The Palestinian refugee
issue has been dramatically misrepresented, distorting circumstances
and numbers, in order to delegitimize the Jewish state.
The root cause then and now
According to the German
Middle East expert, Fritz Grobba ("Men and Powers in the Orient"), the
1948 Palestinian leadership, headed by Grand Mufti Haj Amin Al-Husseini,
wanted to apply Nazi methods to massacre Jews throughout the Middle
East. In 1941, the mufti drafted a proposal requesting that Germany and
Italy acknowledge the Arab right to settle "the Jewish problem" in
Palestine and the Arab countries in accordance with national and racial
Arab interests, similar to the practice employed to solve "the Jewish
problem" in Germany and Italy. On Nov. 24, 1947, Acting Chairman of the
(Palestinian) Arab Higher Committee Jamal Al-Husseini threatened:
"Palestine shall be consumed with fire and blood," if the Jews get any
part of it. On April 16, 1948, Jamal Husseini told the U.N. Security
Council: "The representative of the Jewish Agency told us yesterday that
they were not the attackers, that the Arabs had begun the fighting. We
did not deny this. We told the whole world that we were going to fight."
On January 9, 2013, Mahmoud Abbas pledged allegiance to the Grand Mufti,
who collaborated intimately with the Nazi leadership, particularly with
Himmler, Hitler's most ruthless right hand man: "On the anniversary of
Fatah, we renew the pledge to our fortunate martyrs. ... We pledge to
continue on the path of the martyrs. ... Here we must remember the
pioneers -- the grand mufti of Palestine, Haj Amin Al-Husseini."
Who is responsible?
PLO Chairman and
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas admitted that "Arab armies
forced Palestinians to leave their homes" (Filastin A-Thawra, March
1976). On May 13, 2008, Al Ayyam, the second largest pro-Abbas
Palestinian daily, claimed: "[In 1948] the Arab Liberation Army (ALA)
told Palestinians to leave their houses and villages, and return a few
days later, so the ALA can fulfill its mission."
The head of Britain's
Middle East Office in Cairo, John Troutbeck, reported in June 1949:
"Arab refugees speak with utmost bitterness of Egypt and other Arab
states. They know who their enemies are. Their Arab brothers persuaded
them unnecessarily to leave their homes." Sir Alan Cunningham, the last
British high commissioner in Palestine, wrote on April 28, 1948 that the
total evacuation was urged on the Haifa Arabs from higher Arab
quarters. The U.S. consul-general in Haifa telegraphed on April 25, 1948
that "reportedly, Arab Higher Committee is ordering all Arabs to
leave."
The secretary-general
of the Arab League, Azzam Pasha, told the Lebanese daily Al Hoda on June
8, 1951: "In 1948, we were assured that Palestine's occupation would be
a military promenade. ... Brotherly advice to Arabs in Palestine was to
leave their homes temporarily." The London Economist wrote on Oct. 2,
1948: "The most potent of the factors [triggering the Arab flight] were
the announcements by the Higher Arab Executive, urging the Arabs to
quit. ... It was clearly intimated that those Arabs who remained in
Haifa and accepted Jewish protection would be regarded as renegades."
Syrian Prime Minister Khaled al-Azam admitted in his 1973 memoirs that
"we brought destruction upon the refugees, by calling on them to leave
their homes."
According to the first
U.S. ambassador to Israel, James G. McDonald ("My Mission in Israel"):
"These Arabs ... fled from Palestine as the result of mass panic when
the wealthy Arabs, almost to a man, began running away in Nov. 1947. ...
The flight was provoked by lurid tales of Jewish sadism issued by the
Mufti and his followers. ... Superstitious and uneducated, the Arab
masses succumbed to the panic and fled. ... The refugees were on [Arab
leaders'] hands as the result of a war, which they had begun and lost."
How many refugees? The regional context
While the actual number of the 1948/9 Palestinian refugees was 320,000, Dr. Yoel Guzansky writes
that about one-third of Syria's population of 23 million have recently
lost their homes, and over 2 million (and growing) have found refuge in
neighboring Arab countries. In Jordan, there are 1.2 million refugees,
intensifying domestic instability; 800,000 Sunni Muslims fled to
Lebanon, aggravating Shiite-Sunni sectarian terrorism and constituting
an existential threat; 700,000 are in Turkey, 250,000 in Iraq and
125,000 in Egypt. One million Libyans have fled their country, which has
become increasingly violent and unstable since the 2011 toppling and
assassination of Moammar Gadhafi. Half a million refugees from
Ethiopia, Somalia, Djibouti and Sudan have reached Yemen, which is
burdened by a similar number of Yemenis who lost their home due to
tribal, religion, ideological and geographic domestic strife.
According to the
British "Survey of Palestine, Volume I" -- cited in Samuel Katz's
"Battleground: Fact and Fantasy in Palestine" -- in 1947, there were
561,000 Arabs in the area that became Israel. Katz contends that at the
end of the war there were 140,000 Arabs in Israel; thus, there could not
have been more than 420,000 displaced Arabs. "At the end of May 1948,
Faris el Khoury, Syria's representative on the U.N. Security Council,
estimated their number at 250,000. ... Emil Ghoury, secretary of the
Arab Higher Committee -- the leadership of the Arabs in British Mandate
Palestine -- announced on Sept. 6, 1948, that by the middle of June, the
number of Arabs who had fled was 200,000, and by July 17 their number
had risen to 300,000. ... Count Bernadotte, the U.N. special
representative in Palestine, estimated the number of Arab refugees at
360,000, including 50,000 in Israeli territory." The Chicago Tribune's
E. R. Noderer reported on May 10, 1948 that "150,000 Arabs were
estimated to have left the areas of Palestine assigned to the Jews in
the partition plan."
Misinformation and disinformation
have dominated the diplomatic discourse on the Palestinian issue,
misleading Western policymakers and public opinion molders, thus
radicalizing Arab expectations and demands, fueling terrorism and
minimizing the prospects of peace.
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