By WILLIAM MARTIN
On April 9, 1948, members of the underground Jewish
terrorist group, the Irgun, or IZL, led by Menachem Begin, who was to become
the Israeli prime minister in 1977, entered the peaceful Arab village of
Deir Yassin, massacred 250 men, women, children and the elderly, and stuffed
many of the bodies down wells. There were also reports of rapes and mutilations.
The Irgun was joined by the Jewish terrorist group, the Stern Gang, led
by Yitzhak Shamir, who subsequently succeeded Begin as prime minister of
Israel in the early '80s, and also by the Haganah, the militia under the
control of David Ben Gurian. The Irgun, the Stern Gang and the Haganah
later joined to form the Israeli Defense Force. Their tactics have not
changed.
The massacre at Deir Yassin was widely publicized by
the terrorists and the numerous heaped corpses displayed to the media.
In Jaffe, which was at the time 98 percent Arab, as well as in other Arab
communities, speaker trucks drove through the streets warning the population
to flee and threatening another Deir Yassin. Begin said at the time, "We
created terror among the Arabs and all the villages around. In one blow,
we changed the strategic situation."
From about 1938 on to the founding of Israel, Begin
was the leader of the Irgun. That group regularly assassinated English
soldiers in Palestine and frequently hung their booby-trapped bodies in
public places. Under Begin, the Irgun blew up the King David Hotel in Jerusalem
in 1946, killing 97 British civil servants. The Stern Gang, under Shamir,
also assassinated the U.N. representative to Palestine, Count Bernadotte,
in 1948.
But Deir Yassin was not the only massacre by the Israeli
Defense Force. That army, under Moshe Dayan, took the unarmed and undefended
village of al-Dawazyma, located in the Hebron hills, massacred 80 to 100
of its residents, and threw their bodies into pits. "The children
were killed by breaking their heads with sticks ... The remaining Arabs
were then sealed in houses, as the village was systematically razed ..."
(Nur Masalha, The Historical Roots of the Palestinian Refugee Question).
We read further. According to Yitzhak Rabin's biography:
We walked outside, Ben-Gurion accompanying us. Alon
repeated his question: "What is to be done with the population?"
BG waved his hand in a gesture, which said: Drive them out! ... I agreed
that it was essential to drive the inhabitants out.
Continuing the narrative, Ben-Gurion University historian
Benny Morris writes in "Operation Dani and the Palestinian Exodus
from Lydda and Ramle in 1948", Middle East Journal, 40
At 13.30 hours on 12 July [1948]... Lieutenant-Colonel Yitzhak Rabin, operation
Dani head Operation, issued the following order: '1. The inhabitants of
Lydda must be expelled quickly without attention to age. They should be
directed to Beit Nabala,... Implement Immediately.' A similar order was
issued at the same time to the Kiryati Brigade concerning the inhabitants
of the neighboring town of Ramle, occupied by Kiryati troops that morning...
On 12 and 13 July, the Yaftah brigades carried out their orders, expelling
the 50-60,000 remaining inhabitants of and refugees camped in and around
the two towns....
About noon on 13 July, Operation Dani HQ informed IDF
General Staff/Operations: 'Lydda police fort has been captured. [The troops]
are busy expelling the inhabitants.... Lydda's inhabitants were forced
to walk eastward to the Arab legion lines; many of Ramle's inhabitants
were ferried in trucks or buses. Clogging the roads... the tens of thousands
of refugees marched, gradually shedding their worldly goods along the way.
It was a hot summer day. The Arab chroniclers, such as Sheikh Muhammed
Nimr al Khatib, claimed that hundreds of children died in the march, from
dehydration and disease. One Israeli witness described the spoor: the refugee
column 'to begin with [jettisoned] utensils and furniture and, in the end,
bodies of men, women, and children.
There were many other such villages with Arabic names
that have almost been expunged from memory--but not quite. These facts
have always been known to some historians, however they have been consistently
denied by the official Israeli histories, as, indeed, Israel has never
taken any responsibility for the exodus of Palestinians from the land of
the present state of Israel.
Within the last 10 to 20 years, however, there has
been an exponential increase in historical studies of the origins of the
state of Israel which have coincided with the release by Israel of many,
but not all, of the historical and military archives. Ben-Gurion University
historian Benny Morris, as well as others, have systematically mined these
documents and found numerous instances of massacres, and, by the way, not
one shred of evidence for the frequently repeated official Israeli lie
that the Palestinians fled Palestine because the surrounding Arab states
told them to.
In fact, according to UN estimates, which some say
are conservative, 750,000 Palestinians fled the site of the present Jewish
state in 1948. Those refugees and their descendents now number about 4.5
million and constitute the largest and longest standing refugee population
in the world. Many live in squalid refugee camps distributed in the surrounding
Arab states or in the West Bank or Gaza, many retain the titles to their
land, recognized by the British before 1948 or the Ottomans before that
, and many retain the keys to their front doors of their former homes in
what is now Israel, whether or not those doors still exists.
The '67 War generated a second wave of about 300,000
refugees from the West Bank and Gaza who were either expelled through direct
or psychological methods or fled the Israel aerial attacks on the territories
which included the extensive use of napalm.
The reader is invited to read the Hagana's Plan D ,
which has been available in English since the 1960s and was a military
strategy of 1948 that entailed the evacuation of the Palestinian population
from the areas of a future Jewish state.
Those who invoke the suicide bombings against mostly
Israeli civilians to infer the righteousness of the Israeli cause live
in a twilight of psychic denial of an otherwise unambiguous historical
record: the state of Israel was founded on terrorism and ethnic cleansing.
The suicide bombings inside Israel, the first of which
only occurred in 1994, after 25 years of occupation, is only a side show.
That is a symptom and long way from the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict.
There will never be a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict until Israel takes responsibility, under U.N. Resolution 194,
calling for reparation of the Palestinian refugees, and recognizes the
immense suffering it caused at that time. We need also to recognize the
US is giving unqualified moral support to a state that is based on racial
purity and one that is intrinsically expansionist.
William James Martin is a visiting Instructor of Mathematics
at the University of Central Florida, Orlando. He can be reached at: martinw@email.unc.edu
The very first lesson that we have a right to
demand that logic shall teach us is, how to make our ideas clear; and a
most important one it is, deprecated only by minds who stand in need of
it. To know what we think, to be masters of our own meaning, will make
a solid foundation for great and weighty thought. It is most easily learned
by those whose ideas are meager and restricted; and far happier they than
such as wallow helplessly in a rich mud of conceptions. - Charles Sanders
Peirce - founder of Pragmatism

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