no
stage of the 1948 war was there a decision by the leadership of the
Yishuv [pre-state Jewish community] or the state to ‘expel the Arabs’.”
On this official view, most Palestinians either chose to leave or were
responsible for provoking the violence that led to them being forced
out. Israel’s hands are supposedly clean.
But if Israelis really
believe this to be the case, why are veteran politicians such as Katz,
Dayan and Hanegbi using the Palestinian terminology of Nakba themselves -
and threatening that Israel will carry out a second or third time what
officials insist never happened in the first place?
Operation Broom
Israel’s
narrative is so dominant that until recently most Israeli Jews believed
that their state’s founding father, David Ben-Gurion, urged the
Palestinian population fleeing the large port city of Haifa to return in
1948. Palestinians supposedly preferred to wait out the fighting until
the Zionist forces were defeated.
According to this account,
Ben-Gurion sent Golda Meir, later prime minister herself, on a mission
to reassure fleeing Palestinians. In her autobiography, Meir recounts:
“I sat on the beach there [in Haifa] and begged them to return home… I
pleaded with them until I was exhausted but it didn’t work.”
But a
letter written in early June 1948 by Ben-Gurion came to light seven
years ago that undermines Israel’s propaganda. In it, he responded
angrily to reports that the British consul was “working to return the
Arabs to Haifa”. Ben-Gurion demanded that Haifa’s Jewish leaders
actively stymie these British efforts.
In fact, an Israeli
scholar who was handed an archive file in error disclosed nearly a
decade ago that the story of Arab leaders insisting Palestinians flee
their homeland in 1948 was a nonsense. It was concocted by Israeli
officials as a way to end US pressure on Israel to allow Palestinian
refugees to return.
Beginning in the 1980s, a new generation of
Israeli historians started trawling through Israel’s archives as
sections of it were briefly opened. They unearthed documentary evidence
of an entirely different set of events that accorded with the
Palestinian narrative.
Military operations had suggestive titles
like “Operation Broom” and commanders received orders to “clean” areas.
Many hundreds of Palestinian villages were destroyed as soon as their
populations had been driven out by Zionist soldiers, with the clear
intent never to let them return.
Reign of terror
And
despite Israel’s best efforts to keep it under wraps, archival evidence
has kept emerging of Israeli massacres of Palestinian civilians, making
explicit why the vast majority of Palestinians fled in 1948.
In
one of the worst, around 170 unarmed men, women and children were
executed by the Israeli army near Hebron, and hundreds more wounded,
even as they offered no resistance.
A letter from the time by
Shabtai Kaplan, a soldier and journalist who witnessed the Dawayimah
massacre, was found in 2016. He observed that the killings were part of
“a system of expulsion and destruction”. The rationale, he wrote, was:
“The fewer Arabs who remain, the better.”
Another long-denied
massacre of Palestinians - at Tantura, on the coast south of Haifa - was
thrust into the spotlight earlier this year after a new Israeli film
included testimonies from former soldiers in which they admitted
committing the massacre.
Katz, Dayan and Hanegbi understand what
the word Nakba means for Palestinians and are aware too that the
Palestinian narrative of the events of 1948 has been confirmed by the
archives.
Nakba - for them, as for Palestinians - means a reign
of military terror to drive out the Palestinian population in areas
Israel wishes to further colonise with Jews, or “Judaise” as official
Israeli terminology puts it. It means yet another wave of ethnic
cleansing of Palestinians, both those under occupation and the minority
living with highly degraded citizenship inside Israel.
In
threatening a second Nakba, Katz and Dayan are simply confirming that
Israeli leaders, despite their protestations, have always known what the
Nakba was - and have always approved of the goal of ethnic cleansing
Palestinians.
The irony is that, while Israel denounces
Palestinians and their supporters as liars for speaking of the Nakba,
its own officials publicly cite the Nakba as a real event that can be
repeated if Palestinians do not submit completely.
Genocidal rhetoric
That
should not surprise us. After all, the goal of expulsion did not end
with the events of 1948 - the reason Palestinians speak of an “ongoing
Nakba”.
Israeli officials regularly employ genocidal-type
rhetoric. As head of Israel’s military, Moshe Yaalon compared the threat
posed by Palestinians to “cancer” that had “to be severed and fought to
the bitter end”.
Ayelet Shaked, currently Israel’s interior
minister, has characterised all Palestinians as “enemy combatants” - a
term suggesting they are legitimate military targets. She has referred
to any Palestinians that fights Israel’s decades of belligerent
occupation as “snakes” and indicated that their entire families can be
eliminated, including their mothers, otherwise “more little snakes will
be raised there”.
Leading rabbis in Israel are even more
explicit. Two wrote a notorious handbook, The King’s Torah, arguing that
it is permitted to kill Palestinians, even babies, pre-emptively
because “it is clear that they will grow to harm us”. Neither faced
prosecution.
‘Finish the job’
These types of menacing
comments are not just directed at Palestinians in the occupied
territories. Notably, the recent Nakba threats were chiefly aimed at
Israel’s 1.8 million Palestinian citizens, who, Israel falsely
maintains, enjoy equal status with Israel’s Jewish citizens.
Palestinian
citizens are the descendants of the small numbers of Palestinians who
managed to avoid expulsion in 1948 - due largely to oversights and
international pressure.
Exemplifying Israelis’ cognitive
dissonance on this issue, historian Benny Morris has cited the existence
of a Palestinian minority in Israel as proof that the Nakba is a lie
and that Israel never intended to ethnically cleanse Palestinians.
He
has done so even as he lamented the fact that Ben-Gurion “got cold feet
during the [1948] war” and “faltered” in failing to expel every last
Palestinian.
In this, he shares the sentiments of far-right
politicians like Bezalel Smotrich, another former government minister.
Last year, Smotrich addressed legislators representing the Palestinian
minority, saying: “It’s a mistake that Ben-Gurion didn’t finish the job
and didn’t throw you out in 1948.”
On another occasion, Smotrich made a barely veiled threat of expulsion: “Arabs are citizens of Israel - for now, at least.”
Caught in a trap
Such
threats are far from idle. In its first decades, Israel continued to
secretly expel vulnerable communities of Palestinian citizens, such as
the Bedouin in the Naqab, and plotted to expel more.
Israel’s
security forces carried out an early massacre of Palestinian citizens,
almost certainly to incentivise them to leave. Israel has also conducted
at least one secret military exercise to prepare for a scenario in
which there is a mass expulsion of Israel’s Palestinian minority.
Israel’s
most senior politicians have proposed opaque plans to strip much of the
Palestinian minority of its Israeli citizenship and their right to live
in the state of Israel.
And in addition to comments by Katz and
Dayan, Israeli politicians - even former prime ministers such as
Netanyahu - have incited against Palestinian citizens as freely as they
have Palestinians under occupation, suggesting they are terrorists and
murderers.
And all of this takes place as the jurisdiction of
Israel’s settlements continues to expand relentlessly in the occupied
territories, and Palestinians in the West Bank face ever more pressure
and violence to leave their homes and their homeland.
While
Palestinians are effectively banned from publicly referring to the Nakba
and may soon be barred even from waving a Palestinian flag in public
spaces, Israelis can march through Palestinian communities calling out:
“Death to the Arabs!” and “May your village burn!”
The reality,
as hinted at by Katz and Dayan’s latest statements, is that Palestinians
are caught in a trap. If they assert their national identity, or even
their most basic rights such as by waving a Palestinian flag, they risk
providing Israel with the pretext to forcibly expel them, to carry out
another Nakba.
But if they stay silent, as Katz and Dayan demand,
the process of incremental ethnic cleansing, a second Nakba, takes
place anyway - if a little more quietly.
Palestinians pay the price either way - while Israel’s policy of Nakba continues unabated.
The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.