Transcript Document

Born of War, or Design?
Reading Benny Morris and Debating the Palestinian ‘Exodus’ of 1948
A Problem Born of War
“The refugeedom of the
700,000 Palestinians was
essentially a product of the
war, of the shelling shooting
and bombing, and of the
fears that these generated.”
Benny Morris
Revisiting the Palestinian Exodus of 1948 (p. 37)
A Problem Born of War
“Above all, let me reiterate, the
refugee problem was caused
by attacks by Jewish forces on
Arab villages and towns and by
the [Palestinian] inhabitants
fears of such attacks
compounded by expulsions
atrocities, and rumors of
atrocities – and by the crucial
Israeli cabinet decision in June,
1948 to bar a refugee return.
Benny Morris
Revisiting the Palestinian Exodus of 1948 (p. 38)
Morris and Transfer Thinking
“My conclusion was and
remains that thinking about the
transfer of all or part of
Palestine’s Arabs out of the
prospective Jewish state was
pervasive among Zionist
leadership circles before
1937…how exactly this thinking
affected Zionist policy and
actions remains more
complicated than [Masalha
suggests].
Benny Morris
Revisiting the Palestinian Exodus of 1948 (pp. 40-41.)
The Debate – Was Expulsion Premeditated?
Among my critics (such as Nur
Maslha) was that I ignored or
underplayed the role of pre1948 proposals and thinking
about transfer among the
Zionist leadership…The
controversy is really about the
nature of Zionism and about
the degree of premeditation in
what occurred in 1948.
Benny Morris
Revisiting the Palestinian Exodus of 1948 (p. 39)
Zionist Dilemma
1881 Population
21,000 Jews
470,000 Arab
4.2%
95.8%
“The bride is beautiful but she
is married to another man.”
4 Options To Overcome Dilemma
and Build the Jewish State
1) Immigration
2) Apartheid, that is a Zionist
minority lording it over the
Palestinian majority
3) Partition (Create a Jewish
state and an Arab State)
4) Transfer the Palestinians
from Palestine
Benny Morris
“Revisiting,” pp. 39-40
Morris and Transfer Thinking
“We must expropriate gently…We
shall try and spirit the penniless
population across the
border…Both the process of
expropriation and the removal of
the poor must be carried out
discreetly and circumspectly”
Theodor Herzl
Diaries (1895)
Berl Katznelson
“The matter of population transfer has
provoked a debate among us: My
conscience is absolutely clear in this
respect. A remote neighbor is better than
a close enemy. They will not lose from
being transferred and we most certainly
will not lose from it…. I have always
believed and still believe that they were
destined to be transferred to Syria or Iraq.”
1938
Menachem Ussishkin / Transfer?
• “We must continually raise
the demand that our land be
returned to our possession....
If there are other inhabitants
there, they must be
transferred to some other
place…
• We cannot start the Jewish
state with...half the
population being Arab…Such a
state cannot survive even half
an hour... It [transfer] is most
moral... I am ready to come
and defend ... it before the
Almighty.
Menachem Ussishkin
1930 / 1938
Ben-Gurion a ‘Transferist’?
“The compulsory transfer of
the Arabs from the proposed
Jewish state could give us
something which we never
had….Any doubt on our part
about the necessity of this
transfer…may lose us an
historic opportunity ….I
support compulsory transfer. I
don’t see in it anything
immoral.”
David Ben-Gurion
Diaries (1937)
Speech (1938)
Transfer – Yosef Weitz
“There is no room for both
peoples in this country.
After the Arabs are
transferred, the country will
be wide open for us…not a
single village or a single tribe
must be left…there is no
other solution”
Yosef Weitz (1940)
Morris on Transfer Thinking and Transfer
“What is the importance of expressions of support for
transfer and how do they connect to what actually
happened…Some researchers such as Masalha will have us
believe that there was a direct, causal, one-to-one link
between the earlier thinking and the subsequent actions.
My feeling is that the connection is subtle and indirect.”
Benny Morris
Revisiting the Palestinian Exodus, pp. 47-48.
What is the Relationship between Transfer
Thinking and Transfer?
“Nothing I have seen
in Israeli archives
indicates the
existence of a Zionist
Master Plan to expel
the Arabs of
Palestine.”
Benny Morris
Revisiting the Palestinian
Exodus of 1948 (p. 48)
Nur Masalha
What is the Relationship of Thinking and Doing?
“Can [Morris’] claim that there
was no transfer design and
expulsion policy in 1948 be
sustained? Does the fact that
there was no "master plan" for
expelling the Palestinians absolve
the Zionist leadership of
responsibility for the refugee
problem…? Is it conceivable that
such a transfer policy was based
on an understanding between
Ben-Gurion and his lieutenants
rather than a blueprint?”
Nur Masalha
Critique of Morris, pp. 91-92
No Master Plan?
Is Morris's conclusion that a Zionist
transfer/expulsion policy was never
formulated borne out by his own
evidence?...the Yishuv military
establishment, presided over by BenGurion, formulated in early March
1948 and began implementing in
early April Plan Dalet in anticipation
of Arab military operations.
According to Morris, the essence of
Plan Dalet "was the clearing of
hostile and potentially hostile forces
out of the interior of the prospective
territory of the Jewish State.”
Nur Masalha
Critique of Morris (p. 94)
Plan Dalet
(April, 1948)
“The objective of this plan is to gain control of the areas
of the Hebrew state and defend its borders. It also aims
at gaining control of the areas of Jewish settlements and
concentrations which are located outside the borders (of
the Hebrew state) against regular, semi-regular, and small
forces operating from bases outside or inside the state.”
Opening to Plan Dalet (1948)
Masalha
A De Facto Policy of Transfer
“It is difficult, using Morris's own evidence,
not to see on the part of the leaders of
mainstream labor Zionism a de facto, forcible
transfer policy in 1948.”
Nur Masalha
Critique of Morris, p. 96
Where Did Refugees Go?
Place
# (est)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jordan/W. Bank
Gaza
Lebanon
Syria
400,000
200,000
120,000
75,000
“There are circumstances that
justify ethnic cleansing. A Jewish
state would not have come into
being without the uprooting of
700,000 Palestinians. Therefore
it was necessary to uproot
them…. It was necessary to
cleanse the border areas and
main roads…to cleanse the
villages…I know it doesn’t sound
nice, but that’s the term we used
at the time.”
Benny Morris
Ha’aretz Interview (2004)