Arab Apartheid (Nakba)
By Ben Dror Yemini
Maariv (translated from Hebrew)
May 14, 2011
The real “nakba,” which is the story of the Arab apartheid. Tens of millions, among them Jews,
suffered from the “nakba,” which included
dispossession, expulsion and displacement. Only the Palestinians remained
refugees because they were treated to abuse and oppression by the Arab
countries. Below is the story of the real “nakba”
In 1959, the Arab League passed Resolution 1457, which states as
follows: “The Arab countries will not grant citizenship to applicants of
Palestinian origin in order to prevent their assimilation into the host
countries.” That is a stunning resolution, which
was diametrically opposed to international norms in everything pertaining to
refugees in those years, particularly in that decade. The story began, of
course, in 1948, when the Palestinian “nakba”
occurred. It was also the beginning of every discussion on the Arab-Israeli
conflict, with the blame heaped on Israel, because it expelled the
refugees, turning them into miserable wretches. This lie went public through
academe and the media dealing with the issue.
In previous articles on the issue of the Palestinians, we explained that there
is nothing special about the Israeli Arab conflict. First, the Arab countries
refused to accept the proposal of partition and they launched a war of
annihilation against the State of Israel which had barely been established. All
precedents in this matter showed that the party that starts the war - and with
a declaration of annihilation, yet - pays a price for it. Second, this entails
a population exchange: indeed, between 550,000 and 710,000 Arabs (the most
precise calculation is that of Prof. Ephraim Karash,
who calculated and found that their number ranges between 583,000 and 609,000).
Most of them fled, a minority were expelled because of the war and a larger
number of about 850,000 Jews were expelled or fled from Arab countries ( the “Jewish nakba”). Third, the
Palestinians are not alone in this story. Population exchanges and expulsions
were the norm at that time. They occurred in dozens of other conflict points,
and about 52 million people experienced dispossession, expulsion and uprooting
(”And the
World is lying”). And fourth, in all the population exchange
precedents that occurred during or at the end of an armed conflict, or on the
backdrop of the establishment of a national entity, or the disintegration of a
multinational state and the establishment of a national entity - there was no
return of refugees to the previous region, which had turned into a new national
state. The displaced persons and the refugees, with almost no exceptions, found
sanctuary in the place in which they joined a population with a similar
background: the ethnic Germans who wore expelled from Central and Eastern
Europe assimilated in Germany, the Hungarian refugees from Czechoslovakia and
other places found sanctuary in Hungary, the Ukrainians who were expelled from
Poland found sanctuary in Ukraine, and so forth. In this sense, the affinity
between the Arabs who originated in mandatory Palestine and their neighbors in
Jordan, Syria and Lebanon, was similar or even greater than the affinity
between many ethnic Germans and their country of origin in Germany, sometimes
after a disconnect of many generations.
Only the Arab states acted completely
differently from the rest of the world. They crushed the refugees despite the
fact that they were their coreligionists and members of the Arab nation. They
instituted a régime of apartheid to all intents and purposes. So we must
remember that the “nakba” was not caused by the
actual dispossession, which had also been experienced by tens of millions of
others. The “nakba” is the story of the apartheid and
abuse suffered by the Arab refugees (it was only later that they became
“Palestinians”) in Arab countries.

Egypt:
Throughout many eras, there was no real distinction between the inhabitants of Egypt and the
inhabitants of the coastal plain. Both were Muslims, Arabs, who lived under
Ottoman rule. According to the researcher Oroub
El-Abed, commercial ties, mutual migration and intermarriage between the two
groups was commonplace. Many of the residents of Jaffa
were defined as Egyptians because they arrived in many waves, like the wave of
immigration to Jaffa
during the rule of Muhammad Ali and his son over many parts of the coastal
plain. Inhabitants of the Ottoman Empire, which became mandatory Palestine, did not have
an ethnic or religious identity that differed from that of the Egyptian Arabs.
Various records from the end of 1949 show that 202,000 refugees went to the
Gaza Strip, primarily from Jaffa, Beer Sheva and Majdal (Ashkelon). That number may be exaggerated because
the local poor also joined the list of aid recipients. The refugees went to the
place where they were part of the majority group from all standpoints: ethnic,
national and religious. Egypt,
however, did not think so. At first, back in September 1948, a “government of
all Palestine”
was established, headed by Ahmad al-Baki. However, it
was an organization under Egyptian auspices due to the rivalry with Jordan. The
ostensible Palestinian government gave up the ghost after a decade.
What happened to the people in the Gaza Strip? How did the Egyptians treat
them? Strangely, there is almost no research dealing with those days. But it is
a bit difficult to hide that not so distant past. The Gaza Strip became a
closed camp. It became almost impossible to leave Gaza. Severe restrictions were imposed on the
Gazans (the originals and the refugees) in everything
connected with employment, education and other matters. Every night there was a
curfew until dawn the next day. There was only one matter in which the
Egyptians assisted to the best of its ability: the school books contained
serious incitement against Jews. Already in 1950, Egypt notified the UN
that “due to the population crowding,” it would not be possible to assist the
Palestinians by resettling them. That was a dubious excuse. Egypt thwarted the UN proposal
to resettle 150,000 refugees in Libya.
Many of the refugees who had fled in the earlier stages and were within Egypt were also
forced to move to the giant concentration camp that was forming in the Gaza
Strip. In effect, all the settlement arrangements proposed for resettling the
refugees were blocked by the Arab countries.
Despite the absolute isolation, there is testimony about what happened in the
Gaza Strip during those years. The important American journalist Martha Gellhorn paid a visit to the refugee camps in
1961. She also went to the Gaza Strip. It wasn’t simple. Gellhorn
described the bureaucratic ordeal involved in obtaining an entry permit to the
Gaza Strip and the days of waiting in Cairo.
She also described the “sharp contrast between the amiability of the clerks,
and the anti-Semitic propaganda that blossomed in Cairo.” “The Gaza Strip is not a hole,” Gellhorn stated, “but rather one big prison. The Egyptian
government and is the warden.” She described a harsh military régime with all
the elite of the Gaza Strip expressing enthusiastically pro-Nasser positions.
Thus, for example, “For 13 years (1948-1961) only 300 refugees managed to
obtain temporary exit visas.” The only thing that the Egyptians gave the
Palestinians was hate propaganda.
That is not the only testimony. In 1966, a Saudi
newspaper published a letter by one of the inhabitants of the Gaza
Strip:
“I would be happy if the Gaza
Strip would be conquered by Israel.
At least that way we would know that the one violating our honor, hurting us
and tormenting us - would be the Zionist oppressor, Ben Gurion,
and not an Arab brother whose name is Abdel Nasser. The Jews under Hitler did
not suffer the way we are suffering under Nasser.
In order to go to Cairo or Alexandria or other cities, we have to go
through an ordeal.”
Radio Jedda in Saudi Arabia broadcast the
following:
“We are aware of the laws that prohibit Palestinians from
working in Egypt.
We have to ask Cairo, what is the Iron Curtain
that Abdel Nasser and his gang have raised around the Gaza Strip and the
refugees? The military governor in Gaza has
prohibited every Arab from traveling to Cairo
without a military permit, which is valid for only 24 hours. Imagine, Arabs,
how Nasser, who claims to be the pioneer of Arab nationalism, treats the
wretched Arabs of Gaza, who are starving to death while the military governor
and his officers enjoy the riches in the Gaza Strip.”
Even assuming that those were exaggerated descriptions in the struggle between Saudi Arabia and Nasser,
we are still left with an oppressive régime of two decades. And it is worth
noting another fact - when Israel
arrived in the Gaza Strip, the life expectancy there was 48 years of age. After
a little over two decades, the life expectancy has jumped to 72 years of age,
past that of Egypt.
More than the fact that this awards points to Israel, it also shows the abyss in
which the Gaza Strip found itself during the days of the Egyptian régime.
Refugees from mandatory Palestine also lived in Egypt itself.
Many of them did not
even feel that they were Palestinians and preferred
to assimilate. The Egyptians prevented them from doing so. Except
for a short period of time that was considered the “golden age,” during some of
the years of Nasser’s rule, which did not include the Gaza refugees, even those
who were in Egypt suffered from restrictions on purchasing land, engaging in certain
professions and education (for example, there was a prohibition on the
establishment of a Palestinian school). The Egyptian citizenship law allowed
citizenship for someone whose father is Egyptian, and later the law was
expanded to anyone whose mother is Egyptian. In actuality, however, restrictions were imposed on
anyone considered a Palestinian. Even the decision of an Egyptian
court canceling the restrictions did not help. The new régime in Egypt has
recently promised change. The change, even if it happens, cannot erase many
years of discrimination, which was tantamount to collective punishment. Thus,
for example, in 1978, Egyptian Minister of Culture Yusouf
al-Shib'ai was murdered in Cyprus by a member of Abu Nidal’s group. In reprisal, the Palestinians suffered a new
wave of attacks and the Egyptian parliament renewed legislation restricting the
Palestinians in education and employment services.

Jordan:
Precisely like the identification and unity between the Arabs of Jaffa and
southern Israel, and the
Arabs of Egypt, similar identification exists between the Arabs of the West Bank and the Arabs of Jordan. Thus, for example, the
Bedouin of the Majalis (or Majilis)
tribe from the al-Karak region are originally from Hebron. During the days
of the Ottoman Empire, Eastern Jordan was part of the Damascus district, like other parts of what
later came under the auspices of the British mandate. According to the Balfour
declaration, the area now called Jordan was supposed to be part of
the Jewish national homeland.
The initial distress of the refugees on both sides of the Jordan
River, was
enormous. For example, Iraqi soldiers controlled the area of Nablus, and there is testimony about “the Iraqi soldiers taking the
children of the rich for acts of debauchery and returning the children to their
families the next day, the inhabitants are frequently arrested.” (in Hebrew) Indeed, Arab solidarity.
It seemed that Jordan
treated the refugees differently. Under a 1954 Jordanian law, any refugee who
lived in the area of Jordan
between 1948 and 1954 was given the right to citizenship. However, that was
only the outward façade. Below is a description of the reality under the
Jordanian régime in the West Bank:
“We have never forgotten and we will never forget the
nature of the régime that degraded our honor and trampled our human feelings. A régime that was built on an inquisition and the boots of the
desert people. We lived for a long time under the humiliation of the
Arab nationalism and it hurts to say that we had to wait for the Israeli
conquest in order to become aware of humane relations with civilians.”
Because these things are liable to sound like an ad from a public relations
campaign by the occupying force, it should be noted that they were published in
the name of critics from the West Bank in an
interview with the Lebanese newspaper Al Hawadith
on April 23, 1971.
As in all other Arab countries, Jordan
did not do a thing to dismantle the refugee camps. While Israel was absorbing hundreds of thousands of
refugees from Europe and the Arab countries in similar camps (transit camps),
and undergoing a punishing process of rehabilitation, building new settlements
and dismantling the camps, Jordan
did exactly the opposite and prevented any process of rehabilitation. During
those same two decades, not one institution of higher learning was established
in the West Bank. The flowering of higher education
began in the 1970s, after the Israelis took control..
Even the citizenship that was given to the refugees was mainly for the sake of
appearances. Despite the fact that the Palestinians number over 50% of the
inhabitants of Jordan,
they hold only 18 seats
- out of 110 - in the Jordanian parliament, and only 9 senators out of 55, who
are appointed by the king. It should also be recalled that during just
one month, September 1970, in one confrontation, Jordan
killed many more Palestinians than all the Palestinians who have been hurt in
the 43 years of Israeli rule over the West Bank
and Gaza Strip.

Syria:
The first Congress of Muslim-Christian Associations, the first Palestinian Arab
conference, was held in Jerusalem
in 1919. At the conference, it was decided that Palestine,
which had just been conquered by the British, was southern Syria - an integral part of greater Syria. Over the
years of the mandate, the immigration from Syria
into the British mandate territory increased, for example, the Al-Hourani family, which arrived from the Houran
in Syria,
and others. The idea of “greater Syria,”
which included mandatory Palestine, was also
reflected in the growing involvement of Syrians in the great Arab rebellion and
in the gangs that arrived from Syria
during the War of Independence. The refugees, therefore, were not strangers
politically, religiously or ethnically. To the contrary.
Their fate should not have been different from the fate of other ethnic groups
who were expelled to a place in which they constituted the national and
cultural majority.
Between 70,000 and 90,000 refugees arrived in Syria,
the decisive majority of them from Safed, Haifa, Tiberias and Acre. Thus, in 1954, they were granted partial rights,
which did not include political rights. Until 1968, they were
prohibited from holding property. Syrian law enables any Arab
citizens to obtain Syrian citizenship, provided that his permanent residence is
in Syria
and he has a proven capacity for economic subsistence. However, the
Palestinians are the only ones outside the applicability of the law.
Even if they are permanent residents and possess means, the law prevents them
from obtaining citizenship.
Only 30% of those who, for some reason, are still considered “Palestinian
refugees in Syria”
still live in refugee camps. Actually, they should long ago have been
considered Syrians to all intents and purposes. They were part of the national
Arab identity, they are connected by family ties, they
should have been assimilated into the economic life of the country. But despite
that, as a result of the political brainwashing, they remain in Syria as a
foreign element, they daydream about the “right of return,” and are kept
perpetually in their inferior status. Most of
them are at the bottom of the employment ladder, in the service
(41%) and construction (27%) professions. But there is nothing like the field
of education to clarify their situation. 23% do
not even go to elementary schools and only 3% reach academic education.

Lebanon:
In the Gaza Strip, the Palestinians suffered for only two decades because of
the Egyptian régime. In Lebanon, the apartheid
continues to this day. The result is poverty, neglect, and enormous
unemployment. Up to 1969, the refugee camps were under the stringent military
control of Lebanon.
According to the descriptions of Martha Gellhorn,
most of the refugees were in a reasonable situation. Many even improved their
standard of living compared with the days before the “nakba.”
But in 1969, the Cairo
Agreement was signed, which transferred control of the camps to the
refugees themselves. The situation only grew worse. Terrorist organizations
took control of the camps, which turned them into arenas of conflict - mostly
violent - among the various groups.
A new study that was published
in December 2010 presents data that makes the Gaza Strip look like
paradise compared with Lebanon.
Indeed, there was some scant publicity about it here and there, but as far as
we know, there was no worldwide protest, not even a Turkish or international
flotilla.
In contrast to Syria and Jordan, in which most of those defined as
refugees are no longer in refugee camps, two thirds of the Palestinians in Lebanon live in
camps, which are “enclaves outside the control of the state.” The most stunning
data is that, despite the fact that about 425,000 refugees are registered with
UNRWA, the study found that only between 260,000 and 280,000 Palestinians live
in Lebanon.
The paradox is that UNRWA is receiving financing for more than 150,000 people
who are not even in Lebanon.
This figure alone should have led to a serious inquest by the financing countries
(primarily the US and Europe), but there is no chance that that will happen.
The issue of the refugees is fraught with so many errors and lies that one more
lie doesn’t really change anything. And so UNRWA can demand a budget for
425,000 people from the international community, while its website has a link
to the study that shows that it’s all a fiction.
According to the study, the refugees are suffering from 56% unemployment. That
seems to be the highest figure, not just among the Palestinians, but in the
entire Arab world. Even those who are working are at the bottom of the
employment ladder. Only 6% of those in the workforce have some kind of academic
degree (compared with 20% of the workforce in Lebanon). The result is that 66% of
the Palestinians in Lebanon
live below the poverty line, which was set at six dollars per day per person.
That is double the number of the Lebanese.
This dismal state of affairs is a result of apartheid to all intents and
purposes. A series
of Lebanese laws restrict the right to citizenship, to property, and
to employment in the fields of law, medicine, pharmaceutics, journalism, etc.
In August 2010 there was a limited amendment to the
labor law but the amendment did not actually lead to any real
change. Another
directive prohibits the entry of building materials into refugee camps,
and there are reports of arrests and the demolition of houses resulting from
construction in the refugee camps. The partial and limited prohibition imposed
by Israel
on bringing building materials into the Gaza Strip stemmed from the firing of
rockets at population centers. As far as we know, no prohibition was imposed in
Lebanon
due to a similar firing of rockets at population centers. And despite that, again,
beyond the dry reports of human rights organizations, as part of the outlook
that “they are permitted to do as they please,” no serious protest was recorded
and no “apartheid week” was held against Lebanon.

Kuwait:
In 1991, the Palestinians constituted 30% of the country’s population. Relative
to other Arab countries, their situation there was reasonable. Then Saddam
Hussein invaded Iraq.
As part of the attempts at compromise that proceeded to first Gulf War, Saddam
made a “proposal” to retreat from Kuwait
in exchange for Israel’s
retreat from the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.
The PLO, headed by Yasir Arafat,
supported Saddam’s proposal. That support was the opening salvo in one
of the worst events in Palestinian history. After Kuwait was liberated from the Iraqi
conquests, and anti-Palestinian campaign commenced, which included persecution,
arrests and show trials. The terrible saga ended in the
expulsion of 450,000 Palestinians. Incidentally, some of them had
settled there back in the 1930s, and most of them had no connection to Arafat’s
support for Saddam. Nevertheless, they were subject to collective punishment, a
transferor of proportions similar to the original nakba
in 1948, which barely earned any mention in the world media. There are endless
academic publications on the expulsion and flight in 1948. There are close to
zero studies on the “nakba” of 1991.
* * *
These are the main countries in which the refugees are located. Apartheid is
also rampant in other countries. In Saudi Arabia,
the refugees from mandatory Palestine
have not received citizenship. In 2004, Saudi Arabia announced some changes
but clarified that the changes do not include the Palestinians. Jordan also prevents
150,000 refugees, most of them originally from the Gaza Strip, from receiving
citizenship now. In Iraq,
the refugees were actually given preference under the leadership of Saddam
Hussein, but since he fell from power they have become one of the most persecuted
groups. Twice, both on the Libyan-Egyptian
border and on the Syria,-Iraqi border,
thousands of expelled Palestinians lived in temporary camps and not a single
Arab state agreed to take them. That was a formidable show of “Arab
solidarity,” in making the “Arab nation.” And it continues. Palestinians from Libya, refugees from the civil war, are now arriving
at the border of Egypt,
which
refuses to grant them entry.
Time after time the
Arab countries have rejected proposals to resettle the refugees,
despite the fact that there was room and there was a need. The march continues.
In 1995, the ruler of Libya,
Muammar Gaddafi, decided to expel
30,000 Palestinians, just because he was angry about the Oslo accords, about the
PLO, and about the establishment of the Palestinian Authority. A Palestinian
doctor, Dr. Ashraf al-Hazouz,
spent 8
years in a Libyan prison (together with Bulgarian nurses), on false
charges of spreading AIDS. In August 2010, before the present uprising, Libya
passed laws that made the lives of the Palestinians impossible. It
was precisely at the time when Libya
dispatched a “humanitarian aid ship” to the Gaza Strip. There is no limit to
hypocrisy.
The following is a summary of the apartheid against minorities in the Arab
world in general, and against the Palestinians in particular. But there is a
difference. While the Copts in Egypt
or the Kurds in Syria are,
indeed, minorities, the Arabs from mandatory Palestine were supposed to be an integral
part of the Arab nation. Two of the symbols of the Palestinian struggle were
born in Egypt
- Edward Said and Yasir Arafat. Both of them tried to
fabricate their birthplace as Palestine.
Two other prominent symbols of the struggle by the Arabs of mandatory Palestine are Fawzi al-Qawuqji (who competed
with the mufti to lead the Arab struggle against the British) and Izz al-Din al-Qassam - the former
Lebanese and the latter Syrian. There is nothing strange about this, because
the struggle was Arab, not Palestinian. And despite that, the Arabs of
mandatory Palestine
became the most downtrodden and spurned group of all, following the Arab defeat
in 1948. The vast majority of the descriptions from those years talks about
Arabs, not about Palestinians. Later, only later, did they become Palestinians.
The Arab countries are well aware that their treatment of the refugees from
mandatory Palestine
was no less than scandalous. To that end, they signed the
“Casablanca Protocol” in 1965, which was supposed to grant the
Palestinians the right of employment and movement, but not citizenship. To have it almost within their grasp. But like other
documents of that type, this one did not change a thing. The abuse continued.
At the comparative level, it seems that the Palestinian group that underwent
the most significant growth is the one that is under Israeli sovereignty - both
the Israeli Arabs who received Israeli citizenship, whose situation is far
better, and the Arabs of the territories. Despite the harsh living conditions
in Lebanon and Syria, and before that also in Egypt and the Gaza Strip, the
Palestinians under Israeli rule, beginning in 1967, have enjoyed a steady rise
in their standard of living, in employment, in health services, in life
expectancy, in the dramatic drop in infant mortality, and in the enormous
growth of higher education.
For example, in all the territories captured by Israel in 1967, there was not one
institution of higher education. In the 1970s, academic institutions began to
sprout one after the other, and today there are at least 16 institutions of
higher education. The growth in the number of students has continued for three
decades, including during the years of the Intifada in the last decade. Within
six decades the Palestinians - only those under Israeli rule - have become the
most educated group in the Arab world.
The same is true in the political arena. After decades of political oppression,
it was only under Israeli rule that the Palestinian national consciousness
sprang up. For two decades after the War of Independence, the Arabs could have
established a Palestinian state in the Gaza Strip and the West
Bank. They did not do so - until Israel arrived and released them
from the oppression of two decades. That didn’t make the occupation desirable.
It doesn’t mean that there weren’t injustices and dispossessions. There were.
But it seems that after the first two decades following the “nakba,” it was actually the era of Israeli rule that caused
the enormous flourishing growth in every field. We should, and we must, criticize
the negative aspects of the occupation. But we should, and we must, also
remember the aspect that is ignored.
In the past decades, the lie has arisen again and again about Israel’s
responsibility for the distress of the Palestinians, so it is advisable to set
matters straight. The Palestinians went through a terrible experience of
uprooting and expulsion. Most of them fled. Some of them were expelled. But,
again, that type of occurrence was experienced by tens of millions of others.
The difference lies in the fact that all the other tens of millions were
absorbed by the countries to which they went. That has not been the case with
the Palestinians. They have gone through ordeals of oppression, abuse, and
denial of rights. That was the work of the Arab countries, which decided to
perpetuate the situation. Many proposals to resolve the problem of the
Palestinians and resettle them have been rejected again and again. The open
wound has festered. Time after time the Arabs themselves have claimed that the Arabs
are one nation. The borders between the countries, and of this there is no
dispute, are a fiction of the colonial government. After all, there is no
difference, either ethnic, or religious, or cultural, or national, between the
Arabs of Jaffa and Gaza and the Arabs of El
Arish and Port Said, or between the Arabs of Safed and Tiberias and the Arabs
of Syria and Lebanon.
Despite that, the Arab refugees have become the forced victims of the Arab
world. The “right of return,” which is primarily a propaganda invention, has
become the ultimate demand. Behind this demand was hidden, and still hides, one
single intention: the annihilation of the State of Israel. The Egyptian Foreign
Minister, Muhammad
Salah al-Din, said back in 1949 that the
“demand for the right of return was actually intended to achieve the purpose of
annihilating Israel.”
That was also the case at a conference of refugees that
was held in 1957 in Homs in Syria, where it was declared that “Any
discussion of the refugee issue that does not promise the right to the
annihilation of Israel
will be deemed a desecration of the Arab nation and treason.” There is no
confusion here between the “right of return” and the “right of annihilation.”
It is the same “right.” Identical
words about return, whose purpose is the annihilation of Israel, were stated in
1988 by Sacher Habash,
Yasir Arafat’s adviser. So, too, in our day, is the
BDS campaign, whose platform supports the “right of return,” and whose leaders,
such as Omar Barghouti, explained that the real
objective is the annihilation of Israel.
Already
back in 1952, Alexander Galloway, a senior official in UNRWA, stated
that “The Arab countries do not want to resolve the problem of the refugees.
They want to leave them like an open wound, as a weapon against Israel. The
Arab rulers don’t care at all if the refugees live or die.” The Palestinian -
and usually also the academic - historiography mimics a series of expressions
of that type, just as it mimics the absorption of tens of millions of refugees
in other places, and as it mimics the “Jewish nakba,”
the story of the dispossession and expulsion of Jews from Arab countries, and
as it mimics the story of the Arab apartheid. But the truth must be told.
Indeed, there was a nakba, but it is a nakba that is recorded primarily in the name of the Arab
apartheid.