Fabricating Palestinian History
For nearly two decades the Palestinian
Authority (PA) has been denying Israel's right to exist, and a recent
"Nakba Day" was no exception. In a Gaza speech on behalf of Mahmoud Abbas, his personal representative made the following statement:
National reconciliation [between Hamas and Fatah] is required in order to face Israel and Netanyahu. We say to him [Netanyahu], when he claims that they [Jews] have a historical right dating back to 3000 years B.C.E.—we say that the nation of Palestine upon the land of Canaan had a 7,000-year history B.C.E. This is the truth, which must be understood, and we have to note it, in order to say: "Netanyahu, you are incidental in history. We are the people of history. We are the owners of history."[1]
This remarkable assertion has been almost
completely ignored by the Western media. Yet it bears a thorough
examination: not only as an indication of unwavering Palestinian
rejection of Israel's right to exist but as an insightful glimpse into
the psyche of their willfully duped Western champions.
Unpacking Abbas's Speech
Archaeologists have only the dimmest notion
of prevailing ethnic concepts in 7000 B.C.E. There may have been tribes
and clans of some sort, and villages may have had names and a sense of
collective or local identity, but their nature is completely unknown.
Even with the elaborate symbolism of the period, as seen in figurines,
and other data such as the styles of stone tools and house plans,
nothing whatsoever is known regarding the content of the makers'
identities. Writing would not be invented for almost another 4,000 years
and would only reach the Levant a thousand years after that, bringing
with it the ability to record a society's own identity concepts.
There were no Jews or Arabs, Canaanites,
Israelites, or Egyptians. There were only Neolithic farmers and herders.
In fact, none of the concepts that Abbas used developed until vastly
later. The Plst—a Mediterranean group known to the Egyptians as one of
the "Sea Peoples" and who gave their name to the biblical
Philistines—arrived around 1200 B.C.E. Arabs are known in Mesopotamian
texts as residents of the Arabian Peninsula from around 900 B.C.E. The
concept of a "nation" emerged with the kingdoms of Israel and Judah and
their neighbors sometime after 900 B.C.E. The Romans renamed the Kingdom
of Judea "Palestina" after the biblically attested Philistines, the
hated enemy of the Israelites, following the defeat of the Bar Kochba
revolt in 135 C.E. The ethnic identity called "Palestinian," denoting
the local Muslim and Christian inhabitants of the region south of
Lebanon and West of the Jordan River, tenuously developed as an elite
concept at the end of the Ottoman era and did not propagate to the
grassroots until the 1920s and 1930s.[2]
Is there perhaps genetic continuity between
modern Palestinians and Neolithic farmers and herders? Perhaps, but
that is not what Abbas claimed. Is there cultural continuity, a nation
with a name? Hardly.
Types of Palestinian Rhetoric
Why then should Abbas make such an
incredible fabrication? And why lie in such a ludicrous and extravagant
fashion? Part of the answer is that for Abbas, as it was for PLO leader
Yasser Arafat before him, there is a reflex that simply and absolutely
cannot accept the antiquity of Jews. Arafat famously told then-U.S.
president Bill Clinton that there was no Jewish temple in Jerusalem,
causing the usually unflappable Clinton to nearly explode.[3]
Denials regarding the Jewish historical connection to the Land of
Israel generally and categorical denials that Jews constitute a nation
are all frequently heard from Palestinian leaders, intellectuals, and
others.
A useful avenue of investigation is to
consider Abbas's words as a type of rhetoric with a form and underlying
philosophy. When viewed in this way, Abbas's spokesman was not lying as
such but doing something else.
As philosopher Harry Frankfurt put it
The fact about himself that the bullshitter hides … is that the truth-values of his statements are of no central interest to him; what we are not to understand is that his intention is neither to report the truth nor to conceal it … A person who lies is thereby responding to the truth, and he is to that extent respectful of it … For the bullshitter, however, all these bets are off: He is neither on the side of the true nor on the side of the false. His eye is not on the facts at all, as the eyes of the honest man and of the liar are, except insofar as they may be pertinent to his interest in getting away with what he says. He does not care whether the things he says describe reality correctly. He just picks them out, or makes them up, to suit his purpose.[4]
As Frankfurt describes it, such nonsensical
rhetoric is constructed impulsively and without thought—entirely out of
whole cloth. It is unconcerned with truth and so, unlike a lie, has
license to be panoramic, unconcerned with context. The user is
endeavoring to bluff, and the desire for effect is paramount. Whereas
lying is austere and rigorous because it must triangulate against truth,
nonsense loses, and loosens, the grasp on reality. In that sense, its
effect is corrosive, a matter not discussed by Frankfurt.
Stating nonsense to suit one's purpose is
only one of three obvious Palestinian rhetorical strategies. Lying,
knowingly distorting the truth, is another. A paradigmatic example of
this is "Pallywood,"
the staging of scenes for news cameras. These have ranged from
orchestrated street scenes and rioting, which sometimes include fake
casualties who leap off of stretchers when out of sight, to destroyed
structures and grieving families, to manipulated photographs. Above all
there was the so-called Jenin massacre of 2002 and the Muhammad al-Dura
case in 2000. In the former, Palestinians accused Israelis of having
killed hundreds or thousands of civilians and bulldozing their bodies
into mass graves, deliberate lies that were then repeated by human
rights organizations. In fact, some fifty-two Palestinian gunmen and
twenty-three Israeli soldiers were killed in brutal house to house
fighting.[5]
Stating nonsense to suit one's purpose is only
one Palestinian rhetorical strategy. Knowingly distorting the truth is
another. An example of this is "Pallywood," the staging of scenes for
news cameras. This photograph was widely distributed with the observers
cropped out and promoted as a picture of an Israel Defense Forces
soldier stomping on a Palestinian child. The uniform is not an IDF
uniform; the boots are not IDF boots, and the weapon is not one used by
the IDF.
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In the Dura case, a Palestinian stringer
for French television purported to have observed a Palestinian father
and son caught in a firefight in Gaza, during the course of which the
boy appeared to have been killed. The iconic martyrdom and funeral of
the boy became an international symbol of Israeli brutality. But
examination of withheld footage showed other Palestinian "wounded"
getting up and walking around and contained no death throes of the Dura
boy. In fact, grave doubts exist whether a boy died at all in the
exchange and whether his father was injured. A series of lawsuits have
not resolved the situation, but the impact of what is at least in large
part a fabrication is clear.[6]
As French journalist Catherine Nay wrote with satisfaction, Dura's
supposed death "cancels, erases that of the Jewish child, his hands in
the air before the SS in the Warsaw Ghetto."[7]
This statement holds the key to understanding the reception of
Palestinian rhetoric in Europe. It is a means to erode historical and
moral realities regarding the European treatment of the Jews, and it is
eagerly embraced in some quarters.
The third Palestinian approach is to
propagandize through the lens of pure ideology, specifically Islam.
Thus, for example, the former Jerusalem mufti and chairman of the
Supreme Islamic Council in Jerusalem, Ekrima Sabri, was recently quoted
as saying "after twenty-five years of digging, archaeologists are
unanimous that not a single stone has been found related to Jerusalem's
alleged Jewish history." This statement is patently false, but the
orientation of the religious lens is obvious, indeed, he goes on to
state clearly: "We do not recognize any change to the status of
Jerusalem, and we reserve our religious, historic, geographic, and
cultural heritage in the city, no matter how long or how many
generations succeed."[8]
Islamic doctrine as it has evolved today simply cannot accept the
reality of the Jewish connection to Jerusalem precisely on religious
grounds. Sabri is, therefore, neither lying nor fabricating reality to
suit his purposes but rather expressing what he regards as a true
religious belief. This works in concert with lies and nonsense.
Swallowing Palestinian Rhetoric
Palestinian efforts to minimize or expunge
Jews from history go back several decades but have intensified in recent
years. Palestinian intellectuals make their own important
contributions: Hayel Sanduqa recently claimed
that the expression in Psalm 137:5, "If I forget thee, oh Jerusalem,
may my right hand forget its skill" was authored by a Crusader king and
stolen by "Zionists."[9]
Palestinian denial of any Jewish
connections to Israel and allegations that Israel is "Judaizing"
Jerusalem are so routine as to be unheard by Israelis, accustomed as
they are to Palestinian leaders blustering, lying, and simply making
things up, from trivial allegations regarding Israeli "libido-increasing chewing gum" distributed in Gaza[10]
to heinous allegations of all manner of war crimes. This is unfortunate
since such claims of "Judaization," largely by means of archaeological
excavations and infrastructure modernization, featured for decades in
international forums such as UNESCO,[11] are central to the global efforts to delegitimize Israel by elevating the Islamic status of Jerusalem.[12]
By and large, the lack of Arab media
attention suggests that they also take Palestinian claims with a heaping
teaspoon of salt. In the absence of open warfare between Israel and the
Palestinians, Arab media today appear preoccupied with more important
events in Syria, Egypt, Iran, and elsewhere. Even so, why has there been
so little attention to Abbas's statement?
The Palestinian reception of rhetoric such
as Abbas's is a critical question. Palestinian nationalist rhetoric
since the early 1920s was characterized by what even
Palestinian-American historian Rashid Khalidi has called "overheated
prose."[13]
From the beginning, it was also suffused with local, pan-Arab and
Islamic themes that were sometimes complementary but often in tension
with one another. In general, Palestinian rhetoric today takes place in
an environment that has been progressively Islamized over the past two
decades by Arafat and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), in
part through competition with Hamas and other Islamist and jihadist
movements.[14]
Islamic themes and imagery have helped frame and elaborate political
discourse and in turn have intensified the Islamic dimension of
Palestinian collective identity.[15]
While a full study of language and
cognition in Palestinian culture is beyond the scope of this article, it
is useful to bear in mind the analysis of Arab societies as "high
context" cultures. In such cultures, the domination of in-groups with
similar experiences and expectations requires fewer but more carefully
selected words that convey complex messages using inferences supplied by
the listener. By contrast, communications in "low context" cultures are
not aimed at in-groups and, therefore, tend to be more explicit.[16]
Seen in this light, Palestinian political
statements regarding their Neolithic origins and continuity, which can
be regarded in historical, rhetorical, and philosophical terms as
completely fictional, might be understood as simply innovative shorthand
communications to an in-group. On the one hand, it nominally cites
Western scientific frameworks, which demonstrates a sort of modernist
orientation. But on the other, the emotive power and real intention is
largely supplied by the listener, who hears in effect that Palestinians
have existed forever, along with the implication that this fact is
supported by history or even science.
Together with lies and ideological speech,
fictional nonsense helps shape Palestinian culture, beliefs, and
political behavior. To say that this is at odds with objective reality
as recovered by science is to miss the point. To some unknowable but
large degree, this is Palestinian reality. What from the outside appears
to be disjointed and nonsensical bits in reality are seamless parts of a
larger Palestinian whole, beliefs about the history, the world,
culture, and the self. The question then becomes the relationship of
that reality to others. And here the matter of media as a conduit and
interpreter becomes paramount.
The problem is that in-group statements and
the reality they create are never restricted to the in-group. Western
reception of rhetorical nonsense varies widely. Western media have been
silent about the Neolithic Palestinian nation, and this is most
instructive. The simplest explanation why Abbas's comments were not
mentioned in Western press accounts is that literal nonsense from
Palestinians simply does not register. Although it is not acknowledged,
to some extent Palestinian nonsense is likely recognized as such by
Western media and filtered out, at least semiconsciously, as "overheated
prose." Ironically, of course, objections to such cultural stereotyping
are characteristic of the Orientalist critique although they are rarely
made when such analyses come from Arab sources.
Willing Infidels
What Israelis regard as incitement—rhetoric
designed to inflame populations and move them to hatred and
violence—thus seems to register as mere epiphenomena to other Western
audiences, who appear to seek a simple, moralistic tale with materialist
underpinnings. By and large, Western media in particular, abetted by
intellectuals, have created a singular distortion zone around
"Israel/Palestine"—turning it into a clear-cut morality tale of colonial
white people with F-16s oppressing indigenous brown people with stones
and the odd suicide bomber.
A recent study of how the Arab-Israeli
conflict is treated by the Reuters news agency noted the pervasive use
of appeals to pity and to poverty, innuendo, euphemisms and loaded
words, multiple standards and asymmetrical definitions, card-stacking,
symbolic fictions, and atrocity propaganda, along with non-sequiturs and
red herrings. The study concludes that "Reuters engages in
systematically biased storytelling in favor of the Arabs/Palestinians
and is able to influence audience affective behavior and motivate direct
action along the same trajectory."[17]
For most journalists engaged with the
moralistic narrative, fantastic stories about Palestinians having
existed 9,000 years ago do not even rise to the level of cognitive
dissonance; it is, for now, nonsense discourse and anti-realism. But
another factor for the lack of Western attention to such statements is
found in Frankfurt's discourse on nonsensical rhetoric; the sincerity of
the user cannot be challenged since to do so would require making
fundamental judgments. To preserve the fiction of rational
interlocutors, sincerity must be accepted as a token of trustworthiness
even as the simple words of the statement contradict such claims.
Three other factors also play a role: the
postmodern downgrading of objectivity and the idea of a single shared
reality; the elevation of multiple narratives as being equally valid,
and the valuation of feelings over facts. Challenging rhetorical
nonsense, in addition to potentially compromising journalistic access,
could hurt interlocutors' feelings.
There is more than a little condescension
at work in the Western reception of these strategies if not actual
contempt. For one thing, Palestinians lies and nonsense are rarely
challenged by the media or other interpreters besides those termed
Israel advocates, something that has itself been transformed into a
negative semantic and social category. It is almost as if Palestinians
are expected simply to make things up as they go along, which then may
or may not be accepted by the West according to how well they fit the
Palestinian narrative.
Ideological religious statements are
similarly ignored but in all likelihood for different reasons.
Non-religious Western observers simply have no intellectual framework to
interpret such strong statements outside materialist constructs that
regard religion generally as epiphenomenal or false consciousness. For
these reasons, the Islamic rather than nationalistic basis for the
Arab-Israeli conflict has been systematically downplayed from the 1930s.
Even the Hamas charter—which is nothing but forthright regarding its
religious basis, theological anti-Semitism, and calls for genocide—is
largely excluded from journalistic and even academic analyses because it
makes no sense within the context of frameworks that are exclusively
nationalistic and materialist in nature.
But the eagerness with which certain lies
are accepted, such as talk of Israeli war crimes, and the flimsy nature
of Western journalistic investigations strongly shows that at least two
additional levels of bias are at work. At one level, the narrative of
the oppressed underdog is so strong that there is little inclination to
press for truths that would undermine that narrative, embarrass the
Palestinians, and in doing so, incur their wrath and limit the media
access they give to their territories, sources, and stories. At the
deeper level, as perfectly illustrated by the quote from Catherine Nay
above, there is a deep need to find Israelis guilty in order to relieve
Holocaust guilt (and, one might argue cynically, to get back to
old-fashioned anti-Semitism) particularly among European descendents of
its perpetrators. The satisfaction of making this so is palpable.
These factors also illustrate how the
Palestinian narrative, even with ludicrous bits thrown in and others
excluded, is arguably not by or even about the Palestinians. It is
propelled largely by Western needs to see the world through the
post-colonial lens of noble indigenes and evil Western colonists. The
Palestinians may in fact have lost exclusive control of the narrative
decades ago, perhaps as far back as the 1920s or 1930s, when their cause
was taken over by the Arab states and the Muslim world. A more
comprehensive view of the Palestinian narrative would see them as
secondary contributors to a process propelled by Arab and Muslim states
and refracted through Western media and universities, ultimately minor
subjects in a far larger discussion between Islam and the West.
The problem is that, thanks to mindless
parroting by journalists and human rights organizations of Palestinian
lies and nonsense, hatred, anti-Semitism, and ceaseless incitement are
gradually overwhelming the filters against anti-realism, particularly in
Europe where there are powerful cultural incentives to think ill of
Jews and wish ill for Israelis. The effects of this process are seen
even more clearly throughout the Arab and Muslim worlds where, though
free of Jews, anti-Semitism is all-pervasive.
Conclusion
An example of the erosion of Western critical filters was the unchallenged appearance of an opinion piece in The Washington Post
in December 2011 that effectively repeated some of Abbas's absurd
statements regarding the antiquity of the Palestinians. Maen Rashid
Areikat, the PLO representative to the United Nations, stated that
Palestinians had "lived under the rule of a plethora of empires: the
Canaanites, Egyptians, Philistines, Israelites, Persians, Greeks,
Crusaders, Mongols, Ottomans, and finally, the British." Throwing
history out the window, he added
we are Arabs with black, brown, and white skin, dark- and light-colored eyes, and the whole gamut of hair types. Like Americans, we are a hybrid of peoples defined by one overarching identity. Many in the United States forget that Palestinians are Muslims and Christians. They ignore the fact that Palestinian Christians are the descendants of Jesus and guardians of the cradle of Christianity.[18]
Palestinians can simultaneously be Arabs,
who arrived in the Levant in the seventh century C.E., and be more
ancient than the Canaanites. At the same time, the empires they endured
and that infused them include everyone except Arab ones, notably the
Umayyad and Abbasid, which brought Arabs and Islam to the region in the
first place. The fact-checkers of The Washington Post editorial
page fall mute and shared reality is eroded further. Unfortunately this
sort of rhetorical nonsense resonates deeply, especially with some
Christian supersessionists committed to anti-Zionism.[19] History no longer matters.
It is often stated that peace can only come
when Israelis and Palestinians recognize one another's narratives.
Claims regarding the Neolithic Palestinian nation indicate this unlikely
to occur either in the future or in the past. In the meantime,
anti-reality continues to spread.
Alex Joffe is a New York-based writer on history and international affairs. His web site is www.alexanderjoffe.net
[1] Palestinian TV (Fatah), May 14, 2011.
[2] Louis H. Feldman, "Some Observations on the Name of Palestine," Hebrew Union College Annual, 61 (1990): 1-23.
[3] "Camp David and After: An Exchange, An Interview with Ehud Barak," The New York Review of Books, June 13, 2001.
[4] Harry Frankfurt, On Bullshit (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2005), p. 56.
[5] See the essays in Hersh Goodman and Jonathan Cummings, eds., The Battle of Jenin: A Case Study in Israel's Communications Strategy (Tel Aviv: Tel Aviv University, Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies, 2003).
[6] Philippe Karsenty, "We Need to Expose the Muhammad al-Dura Hoax," Middle East Quarterly, Fall 2008, pp. 57-65; Nidra Poller, "The Muhammad al-Dura Hoax and Other Myths Revived," Middle East Quarterly, Fall 2011, pp. 71-8.
[7] Ivan Rioufol, "Les médias, pouvoir intouchable?" Le Figaro (Paris), June 13, 2008.
[8] Ahlul Bayt News Agency (Qom, Iran), June 23, 2011.
[9] Palestinian TV (Fatah), June 2, 2011, at Palestinian Media Watch, accessed Mar. 1, 2012.
[10] YNet News (Tel Aviv), July 13, 2009.
[11] See, for example, the summary in Craig Larkin and Michael Dumper, "UNESCO and Jerusalem: Constraints, Challenges and Opportunities," Jerusalem Quarterly, Autumn 2009, pp. 16-28.
[12] Yitzhak Reiter, Jerusalem and Its Role in Islamic Solidarity (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008), pp. 70-149.
[13] Rashid Khalidi, Palestinian Identity: The Construction of Modern National Consciousness (New York: Columbia University Press, 2009), p. 258, n. 76.
[14] Hillel Frisch, "Nationalizing a Universal Text: The Quran in Arafat's Rhetoric," Middle Eastern Studies, May 2005, pp. 321-36.
[15] Mahmoud Mi'ari, "Transformation of Collective Identity in Palestine," Journal of Asian and African Studies, Dec. 2009, pp. 579-98.
[16] Rhonda S. Zaharna, "Understanding Cultural Preferences of Arab Communications Patterns," Public Relations Review, 21 (1995): 241-55.
[17] Henry I. Silverman, "Reuters: Principles of Trust or Propaganda?" Journal of Applied Business Research, Nov./Dec. 2011, pp. 93-116.
[18] Maen Rashid Areikat, "Palestine, a history rich and deep," The Washington Post, Dec. 27, 2011.
[19] David Wenkel, "Palestinians, Jebusites, and Evangelicals," Middle East Quarterly, Summer 2007, pp. 49-56.
[2] Louis H. Feldman, "Some Observations on the Name of Palestine," Hebrew Union College Annual, 61 (1990): 1-23.
[3] "Camp David and After: An Exchange, An Interview with Ehud Barak," The New York Review of Books, June 13, 2001.
[4] Harry Frankfurt, On Bullshit (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2005), p. 56.
[5] See the essays in Hersh Goodman and Jonathan Cummings, eds., The Battle of Jenin: A Case Study in Israel's Communications Strategy (Tel Aviv: Tel Aviv University, Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies, 2003).
[6] Philippe Karsenty, "We Need to Expose the Muhammad al-Dura Hoax," Middle East Quarterly, Fall 2008, pp. 57-65; Nidra Poller, "The Muhammad al-Dura Hoax and Other Myths Revived," Middle East Quarterly, Fall 2011, pp. 71-8.
[7] Ivan Rioufol, "Les médias, pouvoir intouchable?" Le Figaro (Paris), June 13, 2008.
[8] Ahlul Bayt News Agency (Qom, Iran), June 23, 2011.
[9] Palestinian TV (Fatah), June 2, 2011, at Palestinian Media Watch, accessed Mar. 1, 2012.
[10] YNet News (Tel Aviv), July 13, 2009.
[11] See, for example, the summary in Craig Larkin and Michael Dumper, "UNESCO and Jerusalem: Constraints, Challenges and Opportunities," Jerusalem Quarterly, Autumn 2009, pp. 16-28.
[12] Yitzhak Reiter, Jerusalem and Its Role in Islamic Solidarity (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008), pp. 70-149.
[13] Rashid Khalidi, Palestinian Identity: The Construction of Modern National Consciousness (New York: Columbia University Press, 2009), p. 258, n. 76.
[14] Hillel Frisch, "Nationalizing a Universal Text: The Quran in Arafat's Rhetoric," Middle Eastern Studies, May 2005, pp. 321-36.
[15] Mahmoud Mi'ari, "Transformation of Collective Identity in Palestine," Journal of Asian and African Studies, Dec. 2009, pp. 579-98.
[16] Rhonda S. Zaharna, "Understanding Cultural Preferences of Arab Communications Patterns," Public Relations Review, 21 (1995): 241-55.
[17] Henry I. Silverman, "Reuters: Principles of Trust or Propaganda?" Journal of Applied Business Research, Nov./Dec. 2011, pp. 93-116.
[18] Maen Rashid Areikat, "Palestine, a history rich and deep," The Washington Post, Dec. 27, 2011.
[19] David Wenkel, "Palestinians, Jebusites, and Evangelicals," Middle East Quarterly, Summer 2007, pp. 49-56.
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