Professor Ilan Pappe is an Israeli
historian and senior lecturer of Political Science at
Haifa University. He is the author of numerous books,
including A History of Modern Palestine, The Modern
Middle East, The Israel/Palestine Question and, most
recently, The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine, published
in 2006. On March 8, he spoke at a small colloquium in
Tokyo organized by the
NIHU Program Islamic Area
Studies, University of Tokyo
Unit, on the path of personal experiences that brought
him to write his new book. The following is a transcript
of his lecture, tentatively titled "The History of
Israel Reconsidered" by organizers of the event.
03/20/07 "Dissidentvoice"
-- - -Ilan
Pappe:
Thank you for inviting me, it's a pleasure to be here. I
hope that you will ask me, afterwards, questions of a
more general nature because I'm not sure how much I can
cover in 40, 45, 50 minutes. I will be a bit personal,
to begin with, and then move to the more general issues.
I think it will help to understand what I am doing.
I was born
in Israel and I had a very conventional, typical Israeli
education, and life, until I finished my B.A. studies at
Hebrew University, which was many years ago in the
mid-1970s. Like all Israeli Jews, I knew very little on
the Palestinian side, and met very few Palestinians. And
although I was a very keen student of history, already
in high-school ? I knew I would be a historian ? I was
very loyal to the narrative that I was taught in school.
I had very little doubt that what my teachers taught me
in school was the only truth about the past.
My life
was changed, in a way ? definitely my professional life,
but after that also my private and public life ? when I
decided to leave Israel and do my doctoral dissertation
outside the country. Because when you go out, you see
things that you would find very difficult to see from
within. And I chose as a subject for my doctoral thesis
the year of 1948, because even without knowing much the
past, I understood that this is a formative year. I knew
enough to understand that this is a departure point for
history, because for one side, the Israelis, 1948 is a
miracle, the best year in Jewish history. After two
thousand years of exile the Jews finally establish a
state, and get independence. And for the Palestinians it
was exactly the opposite, the worst year in their
history, as they call it the Catastrophe, the Nakba,
almost the Holocaust, the worst kind of year that a
nation can wish to have. And that intrigued me, the fact
that the same year, the same events, are seen so
differently, on both sides.
Being
outside the country enabled me to have more respect and
understanding, I think, to the fact that maybe there is
another way of looking at history than what I lived ?
not only my own world, my own people's way, my own
nation's way. But this was not enough, of course. This
was not enough to revisit history, this attitude, this
fact that one day you wake up and you say: wait a
minute, there's someone else here, maybe they see
history differently ? and if you are a genuine
intellectual, you should strive to have respect for
someone else's point-of-view, not only yours.
I was
lucky that the year I decided to study the other side
was the year when, according to the Israeli law of
classification of documents ? every 30 years the Israeli
archives declassify secret material, 30 years for
political matters, and 50 years for military matters.
When I started in Oxford, in England, in the early
1980s, quite a lot of new material about 1948 was
opened. And I started looking at the archives in Israel,
in the United Kingdom, in France, in the United States,
and also the United Nations opened its archives when I
started working on this. They had interesting archives
in Geneva, and in New York.
And
suddenly I began to see a picture of 1948 that I was not
familiar with. It takes historians quite a while to take
material and turn it into an article or a book, or a
doctoral thesis, in this case. And after two years, I,
at least, found that I had a clear picture of what
happened in 1948, and that picture challenged, very
dramatically, the picture I grew up with. And I was not
the only one who went through this experience. Two or
three, maybe four, historians ? partly historians,
partly journalists, in Israel ? saw the same material
and also arrived at similar conclusions: that the way we
understood Israel of 1948 was not right, and that the
documents showed us a different reality than what we
knew. We were called ? the group of people who saw
things differently ? we were called the New Historians.
And whether it's a good term or not we can discuss
later, but it's a fact that they called us the New
Historians, this is not to be denied.
Now what did we
challenge about 1948? I think that's very important to
understand, the old picture, and the new picture, and
then we can move on. The old picture was that, in 1948,
after 30 years of British rule in Palestine, the Jewish
Nation of the Zionist Movement was ready to accept an
international offer of peace with the local people of
Palestine. And therefore when the United Nations offered
to divide Palestine into two states, the Zionist
movement said
yes,
the Arab world and the Palestinians said
no;
as a result the Arab world went to war in order to
destroy the state of Israel, called upon the Palestinian
people to leave, to make way for the invading Arab
armies; the Jewish leaders asked the Palestinians not to
leave, but they left; and as a result the Palestinian
refugee problem was created. Israel miraculously won the
war, and became a fact. And ever since then the Arab
world, and the Palestinians, have not ceased to want to
destroy the Jewish state.
This is
more or less the version we grew up with. Another
mythology was that a major invasion took place in '48, a
very strong Arab contingent went into Palestine and a
very small Jewish army fought against it. It was a kind
of David and Goliath mythology, the Jews being the
David, the Arab armies being the Goliath, and again it
must be a miracle if David wins against the Goliath.
So this is the picture.
What we found challenged most of this mythology. First
of all, we found out that the Zionist leadership, the
Israeli leadership, regardless of the peace plans of the
United Nations, contemplated long before 1948 the
dispossession of the Palestinians, the expulsion of the
Palestinians. So it was not that as a result of the war
that the Palestinians lost their homes. It was as a
result of a Jewish, Zionist, Israeli ? call it what you
want ?
plan
that Palestine was ethnically cleansed in 1948 of its
original indigenous population.
I must say that not all
those who are included in the group of new historians
agree with this description. Some would say only half of
the Palestinians were expelled, and half ran away. Some
would say that it was a result of the war. I have a
clear picture in my mind. Of course I don't oblige
anyone to accept it, but I am quite confident, as I
wrote in my latest book,
The Ethnic
Cleansing of Palestine,
that actually already in the 1930s the Israeli ? then it
was not Israeli, it was a pre-state leadership ? had
contemplated and systematically planned the expulsion of
the Palestinians in 1948.
To
summarize this point, the old historical Israeli
position was: Israel has no responsibility for the
Palestinians becoming refugees, the Palestinians are
responsible for this because they did not accept the
peace plan, and they accepted the Arab call to leave the
country. That was the old position. My position, and
with this a lot of the New Historians agree, was that
Israel is exclusively responsible for the refugee
problem, because it planned the expulsion of the
Palestinians from their homeland. Therefore it
definitely bears the responsibility.
Another
point that we discovered is that we checked the military
balance on the ground, and we found that this
description of an Arab Goliath and a Jewish David also
does not stand with the facts. The Arab world talked a
lot, still does today, but doesn't do much when it comes
to the Palestine question. And therefore they sent a
very limited number of soldiers into Israel, and
basically for most of the time, the Jewish army had the
upper hand in terms of the numbers of soldiers, the
level of equipment, and the training experience.
Finally, one of the
common Israeli mythologies about 1948 ? and not only
about 1948 ? is, that Israel all the time stretches its
hand for peace, always offers peace to the Arab world in
general, and the Palestinians in particular, and it is
the Arab world and the Palestinians who are inflexible
and refuse any peace proposal. I think we showed in our
work that, at least in 1948, that there was a genuine
offer for peace from the world ? or an idea of peace ?
after the war ended, and actually the Palestinians and
the Arab neighbouring states were willing at least to
give a chance for peace, and it was the Israeli
government that rejected it. Later, one of the New
Historians, Avi Shlaim from Oxford, would write a book
that is called
the Iron Wall.
In this book, he shows that not only in 1948, but since
1948 until today, there were quite a lot of junctures in
history where there was a chance for peace, and it
failed not because the Arab world refused to exploit the
chance, but rather because the Israelis rejected the
peace offer.
So
revisiting history, for me, starts with 1948. And I will
come back again in the end of my talk to 1948 to talk
more about my latest book. But I want to explain that in
the path from looking back at 1948 and questioning the
common historical version and narrative, a group of
Israeli scholars, academics, journalists, and so on,
were not only content with looking at 1948 but also
looked at other periods. We had a very strange time in
Israeli academia, which is over now, in the 1990s. In
the 1990s, Israeli academics went back to Israeli
history, as I said not only to 1948, and looked at very
important chapters in Israel's history, critically, and
wrote an alternative history to the one that they were
taught in schools, or even in universities. I say that
it is a very interesting time because it ended in 2000
with the second Palestinian uprising. You won't find
many traces of this critical energy today in Israel.
Today in Israel these academics either neglect Israel,
or left the views and came back to the national
narrative. Israel is a very consensual society nowadays.
But in the 1990s it was a very interesting time, I'm
very happy that I was part of it. I don't regret it, I'm
only sorry that it does not continue, and time will tell
whether it is the beginning of something new or whether
it was an extraordinary chapter and is not going to be
repeated.
Now what
did these scholars do? They went from the beginning of
the Zionist experience to the present time and looked at
all kinds of stations. They began with the early Zionist
years. The Zionist movement appeared in Europe in the
late 19th century. The first Jewish settler in Palestine
arrived in 1882. Now the common view in Israel is that
these people came to more or less an empty land, and
were only part of a national project, that they created
a national homeland for the Jews, and for some
unexplained reasons, the Arabs didn't like it, and kept
attacking the small Jewish community, and this seems to
be the fate of Israel, to live in an area of people who
cannot accept them. They don't accept them because the
attackers of Israel are either Muslims, or Arabs, which
should explain a certain political culture that cannot
live at peace with neighbours, or whatever the
explanations Israelis give for why Arabs and
Palestinians keep attacking the Jewish state.
Now the
new scholarship decided to look at the movement of Jews
from Europe to the Arab world as a colonialist movement.
It was not the only place in the world where Europeans,
for whatever reasons ? even for good reasons ? moved out
from Europe and settled in a non-European world. And
they said that Zionism in this respect was not
different. The fact that the Jews of course were
persecuted in Europe explains why they were looking for
a safe haven, this is known and accepted. But the fact
that they decided that the only safe haven is a place
where already someone else lived turned them into a
colonialist project as well. So they introduced the
colonialist perspective to the study of early Zionism.
They also
looked differently at a very touchy subject, and this is
the relationship between the Holocaust and the state of
Israel. Very brave scholars showed what we know now is a
fact how the Jewish leadership in Palestine was not
doing all it could to save Jews in the Holocaust because
it was more interested in the fate of the Jews in
Palestine itself. And how the Holocaust memory was
manipulated in Israel to justify certain attitudes and
policies toward the Palestinians. They also note the
treatment of Jews who came from Arab countries in the
1950s, they found this Israeli urge to be a part of
Europe very damaging in the way they treated Jewish
communities who came from Arab countries. And of course
it would have helped Israel to integrate in the
Middle-East, because they were Arabs as well, but they
de-Arabized them, they told them: "You are not Arabs,
you are something else." And they accepted it because it
was the only ticket to be integrated into Israeli
society.
All this
revisiting, if you want, of Israeli history goes from
1882 to at least the 1950s. Around 100 to 120 scholars
were involved in this in the 1990s. The Israeli public,
at first, of course, did not accept these new findings,
and was very angry with these scholars, but I think it
was the beginning of a good chance of starting to
influence Israeli public opinion to the point of even
changing some of the textbooks in the educational
system.
Then came
the second Intifada, and a lot of people felt that
Israel is again at war, and when you are at war, you
cannot criticize your own side. This is where we are
now, and so many of these critical scholars lowered down
their criticism, and in fact people like myself ? I can
only testify from my own experience ? in one night,
changed from heroes to enemies. It is not an easy
experience. In the 1990s, my university was very proud
that I was a part of it. So the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs sent a lot of people to show how pluralistic is
this university, they have this guy who is a New
Historian, and he can show you how critical he is and
that Israel is an open society, the only democracy in
the Middle East.
After
2000, I became the enemy of the university. Not only did
the foreign office stop sending people to see me, the
university was looking for ways of sending me abroad,
not bringing people to visit me, and almost succeeded in
2002. There was about to be a big trial ? the trial
didn't take place, thank God ? where I was to be accused
of all kinds of things that you would think that a
democracy doesn't have, accusing lecturers of treason
and being not loyal to their country, and so on. I was
saying the same things in the 1990s as I was in 2002 ? I
didn't change my views, what changed was the political
atmosphere in Israel.
I want to
go, now, in the last part of my talk, to my new book.
After working on this new scholarship I wrote quite a
lot of articles and edited a lot of books that
summarized this new scholarship that I was talking
about, trying to assess its impact. I was also very
impressed ? in one of my books I wrote extensively about
this ? how it influenced Palestinian scholarship to be
more open and critical. It really created something
which I call the "Bridging Narrative," a concept that I
developed, and I am still developing. It is a historical
concept that in fact to create peace you need a bridging
narrative. You need both national sides, each has their
own historical narrative, but if they want to contribute
to peace they have to build a bridge narrative. I
founded, together with a Palestinian friend, a group in
Ramala, called the Bridging Narrative Historians. We
started to work in 1997, still work now, and it's a very
good project of building a joint narrative. We looked
jointly at history because we believe the future is
there if you agree on the past.
After
doing that, I felt still very haunted by '48, I felt
that the story was not complete. I wrote two books on
1948, and I felt it was not enough. And then came the
new archives. In 1998, the Israelis opened the military
archives. As I said, they opened political archives
after 30 years, but military archives after 1990. And
then I felt I had even a more complete picture, not only
of '48, but unfortunately, of how '48 lives inside
Israel today. And the new documents, I think, show very
clearly ? although I knew it before, but the new
documents show even more clearly, if you needed more
evidence ? that the Zionist movement, from the very
beginning, it realized that in the land of Palestine
someone else lives. That the only solution would be to
get rid of these people.
I'm not
saying that they knew exactly how to do it, I'm not sure
that they always knew how to do it, but they definitely
were convinced that the main objective of the Zionist
project ? which was to find a safe place for the Jews on
the one hand, and to redefine Judaism as a national
movement, not just as a religion ? can not be
implemented as long as the land of Palestine was not
Jewish. Now some of them thought that a small number of
Palestinians can stay, but definitely they cannot be a
majority, they cannot even be a very considerable
minority. I think this is why '48 provides such a good
opportunity for the Zionist leadership to try to change
the demographic reality on the ground. And as I tried to
show in my book, ever since 1937, under the leadership
of the founding father of Zionism, David Ben-Gurion, the
plan for ethnic cleansing of Palestine was carefully
prepared.
This has a
lot of moral implications, not just political ones.
Because if I am right ? and I may be wrong, but if I am
right ? in applying the term ethnic cleansing to what
Israel did in 1948, I am accusing the state of Israel of
a crime. In fact in the international legal parlance,
ethnic cleansing is a crime against humanity. And if you
look at the website of the American State Department,
you will see that the American State Department Legal
Section says that any group in history, or in the
future, that lives in a mixed ethnic group, and plans to
get rid of one of the ethnic groups, is committing a
crime against humanity. And it doesn't matter ? very
interesting ? it doesn't matter whether it does it by
peaceful means, or military means. The very idea that
you can get rid of people just because they are
ethnically different from you, today, definitely, in
international law, is considered to be a crime.
It's also
interesting that the State Department says that the only
solution for victims of an ethnic cleansing crime, who
are usually refugees because you expel them, is the
return of everyone their homes. Of course, in the State
Department list of cases of ethnic crime, Israel does
not appear. Everyone else appears, from Biblical times
until today, but the one case that does not appear as an
ethnic cleansing case is the case of Palestine because
this would have committed the State Department to
believe in the Palestinian right of return, which they
don't want.
There is
another implication. I am not a judge, and I don't want
to bring people to justice, although in this book, for
the first time in my life, I decided not to write a book
that says "Israel ethnically cleansed Palestine." I name
names, I give names of people. I give the names of the
people that decided that 1.3 million Palestinians do not
have the right to continue to live where they lived for
more than one thousand years. I decided to give the
names. I also found the place where the decision was
taken.
I think
far more important for me is not what happened in 1948.
Far more important for me is the fact that the world
knew what happened and decided not to do anything, and
sent a very wrong message to the state of Israel, that
it's okay to get rid of the Palestinians. And I think
this is why the ethnic cleansing of Palestine continues
today as we speak. Because the message from the
international community was that if you want to create a
Jewish state by expelling so many Palestinians and
destroying so many Palestinian villages and towns,
that's okay. This is aright. It's a different lecture,
why ? and I'm not going to give it ? why did the world
allow Israel in 1948 to do something it would not have
allowed anyone else to do. But, as I say, it's a
different lecture, I don't want to go into it.
The fact
is that the world knew, and absolved Israel. As a
result, the Israeli state, the new state of Israel that
was founded in 1948, accepted as an ideological
infrastructure the idea that to think about an ethnic
purity of a state is a just objective. I will explain
this. The educational system in Israel, the media in
Israel, the political system in Israel, sends us Jews in
Israel a very clear message from our very early days
until we die. The message is very clear, and you can see
that message in the platforms of all the political
parties in Israel. Everybody agrees with it, whether
they are on the left, or on the right. The message is
the following. And to my mind ? I will say the message
in a minute ? but I will say that, to my mind, this is a
very dangerous message, a very racist message, against
which I fight (unsuccessfully).
The message is that
personal life
? not collective life, not even political life ?
personal life
of the Jew in Israel would have been much better had
there not been Arabs around. Now that doesn't mean that
everybody believes that because of that you go out and
start shooting Arabs or even expelling them. You will
see the paradox.
Today I
gave an interview to a journalist here in Japan, and he
told me of someone ? I won't mention the name ? but a
very well-known Israeli politician of the left, who said
to him: "My dream is to wake up one morning and to see
that there are no Arabs in Israel." And he is one of the
leading liberal Zionists, he is on the left, very much
in the peace camp. This is the result of 1948, the idea
that this is legitimate, to educate people that the
solution for their problems is the disappearing of
someone just because he is an Arab, or a Muslim, and of
course the disappearing of someone who is an indigenous
population, who is the native of that land, not an
immigrant. I mean, you can understand ? maybe not accept
but you can understand ? how a society treats
immigrants. Sometimes they find that these immigrants
come to take my job, you know these politics of racism
that are the result of immigration. But we are not even
talking about immigrants, we are talking about a country
that someone else immigrated into, and turned the local
people into immigrants, and said that they have no
rights there.
If someone
who is from the Israeli peace camp, and very much on the
left, has a dream that all the Arabs would disappear
from the land of Israel, you can understand what happens
if you are not from the left. You don't dream, you start
working on this. And you don't have to be on the extreme
right for that, you can be in the mainstream. We have to
remember that the ethnic cleansing of Palestine in 1948
was committed by the Labor Party, not by the Likud, by
the mainstream ideology.
In other words, what we
have here is a society that was convinced that its need
to have ethnic exclusivity, or at least total majority,
in whatever part of Palestine it would consider to be
the future Jewish state, that this value, this objective
is above everything else in Israel. It's more important
than democracy. It's more important than human rights.
It's more important than civil rights. Because, for most
Jews in Israel, if you don't have a demographic
majority, you are going to lose, it's a suicide. And if
this is the position, then no wonder people would say
that if the Palestinians in Israel would be more than
20%, we will have suicide. You will hear people that
will tell you that they are intellectuals, liberals,
democrats,
humanists,
say this.
And if
Israel wants to annex ? and it wants to annex ? half of
the West Bank, as you know, and half of the West Bank
has a lot of Palestinians in it, there is not one person
in Israel that thinks that it's wrong to move by force
the people that live in one half of the West Bank to the
second half of the West Bank. Because otherwise the
demographic balance in Israel will change. And it's no
wonder that Israelis feel no problem with what they did
to the Gaza Strip. Take one million and a half people
and lock them in an impossible prison with two gates and
one key, that the Israelis have, and think that people
can live like this without reaction. In order to
delegitimize the right of someone to be in their own
homeland, you have to dehumanize them. If they're human
beings you won't think about them like this.
I think
that as long as this is the ideology of the state of
Israel, and it is the ideology of the state of Israel, a
lot of the good things in Israel ? and there are many
many good things in Israel, it's an impressive project
that the Zionist movement did, the way it saved Jews,
the way it created a modern society almost out of
nothing ? all these amazing achievements will be lost.
First of all the Palestinians would lose, that's true.
This is true. First of all the Palestinians are going to
lose because the Israelis are not going to change ? it
doesn't look like they're going to change their policy,
and it doesn't look like anyone in the world is going to
force them to change their policy. But in the long run,
Israel is not alone, and it is a small country in the
Arab world and in the Muslim world, and America will not
always be there to save it.
In the end
of the day if the Israelis ? like South Africa, you
cannot be in a neighbourhood and be alien to the
neighbours, and say "I don't like you," or "I don't want
to be here" ? eventually they would react. It could take
one hundred years, two hundred years, I don't know. But
the Israelis are miscalculating, I think, history. Only
historians understand that sixty years is nothing in
history. Look at the Soviet Union. The fact that you are
successful for sixty years with the wrong policy does
not mean that the next sixty years are going to be the
same. They're making a terrible mistake, as the Jewish
communities around the world are making a terrible
mistake in supporting this policy.
The new
book is trying to convince that the most important story
about the ethnic cleansing is not only what happened in
1948 but the way that the world reacted to what happened
in 1948, sending the wrong message to Israel, that this
is fine, you can be part, not only of the world, but you
can be part of the Western world. You can be a part of
what is called "the group of civilized nations." So
don't be surprised, if you go to the occupied
territories and you see first-hand how people are being
treated there, that the vast majority of the Israelis,
firstly don't know what goes on there, secondly when
they know what goes on there, don't seem to bother much.
Because the same message they got from the world in 1948
is the message they get from the world in 2007. You can
take a whole city ? imagine Tokyo ? surround it by an
electric gate, and one person would have the key for the
only gate to the city. Any other place in the world, if
you would hear of a city that is at the mercy of a
warden, like a prison, you would be shocked. You would
not allow it to continue for one day without protests.
In Israel the world accepts it. And this is despite the
fact that there are more international journalists per
square mile in Israel and Palestine than there are
anywhere else in the world. That's a fact. And despite
this international media presence, the Israelis have not
changed one aspect of their policy of occupation in
Palestine.
As I say, unfortunately
I don't have time for this, but I think it's a very
interesting question: why does the world allow Israel to
do what it does?
But it's really a different question ? so I think I will
stop here, and open up for questions and remarks. Thank
you.