Zionism And Its Impact
By Ann M. Lesch
The Zionist movement has maintained a striking continuity in
its aims and methods over the past century. From the start, the
movement sought to achieve a Jewish majority in Palestine and
to establish a Jewish state on as much of the LAND as possible.
The methods included promoting mass Jewish immigration and acquiring
tracts of land that would become the inalienable property of
the Jewish people. This policy inevitably prevented the indigenous
Arab residents from attaining their national goals and establishing
a Palestinian state. It also necessitated displacing Palestinians
from their lands and jobs when their presence conflicted with
Zionist interests.
The Zionist movement—and subsequently the state of ISRAEL—failed
to develop a positive approach to the Palestinian presence and
aspirations. Although many Israelis recognized the moral dilemma
posed by the Palestinians, the majority either tried to ignore
the issue or to resolve it by force majeure. Thus, the Palestine
problem festered and grew, instead of being resolved.
The Zionist movement arose in late nineteenth-century Europe,
influenced by the nationalist ferment sweeping that continent.
Zionism acquired its particular focus from the ancient Jewish
longing for the return to Zion and received a strong impetus
from the increasingly intolerable conditions facing the large
Jewish community in tsarist Russia. The movement also developed
at the time of major European territorial acquisitions in Asia
and Africa and benefited from the European powers' competition
for influence in the shrinking Ottoman Empire.
One result of this involvement with European expansionism,
however, was that the leaders of the nascent nationalist movements
in the Middle East viewed Zionism as an adjunct of European
colonialism. Moreover, Zionist assertions of the contemporary
relevance of the Jews' historical ties to Palestine, coupled
with their land purchases and immigration, alarmed the indigenous
population of the Ottoman districts that Palestine comprised.
The Jewish community (yishuv) rose from 6 percent of Palestine's
population in 1880 to 10 percent by 1914. Although the numbers
were insignificant, the settlers were outspoken enough to arouse
the opposition of Arab leaders and induce them to exert counter
pressure on the Ottoman regime to prohibit Jewish immigration
and land buying.
As early as 1891, a group of Muslim and Christian notables
cabled Istanbul, urging the government to prohibit Jewish immigration
and land purchase. The resulting edicts radically curtailed
land purchases in the sanjak (district) of JERUSALEM for the
next decade. When a Zionist Congress resolution in 1905 called
for increased colonization, the Ottoman regime suspended all
land transfers to Jews in both the sanjak of Jerusalem and
the wilayat (province) of Beirut.
After the coup d'etat by the Young Turks in 1908, the Palestinians
used their representation in the central parliament and their
access to newly opened local newspapers to press their claims
and express their concerns. They were particularly vociferous
in opposition to discussions that took place between the financially
hard-pressed Ottoman regime and Zionist leaders in 1912-13,
which would have let the world Zionist Organization purchase
crown land (jiftlik) in the Baysan Valley, along the Jordan
River.
The Zionists did not try to quell Palestinian fears, since
their concern was to encourage colonization from Europe and
to minimize the obstacles in their path. The only effort to
meet to discuss their aspirations occurred in the spring of
1914. Its difficulties illustrated the incompatibility in their
aspirations. The Palestinians wanted the Zionists to present
them with a document that would state their precise political
ambitions, their willingness to open their schools to Palestinians,
and their intentions of learning Arabic and integrating with
the local population. The Zionists rejected this proposal.
The proclamation of the BALFOUR DECLARATION on November 2,
1917, and the arrival of British troops in Palestine soon after,
transformed the political situation. The declaration gave the
Zionist movement its long-sought legal status. The qualification
that: nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and
religious rights of the existing non-Jewish communities in
Palestine seemed a relatively insignificant obstacle to the
Zionists, especially since it referred only to those communities':
civil and religious rights, not to political or national rights.
The subsequent British occupation gave Britain the ability
to carry out that pledge and provide the protection necessary
for the Zionists to realize their aims.
In fact, the British had contracted three mutually contradictory
promises for the future of Palestine. The Sykes-Picot Agreement
of 1916 with the French and Russian governments proposed that
Palestine be placed under international administration. The
HUSAYN-MCMAHON CORRESPONDENCE, 1915-1916, on whose basis the
Arab revolt was launched, implied that Palestine would be included
in the zone of Arab independence. In contrast, the Balfour
Declaration encouraged the colonization of Palestine by Jews,
under British protection. British officials recognized the
irreconcilability of these pledges but hoped that a modus vivendi
could be achieved, both between the competing imperial powers,
France and Britain, and between the Palestinians and the Jews.
Instead, these contradictions set the stage for the three decades
of conflict-ridden British rule in Palestine.
Initially, many British politicians shared the Zionists' assumption
that gradual, regulated Jewish immigration and settlement would
lead to a Jewish majority in Palestine, whereupon it would
become independent, with legal protection for the Arab minority.
The assumption that this could be accomplished without serious
resistance was shattered at the outset of British rule. Britain
thereafter was caught in an increasingly untenable position,
unable to persuade either Palestinians or Zionists to alter
their demands and forced to station substantial military forces
in Palestine to maintain security.
The Palestinians had assumed that they would gain some form
of independence when Ottoman rule disintegrated, whether through
a separate state or integration with neighboring Arab lands.
These hopes were bolstered by the Arab revolt, the entry of
Faysal Ibn Husayn into Damascus in 1918, and the proclamation
of Syrian independence in 1920. Their hopes were dashed, however,
when Britain imposed direct colonial rule and elevated the
yishuv to a special status. Moreover, the French ousted Faysal
from Damascus in July 1920, and British compensation—in
the form of thrones in Transjordan and Iraq for Abdullah and
Faysal, respectively—had no positive impact on the Arabs
in Palestine. In fact, the action underlined the different
treatment accorded Palestine and its disadvantageous political
situation. These concerns were exacerbated by Jewish immigration:
the yishuv comprised 28 percent of the population by 1936 and
reached 32 percent by 1947 (click here for Palestine's population
distribution per district in 1946).
The British umbrella was CRITICALLY important to the growth and consolidation
of the yishuv, enabling it to root itself firmly despite Palestinian
opposition. Although British support diminished in the late 1930s,
the yishuv was strong enough by then to withstand the Palestinians
on its own. After World War II, the Zionist movement also was able
to turn to the emerging superpower, the UNITED STATES, for diplomatic
support and legitimization.
The Palestinians' responses to Jewish immigration, land purchases,
and political demands were remarkably consistent. They insisted
that Palestine remain an Arab country, with the same right
of self-determination and independence as Egypt, Transjordan,
and Iraq. Britain granted those countries independence without
a violent struggle since their claims to self-determination
were not contested by European settlers. The Palestinians argued
that Palestinian territory COULD NOT AND SHOULD NOT be used
to solve the plight of the Jews in Europe, and that Jewish
national aspirations should not override their own rights.
Palestinian opposition peaked in the late 1930s: the six-month general
strike in 1936 was followed the next year by a widespread rural revolt.
This rebellion welled up from the bottom of Palestinian society—unemployed
urban workers, displaced peasants crowded into towns, and debt-ridden
villagers. It was supported by most merchants and professionals in
the towns, who feared competition from the yishuv. Members of the elite
families acted as spokesmen before the British administration through
the ARAB HIGHER COMMITTEE, which was formed during the 1936 strike.
However, the British banned the committee in October 1937 and arrested
its members, on the eve of the revolt.
Only one of the Palestinian political parties was willing
to limit its aims and accept the principle of territorial partition:
The NATIONAL DEFENSE PARTY, led by RAGHIB AL-NASHASHIBI (mayor
of JERUSALEM from 1920 to 1934), was willing to accept partition
in 1937 so long as the Palestinians obtained sufficient land
and could merge with Transjordan to form a larger political
entity. However, the British PEEL COMMISSION's plan, announced
in July 1937, would have forced the Palestinians to leave the
olive- and grain- growing areas of Galilee, the orange groves
on the Mediterranean coast, and the urban port cities of HAIFA
and ACRE. That was too great a loss for even the National Defense
Party to accept, and so it joined in the general denunciations
of partition.
During the PALESTINE MANDATE period the Palestinian community
was 70 percent rural, 75 to 80 percent illiterate, and divided
internally between town and countryside and between elite families
and villagers. Despite broad support for the national aims,
the Palestinians could not achieve the unity and strength necessary
to withstand the combined pressure of the British forces and
the Zionist movement. In fact, the political structure was
decapitated in the late 1930s when the British banned the Arab
Higher Committee and arrested hundreds of local politicians.
When efforts were made in the 1940s to rebuild the political
structure, the impetus came largely from outside, from Arab
rulers who were disturbed by the deteriorating conditions in
Palestine and feared their repercussions on their own newly
acquired independence.
The Arab rulers gave priority to their own national considerations
and provided limited diplomatic and military support to the
Palestinians. The Palestinian Arabs continued to demand a state
that would reflect the Arab majority's weight—diminished
to 68 percent by 1947. They rejected the UNITED NATIONS (U.N.)
partition plan of November 1947, which granted the Jews statehood
in 55 percent of Palestine, an area that included as many Arab
residents as Jews. However, the Palestinian Arabs lacked the
political strength and military force to back up their claim.
Once Britain withdrew its forces in 1948 and the Jews proclaimed
the state of Israel, the Arab rulers used their armed forces
to protect those zones that the partition plans had ALLOCATED
to the Arab state. By the time armistice agreements were signed
in 1949, the Arab areas had shrunk to only 23 percent of Palestine.
The Egyptian army held the GAZA STRIP, and Transjordanian forces
dominated the hills of central Palestine. At least 726,000
of the 1.3 million Palestinian Arabs fled from the area held
by Israel. Emir Abdullah subsequently annexed the zone that
his army occupied, renaming it the WEST BANK.
The dispossession and expulsion of a majority of Palestinians
were the result of Zionist policies planned over a thirty-year
period. Fundamentally, Zionism focused on two needs:
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to attain a Jewish majority in Palestine;
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to acquire statehood irrespective of the wishes of the
indigenous population. Non-recognition of the political
and national rights of the Palestinian people was a KEY
Zionist policy.
Chaim Weizmann, president of the World Zionist Organization,
placed maximalist demands before the Paris Peace Conference
in February 1919. He stated that he expected 70,000 to 80,000
Jewish immigrants to arrive each year in Palestine. When they
became the majority, they would form an independent government
and Palestine and would become: "as Jewish as England
is English". Weizmann proposed that the boundaries should
be the Mediterranean Sea on the west; Sidon, the Litani River,
and Mount Hermon on the north; all of Transjordan west of the
Hijaz railway on the east; and a line across Sinai from Aqaba
to al-Arish on the south. He argued that: "the boundaries
above outlined are what we consider essential for the economic
foundation of the country. Palestine must have its natural
outlet to the sea and control of its rivers and their headwaters.
The boundaries are sketched with the general economic needs
and historic traditions of the country in mind." Weizmann
offered the Arab countries a free zone in Haifa and a joint
port at Aqaba.
Weizmann's policy was basically in accord with that of the
leaders of the yishuv, who held a conference in December 1918
in which they formulated their own demands for the peace conference.
The yishuv plan stressed that they must control appointments
to the administrative services and that the British must actively
assist their program to transform Palestine into a democratic
Jewish state in which the Arabs would have minority rights.
Although the peace conference did not explicitly allocate such
extensive territories to the Jewish national home and did not
support the goal of transforming all of Palestine into a Jewish
state, it opened the door to such a possibility. More important,
Weizmann's presentation stated clearly and forcefully the long-term
aims of the movement. These aims were based on certain fundamental
tenets of Zionism:
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The movement was seen not only as inherently righteous,
but also as meeting an overwhelming need among European
Jews.
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European culture was superior to indigenous Arab culture;
the Zionists could help civilize the East.
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External support was needed from a major power; relations
with the Arab world were a secondary matter.
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Arab nationalism was a legitimate political movement,
but Palestinian nationalism was either illegitimate or
nonexistent.
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Finally, if the Palestinians would not reconcile themselves
to Zionism, force majeure, not compromise, was the only
feasible response.
First
Adherents of Zionism believed that the Jewish people had an
inherent and inalienable right to Palestine. Religious Zionists
stated this in biblical terms, referring to the divine promise
of the land to the tribes of Israel. Secular Zionists relied
more on the argument that Palestine alone could solve the problem
of Jewish dispersion and virulent anti-Semitism. Weizmann stated
in 1930 that the needs of 16 million Jews had to be balanced
against those of 1 million Palestinian Arabs: "The Balfour
Declaration and the Mandate have definitely lifted [Palestine]
out of the context of the Middle East and linked it up with
the world-wide Jewish problem....The rights which the Jewish
people has been adjudged in Palestine do not depend on the
consent, and cannot be subjected to the will, of the majority
of its present inhabitants."
This perspective took its most extreme form with the Revisionist movement.
Its founder, Vladimir Jabotinsky, was so self-righteous about the Zionist
cause that he justified any actions taken against the Arabs in order
to realize Zionist goals.
Second
Zionists generally felt that European civilization was superior
to Arab culture and values. Theodor Herzl, the founder of the
World Zionist Organization, wrote in the Jewish State (1886)
that the Jewish community could serve as: "part of a wall
of defense for Europe in Asia, an outpost of civilization against
barbarism."
Weizmann also believed that he was engaged in a fight of civilization
against the desert. The Zionists would bring enlightenment and economic
development to the backward Arabs. Similarly, David Ben-Gurion, the
leading labor Zionist, could not understand why Arabs rejected his
offer to use Jewish finance, scientific knowledge, and technical expertise
to modernize the Middle East. He attributed this rejection to backwardness
rather than to the affront that Zionism posed to the Arabs' pride and
to their aspirations for independence.
Third
Zionist leaders recognized that they needed an external patron
to legitimize their presence in the international arena and
to provide them legal and military protection in Palestine.
Great Britain played that role in the 1920s and 1930s, and
the United States became the mentor in the mid-1940s. Zionist
leaders realized that they needed to make tactical accommodations
to that patron—such as downplaying their public statements
about their political aspirations or accepting a state on a
limited territory—while continuing to work toward their
long-term goals. The presence and needs of the Arabs were viewed
as secondary. The Zionist leadership never considered allying
with the Arab world against the British and Americans. Rather,
Weizmann, in particular, felt that the yishuv should bolster
the British Empire and guard its strategic interests in the
region. Later, the leaders of Israel perceived the Jewish state
as a strategic asset to the United States in the Middle East.
Fourth
Zionist politicians accepted the idea of an Arab nation but
rejected the concept of a Palestinian nation. They considered
the Arab residents of Palestine as comprising a minute fraction
of the land and people of the Arab world, and as lacking any
separate identity and aspirations (click here, to read our
response to this myth). Weizmann and Ben-Gurion were willing
to negotiate with Arab rulers in order to gain those rulers'
recognition of Jewish statehood in Palestine in return for
the Zionists' recognition of Arab independence elsewhere, but
they would not negotiate with the Arab politicians in Palestine
for a political settlement in their common homeland. As early
as 1918, Weizmann wrote to a prominent British politician: "The
real Arab movement is developing in Damascus and Mecca...the
so-called Arab question in Palestine would therefore assume
only a purely local character, and in fact is not considered
a serious factor."
In line with that thinking, Weizmann met with Emir Faysal in the same
year, in an attempt to win his agreement to Jewish statehood in Palestine
in return for Jewish financial support for Faysal as ruler of Syria
and Arabia.
Ben-Gurion, Weizmann, and other Zionist leaders met with prominent
Arab officials during the 1939 LONDON CONFERENCE, which was convened
by Britain to seek a compromise settlement in Palestine. The Arab diplomats
from Egypt, Iraq, and Saudi Arabia criticized the exceptional position
that the Balfour Declaration had granted the Jewish community and emphasized
the estrangement between the Arab and Jewish residents that large scale
Jewish immigration had caused. In response, Weizmann insisted that
Palestine remain open to all Jews who wanted to immigrate, and Ben-Gurion
suggested that all of Palestine should become a Jewish state, federated
with the surrounding Arab states. The Arab participants criticized
these demands for exacerbating the conflict, rather than contributing
to the search for peace. The Zionists' premise that Arab statehood
could be recognized while ignoring the Palestinians was thus rejected
by the Arab rulers themselves.
Fifth
Finally, Zionist leaders argued that if the Palestinians could
not reconcile themselves to Zionism, then force majeure, not
a compromise of goals, was the only possible response. By the
early 1920s, after violent Arab protests broke out in Jaffa
and Jerusalem, leaders of the yishuv recognized that it might
be impossible to bridge the gap between the aims of the two
peoples. Building the national home would lead to an unavoidable
clash, since the Arab majority would not agree to become a
minority. In fact, as early as 1919 Ben-Gurion stated bluntly: "Everybody
sees a difficulty in the question of relations between Arabs
and Jews. But not everybody sees that there is no solution
to this question. No solution! There is a gulf, and nothing
can fill this gulf....I do not know what Arab will agree that
Palestine should belong to the Jews....We, as a nation, want
this country to be ours; the Arabs, as a nation, want this
country to be theirs."
As tensions increased in the 1920s and the 1930s Zionist leaders realized
that they had to coerce the Arabs to acquiesce to a diminished status.
Ben-Gurion stated in 1937, during the Arab revolt:
"This is a national war declared upon us by the Arabs....This is an active
resistance by the Palestinians to what they regard as a usurpation of their homeland
by the Jews....But the fighting is only one aspect of the conflict, which is
in its essence a political one. And politically we are the aggressors and they
defend themselves."
This sober conclusion did not lead Ben-Gurion to negotiate
with the Palestinian Arabs: instead he became more determined
to strengthen the Jewish military forces so that they could
compel the Arabs to relinquish their claims.
In order to realize the aims of Zionism and build the Jewish
national home, the Zionist movement undertook the following
practical steps in many different realms:
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They built political structures that could assume state
functions
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Created a military force.
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Promoted large-scale immigration.
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Acquired land as the inalienable property of the Jewish
people
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Established and monopolistic concessions. The labor federation,
Histadrut, tried to force Jewish enterprises to hire only
Jewish labor
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Setting up an autonomous Hebrew-language educational
system.
These measures created a self-contained national entity on
Palestinian soil that was ENTIRELY SEPARATE from the Arab community.
The yishuv established an elected community council, executive
body, administrative departments, and religious courts soon
after the British assumed control over Palestine. When the
PALESTINE MANDATE was ratified by the League of Nations in
1922, the World Zionist Organization gained the responsibility
to advise and cooperate with the British administration not
only on economic and social matters affecting the Jewish national
home but also on issues involving the general development of
the country. Although the British rejected pressure to give
the World Zionist Organization an equal share in administration
and control over immigration and land transfers, the yishuv
did gain a privileged advisory position.
The Zionists were strongly critical of British efforts to establish
a LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL in 1923, 1930, and 1936. They realized that Palestinians'
demands for a legislature with a Palestinian majority ran counter to
their own need to delay establishing representative bodies until the
Jewish community was much larger. In 1923, the Jewish residents did
participate in the elections for a Legislative Council, but they were
relieved that the Palestinians' boycott compelled the British to cancel
the results. In 1930 and 1936 the World Zionist Organization vigorously
opposed British proposals for a legislature, fearing that, if the Palestinians
received the majority status that proportional representation would
require, then they would try to block Jewish immigration and the purchase
of land by Zionist companies. Zionist opposition was couched indirectly
in the assertion that Palestine was not ripe for self-rule, a code
for not until there's a Jewish majority.
To bolster this position, the yishuv formed defense forces (Haganah)
in March 1920. They were preceded by the establishment of guards (hashomer)
in Jewish rural settlements in the 1900s and the formation of a Jewish
Legion in World War I. However, the British disbanded the Jewish Legion
and allowed only sealed armories in the settlements and mixed Jewish-British
area defense committees.
Despite its illegal status, the Haganah expanded to number 10,000 trained
and mobilized men, and 40,000 reservists by 1936. During the 1937-38
Arab revolt, the Haganah engaged in active defense against Arab insurgents
and cooperated with the British to guard railway lines, the oil pipeline
to Haifa, and border fences. This cooperation deepened during World
War II, when 18,800 Jewish volunteers joined the British forces. Haganah's
special Palmach units served as scouts and sappers for the British
army in Lebanon in 1941-42. This wartime experience helped to transform
the Haganah into a regular fighting force. When Ben-Gurion became the
World Zionist Organization's secretary of defense in June 1947, he
accelerated mobilization as well as arms buying in the United States
and Europe. As a result, mobilization leaped to 30,000 by May 1948,
when statehood was proclaimed, and then doubled to 60,000 by mid-July—twice
the number serving in the Arab forces arrayed against Israel.
A principal means for building up the national home was the promotion
of large-scale immigration from Europe. Estimates of the Palestinian
population demonstrate the dramatic impact of immigration. The first
British census (December 31, 1922) counted 757,182 residents, of whom
83,794 were Jewish. The second census (December 31, 1931) enumerated
1,035,821, including 174,006 Jews. Thus, the absolute number of Jews
had doubled and the relative number had increased from 11 percent to
17 percent. Two-thirds of this growth could be attributed to net immigration,
and one third to natural increase. Two-thirds of the yishuv was concentrated
in Jerusalem and Jaffa and Tel Aviv, with most of the remainder in
the north, including the towns of HAIFA, SAFAD, and Tiberias.
The Mandate specified that the rate of immigration should accord with
the economic capacity of the country to absorb the immigrants. In 1931,
the British government reinterpreted this to take into account only
the Jewish sector of the economy, excluding the Palestinian sector,
which was suffering from heavy unemployment. As a result, the pace
of immigration accelerated in 1932 and peaked in 1935-36. In other
words, the absolute number of Jewish residents doubled in the five
years from 1931 to 1936 to 370,000, so that they constituted 28 percent
of the total population. Not until 1939 did the British impose a severe
quota on Jewish immigrants. That restriction was resisted by the yishuv
with a sense of desperation, since it blocked access to a key haven
for the Jews whom Hitler was persecuting and exterminating in Germany
and the rest of Nazi-occupied Europe. Net immigration was limited during
the war years in the 1940s, but the government estimated in 1946 that
there were about 583,000 Jews of nearly 1,888,000 residents, or 31
percent of the total Seventy percent of them were urban, and they continued
to be overwhelmingly concentrated in Jerusalem (100,000) the Haifa
area (119,000), and the JAFFA and RAMLA districts (327,000) (click
here for a map illustrating Palestine's population distribution in
1946). The remaining 43,000 were largely in Galilee, with a scattering
in the Negev and almost none in the central highlands.
The World Zionist Organization purchasing agencies launched large-scale
land purchases in order to found rural settlements and stake territorial
claims. In 1920 the Zionists held about 650,000 dunums (one dunum equals
approximately one-quarter of an acre). By 1930, the amount had expanded
to 1,164,000 dunums and by 1936 to 1,400,000 dunums. The major purchasing
agent (the Palestine Land Development Company) estimated that, by 1936,
89 percent had been bought from large landowners (primarily absentee
owners from Beirut) and only 11 percent from peasants. By 1947, the
yishuv held 1.9 million dunums. Nevertheless, this represented only
7 percent of the total land surface or 10 to 12 percent of the cultivable
land (click here for a map illustrating Palestine's land ownership
distribution in 1946)
According to Article 3 of the Constitution of the Jewish Agency, the
land was held by the Jewish National Fund as the inalienable property
of the Jewish people; ONLY Jewish labor could be employed in the settlements,
Palestinians protested bitterly against this inalienability clause.
The moderate National Defense Party, for example, petitioned the British
in 1935 to prevent further land sales, arguing that it was a: life
and death [matter] to the Arabs, in that it results in the transfer
of their country to other hands and the loss of their nationality.
The placement of Jewish settlements was often based on political considerations.
The Palestine Land Development Company had four criteria for land purchase:
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The economic suitability of the tract
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Its contribution to forming a solid block of Jewish territory.
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The prevention of isolation of settlements
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The impact of the purchase on the political-territorial
claims of the Zionists.
The stockade and watchtower settlements constructed in 1937,
for example, were designed to secure control over key parts
of Galilee for the yishuv in case the British implemented the
PEEL PARTITION PLAN. Similarly, eleven settlements were hastily
erected in the Negev in late 1946 in an attempt to stake a
political claim in that entirely Palestinian-populated territory.
In addition to making these land purchases, prominent Jewish businessmen
won monopolistic concessions from the British government that gave
the Zionist movement an important role in the development of Palestine's
natural resources. In 1921, Pinhas Rutenberg's Palestine Electric Company
acquired the right to electrify all of Palestine except Jerusalem.
Moshe Novomeysky received the concession to develop the minerals in
the Dead Sea in 1927. And the Palestine Land Development Company gained
the concession to drain the Hula marshes, north of the Sea of Galilee,
in 1934. In each case, the concession was contested by other serious
non-Jewish claimants; Palestinian politicians argued that the government
should retain control itself in order to develop the resources for
the benefit of the entire country.
The inalienability clause in the Jewish National Fund contracts included
provision that ONLY JEWS could work on Jewish agricultural settlements.
The concepts of manual labor and the return to the soil were key to
the Zionist enterprise. This Jewish labor policy was enforced by the
General Foundation of Jewish Labor (Histadrut), founded in 1920 and
headed by David Ben-Gurion. Since some Jewish builders and citrus growers
hired Arabs, who worked for lower wages than Jews, the Histadrut launched
a campaign in 1933 to remove those Arab workers. Histadrut organizers
picketed citrus groves and evicted Arab workers from construction sites
and factories in the cities. The strident propaganda by the Histradut
increased the Arabs' fears for the future. George Mansur, a Palestinian
labor leader, wrote angrily in 1937:
"The Histadrut's fundamental aim is 'the conquest of labor'...No matter
how many Arab workers are unemployed, they have no right to take any job which
a possible immigrant might occupy. No Arab has the right to work in Jewish undertakings."
Finally, the establishment of an all-Jewish, Hebrew-language educational
system was an essential component of building the Jewish national home.
It helped to create a cohesive national ethos and a lingua franca among
the diverse immigrants. However, it also entirely separated Jewish
children from Palestinian children, who attended the governmental schools.
The policy widened the linguistic and cultural gap between the two
peoples. In addition, there was a stark contrast in their literacy
levels (in 1931):
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93 percent of Jewish males (above age seven) were literate
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71 percent of Christian males
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but only 25 percent of Muslim males were literate.
Overall, Palestinian literacy increased from 19 percent in
1931 to 27 percent by 1940, but only 30 percent of Palestinian
children could be accommodated in government and private schools.
The practical policies of the Zionist movement created a compact and
well-rooted community by the late 1940s. The yishuv had its own political,
educational, economic, and military institutions, parallel to the governmental
system. Jews minimized their contact with the Arab community and outnumbered
the Arabs in certain key respects. Jewish urban dwellers, for example,
greatly exceeded Arab urbanites, even though Jews constituted but one-third
of the population. Many more Jewish children attended school than did
Arab children, and Jewish firms employed seven times as many workers
as Arab firms.
Thus the relative weight and autonomy of the yishuv were much greater
than sheer numbers would suggest. The transition to statehood was facilitated
by the existence of the proto state institutions and a mobilized, literate
public. But the separation from the Palestinian residents will exacerbated
by these autarchic policies.
Policies Toward the Palestinians
The main view point within the Zionist movement was that the
Arab problem would be solved by first solving the Jewish problem.
In time, the Palestinians would be presented with the fait
accompli of a Jewish majority. Settlements, land purchases,
industries, and military forces were developed gradually and
systematically so that the yishuv would become too strong to
uproot. In a letter to his son, Weizmann compared the Arabs
to the rocks of Judea, obstacles that had to be cleared to
make the path smooth. When the Palestinians mounted violent
protests in 1920, 1921, 1929, 1936-39, and the late 1940s,
the yishuv sought to curb them by force, rather than seek a
political accommodation with the indigenous people. Any concessions
made to the Palestinians by the British government concerning
immigration, land sales, or labor were strongly contested by
the Zionist leaders. In fact, in 1936, Ben-Gurion stated that
the Palestinians will only acquiesce in a Jewish Eretz Israel
after they are in a state of total despair.
Zionists viewed their acceptance of territorial partition as a temporary
measure; they did not give up the idea of the Jewish community's right
to all of Palestine. Weizmann commented in 1937: "In the course
of time we shall expand to the whole country...this is only an arrangement
for the next 15-30 years."
Ben-Gurion stated in 1938, "After we become a strong force, as
a result of the creation of a state, we shall abolish partition and
expand to the whole of Palestine." A FEW EFFORTS were made to
reduce Arab opposition. For example in the 1920s, Zionist organizations
provided financial support to Palestinian political parties, newspapers,
and individuals. This was most evident in the establishment and support
of the National Muslim Societies (1921-23) and Agricultural Parties
(1924-26). These parties were expected to be neutral or positive toward
the Zionist movement, in return for which they would receive financial
subventions and their members would be helped to obtain jobs and loans.
This policy was backed by Weizmann, who commented that: "extremists
and moderates alike were susceptible to the influence of money and
honors."
However, Leonard Stein, a member of the London office of the World
Zionist Organization, denounced this practice. He argued that Zionists
must seek a permanent modus vivendi with the Palestinians by hiring
them in Jewish firms and admitting them to Jewish universities. He
maintained that political parties in which Arab moderates are merely
Arab gramophones playing Zionist records would collapse as soon as
the Zionist financial support ended. In any event, the World Zionist
Organization terminated the policy by 1927, as it was in the midst
of a financial crisis and as most of the leaders felt that the policy
was ineffective.
Some Zionist leaders argued that the Arab community had to
be involved in the practical efforts of the Zionist movement.
Chaim Kalvarisky, who initiated the policy of buying support,
articulated in 1923 the gap between that ideal and the reality: "Some
people say...that only by common work in the field of commerce,
industry and agriculture mutual understanding between Jews
and Arabs will ultimately be attained....This is, however,
merely a theory. In practice we have not done and we are doing
nothing for any work in common.
-
How many Arab officials have we installed in our banks?
Not even one.
-
How many Arabs have we brought into our schools? Not even
one.
-
What commercial houses have we established in company
with Arabs? Not even one."
Two years later, Kalvarisky lamented: "We all admit
the importance of drawing closer to the Arabs, but in fact
we are growing more distant like a drawn bow. We have no contact:
two separate worlds, each living its own life and fighting
the other."
Some members of the yishuv emphasized the need for political relations
with the Palestinian Arabs, to achieve either a peacefully negotiated
territorial partition (as Nahum Goldmann sought) or a binational state
(as Brit Shalom and Hashomer Ha-tzair proposed). But few went as far
as Dr. Judah L. Magnes, chancellor of The Hebrew University, who argued
that Zionism meant merely the creation of a Jewish cultural center
in Palestine rather than an independent state. In any case, the binationalists
had little impact politically and were strongly opposed by the leadership
of the Zionist movement.
Zionist leaders felt they did not harm the Palestinians by blocking
them from working in Jewish settlements and industries or even by undermining
their majority status. The Palestinians were considered a small part
of the large Arab nation; their economic and political needs could
be met in that wider context, Zionists felt, rather than in Palestine.
They could move elsewhere if they sought land and could merge with
Transjordan if they sought political independence.
This thinking led logically to the concept of population TRANSFER.
In 1930 Weizmann suggested that the problems of insufficient land resources
within Palestine and of the dispossession of peasants could be solved
by moving them to Transjordan and Iraq. He urged the Jewish Agency
to provide a loan of £1 million to help move Palestinian farmers to
Transjordan. The issue was discussed at length in the Jewish Agency
debates of 1936-37 on partition. At first, the majority proposed a
voluntary transfer of Palestinians from the Jewish state, but later
they realized that the Palestinians would never leave voluntarily.
Therefore, key leaders such as Ben-Gurion insisted that compulsory
transfer was essential. The Jewish Agency then voted that the British
government should pay for the removal of the Palestinian Arabs from
the territory allotted to the Jewish state.
The fighting from 1947 to 1949 resulted in a far larger transfer than
had been envisioned in 1937. It solved the Arab problem by removing
most of the Arabs and was the ultimate expression of the policy of
force majeure.
The land and people of Palestine were transformed during the
thirty years of British rule. The systematic colonization undertaken
by the Zionist movement enabled the Jewish community to establish
separate and virtually autonomous political, economic, social,
cultural, and military institutions. A state within a state
was in place by the time the movement launched its drive for
independence. The legal underpinnings for the autonomous Jewish
community were provided by the British Mandate. The establishment
of a Jewish state was first proposed by the British Royal Commission
in July 1937 and then endorsed by the UNITED NATIONS in November
1947.
That drive for statehood IGNORED the presence of a Palestinian majority
with its own national aspirations. The right to create a Jewish state—and
the overwhelming need for such a state—were perceived as overriding
Palestinian counterclaims. Few members of the yishuv supported the
idea of binationalism. Rather, territorial partition was seen by most
Zionist leaders as the way to gain statehood while according certain
national rights to the Palestinians. TRANSFER of Palestinians to neighboring
Arab states was also envisaged as a means to ensure the formation of
a homogeneous Jewish territory. The implementation of those approaches
led to the formation of independent Israel, at the cost of dismembering
the Palestinian community and fostering long-term hostility with the
Arab world.
—Ann M. Lesch
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Abu Lughod, Janet L. "The Demographic Transformation
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Caplan, Neil. Palestine Jew1Y and the Arab Question, 1917-25.
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Farsoun, Samih K., and Christina Zacharia. Palestine and the
Palestinians. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1996.
Flapan, Simha. Zionism and the Palestinians. New York: Barnes & Noble,
1979.
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1969.
Hurewitz, J. C. The Struggle for Palestine. Reprint. New York:
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Lesch, Ann Mosely. Arab Politics in Palestine, 1917-1939.
Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1979.
Mandel, Neville. "Attempts at an Arab-Zionist Entente,
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----."Turks, Arabs, and Jewish Immigration into Palestine,
1882-1914," St. Antony's Papers 17 (1965).
Mansur, George. The Arab Worker under the Palestine Mandate.
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Porath, Yehoshua. The Emergence of the Palestinian-Arab National
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----.Palestinian Arab National Movement, 1929-1939. London:
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The Above article was quoted from Encyclopedia Of
The Palestinians, edited by Philip Mattar.
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