Revealing a
Massacre, or
Stating the
Obvious
By Ramzy
Baroud
21/07/08 "ICH"
-- - For
some folks
interested
in
genealogy,
tracing
one's roots
is a
stimulating
activity.
It's
immensely
interesting
and
meaningful
to learn
where one's
life
started. DNA
testing has
made it
possible to
trace one's
roots back
many
generations
and there
are even
free web
sites that
can help
users trace
their family
history
based on a
few simple
clues.
Recent
findings in
my own
personal
history have
been
interesting
indeed. The
present task
of tracing
my family
roots was
inspired by
a book
project with
Pluto Press,
narrating
the story of
my father,
as once a
fighter from
Gaza who
died
recently
under tragic
circumstances
in the same
refugee camp
to which he
was
expelled,
along with
his family
sixty years
ago.
Just weeks
into my
research, I
found myself
stumbling
into the
details of a
massacre,
one that is
conveniently
overshadowed
by the dust
of the
battle, the
rigidity of
academic
research and
the lack of
media access
of those who
have
survived.
And now,
what started
as a mere
phase of my
father's
torn
childhood in
Palestine
has morphed
into being
the core of
my book's
narrative.
My family
came from
the village
of Beit
Daras, one
of the
hundreds of
villages
destroyed by
Zionist
Jewish
militias
prior to the
establishment
of the state
of Israel.
Growing up
in a refugee
camp in the
Gaza Strip,
decades
after the
destruction
of Beit
Daras, I
heard many
stories of
our village
that now
only exist
in memory.
The
objective
behind the
story was
hardly a
calculated
intent to
ensure that
we don't
forget what
has befallen
us. It was a
daily
narrative
that simply
defined our
internal
relationship
as a
community.
The "Bedrasawis"
- the
collective
name of
those
originated
from Beit
Daras - were
often
stereotyped
as "large
headed" -
literally -
and
stubborn.
Although we
Bedrasawis
protested
the
recurring
accusation,
we also
shared
unspoken
pride in it.
But that
reputation
of zeal and
prowess was
fostered by
the dramatic
events of
1948, during
the Zionist
drive to
evacuate
Palestine
from its
inhabitants.
Israeli
historian
Benny
Morris, in
his volume,
The Birth of
the
Palestinian
Refugee
Problem,
makes a
couple of
references
to Beit
Daras.
Nothing
notable,
aside from
the fact
that a
Haganah's
unit, Givati,
had shelled
the village
on May 10,
1948
"promoting
the flight
of its
inhabitants."
But there is
more to what
took place
in Beit
Daras than
Morris's
footnote.
Arab
historians,
Walid
Khalidi,
Salman Abu
Sitta, among
others,
provided the
story within
a greater
context.
Still,
documenting
the history
of anywhere
between 400
to 500
destroyed
Palestinian
villages in
one volume
is not a
simple feat,
thus much of
Beit Daras'
history is
lumped as
one of many:
the Zionists
attacked on
day such and
such, the
Arabs
resisted,
then fled,
then the
village was
blown up to
ensure that
the
inhabitants
would not
return.
As sinister
as the above
summation
is, much is
left untold.
Peoples,
faces,
stories and
families
were torn
apart, often
never to
meet again,
along with
the
decimated
village's
401 homes,
two mosques
and lone
elementary
school.
Those killed
in the
'massacre of
Beit Daras',
according to
Palestinian
accounts,
were 265,
largely
women,
children and
elders. The
gender and
age groups
of the
victims were
not
selective
nor
coincidental,
but related
to the
nature of
the battle,
where the
fighters of
Beit Daras
were engaged
in fighting
against
successive
Zionist army
units, first
involving
militants
from a
nearby
settlement,
then Haganah
forces and
finally
Givati
units. The
battle for
Beit Daras
was long and
arduous, and
duly
mentioned in
the writings
of Jamal Abd
Al-Nasser,
the first
president of
Egypt,
during his
military
service in
southern
Palestine,
and of David
Ben Gurion's
War Diaries
(1947-1949).
Morris's
chronological
research
methods
discounted
the fact
that
although
Beit Daras
was located
in southern
Palestine -
approximately
30
kilometers
north of
Gaza - the
Zionist
aggression
to conquer
the once
peaceful
village
began
earlier than
the Givati's
"Operation
Lighting" (Mivtza
Barak) of
early May
1948, and
that the
village
didn't fall
for at least
another
month after
the date he
sketchily
provides.
Indeed, Beit
Daras'
strategic
location,
near
important
Zionist
military
hubs -
located
inside
settlements
bordering
the village
- and near
the supply
routes to
the Negev,
made it a
target as
early as
March 16,
and several
times more
in the same
month; then,
again, in
April, and
twice in
May, and
finally in
June.
Zionist
losses were
high and
their
attempts
failed, time
after time.
There was
much fury
that a small
village of
roughly 2000
people would
not
surrender
under
intense
bombardment.
A single day
of fighting
resulted in
the death of
50 Arabs,
according to
Ben Gurion's
own account.
Um 'Adel is
an
80-year-old
woman who
now lives in
Gaza. Today
she sells
foodstuffs
at a tiny
and humble
stand to
help her
family as
they
struggle to
survive the
siege on
Gaza. She
vividly
recalls the
events that
lead to the
massacre in
1948. It
struck me
how
apolitical
she was, and
how, until
this day,
she is
dumbfounded,
not able to
comprehend
the dramatic
events of
those short
months
between
March and
June of
1948.
Until now,
she views
the fight
for Beit
Daras based
on a simple
equation:
They tried
to take our
land, and we
fought them
off until
the end.
"They (The
Zionist
militias)
knew well
that we,
Bedrasawis
would not go
down easily.
They knew
that their
fight for
that whole
area was one
battle, but
to take over
Beit Daras
was
another." As
simple as
the equation
was, her
confusion
about the
whole event
haunts her
until this
day, and
even now
decades
later, she
is still
baffled as
to what
happened and
why the
people of
her village
were
betrayed.
Beit Daras,
lived up to
its
reputation
of
hard-headedness
and
tenacity,
but many
details
remain
murky, yet
incredibly
revealing
and deserve
more than a
footnote.
One can only
hope that
the memory
of the
village
survives
without
having to
wait the
authentication
of an
Israeli
historian,
which may or
may not ever
arrive. I
know that I
will do my
part to make
that happen.
After all, I
owe Beit
Daras my
(relatively)
large head,
and the
tenacious
spirit of my
children,
who carry
the names of
those who
lived in
Beit Daras,
and died
there.
-Ramzy
Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net)
is an author
and editor
of
PalestineChronicle.com.
His work has
been
published in
many
newspapers
and journals
worldwide.
His latest
book is The
Second
Palestinian
Intifada: A
Chronicle of
a People's
Struggle
(Pluto
Press,
London).
