§
Israel ’s
creation, far from being a foreign colonial transplant, can actually be seen as
the vanguard of and impetus for decolonialization of the entire Middle
East , including a significant part of the Arab world,
following the fall of the Ottoman Empire .
§
What is not popularly recognized is how the Arab
world benefited from the 1917 Balfour Declaration and how it served the Arab
world in their nationalist goals and helped advance their own independence from
the colonial powers of England and France.
§
Despite the essentially parallel processes of
independence from colonial and protectorate influence over the first half of
the twentieth century, only one of the national movements at the time and only
one of the resulting states, namely Israel , is
accused of being “colonial,” with the
term “settler-colonialist” applied to the Zionist enterprise
§
This term, however, can assume validity only if it
is assumed that the “settlers” have no indigenous roots and rights in the area.
As such, this is yet another example of psychological manipulation for
political purposes. The notion of “settler” dismisses any historical or
biblical connection of Jews to the area. Hence, the importance of denial of
Jewish rights, history, and claims to the area.
§
Lest there be any confusion about what a “settler”
is, those who use the terminology “settler-colonialist” against Israel
clearly mean the entire Zionist enterprise, including the original territory of
the State of Israel in 1948. The “colonial Israel ”
charge is thus rooted in an ideological denial of any Jewish connection to the
ancient Land of
Israel .
Psychological
factors often play a role in the development of political views. In the
Israel-Arab conflict, one of the ways in which psychological factors operate is
in the formation of “mantras” that do not necessarily reflect either the
historical record or applicable international law.1 Examples include
the use of descriptions of occupation as “illegal”2 and the
determination that there is a “right” of resistance3 or a “right” of
return.4 When used over and over again, these descriptions,
despite their questionable legitimacy, can alter perceptions. Once perceptions
change, attitudes and behavior change as well, leading to partial and
ultimately biased views of historical and political reality.
Language
thus becomes an important psychological tool both in correctly describing
events and in perpetuating beliefs based on narratives that do not accurately
reflect history. Columbia University Professor Joseph Massad is among those
that have portrayed Israel as a colonial entity based on an illegitimate and
racist movement, namely Zionism.5 In the eyes of
many, it is a foreign element implanted into the Middle East where
organizations such as the United Nations6 and political
activists such as Chomsky7 describe Arabs as “indigenous”
and Jews as “immigrants.” While the opposite is true; the Jews are the
remaining indigenous people in Palestine ; the
Arabs are a recent illegal occupiers of Palestine . The
charge of colonialism has become a major theme in criticizing Israel throughout
the academic world and is part of the language of the discourse.8 The language of “colonialism” and its related terms
(e.g., ethnic cleansing) have been incorporated into academic coursework even
in Israel.9 An examination of the actual history and events
related to the Middle East, in general, and Palestine, in particular, however,
fails to confirm the reality behind the “colonial Israel” moniker. Israel ’s
creation, far from being a foreign colonial transplant, can actually be seen as
the vanguard of and impetus for decolonialization of the entire area, including
a significant part of the Arab world, following the fall of the Ottoman
Empire .
The Beginning of the End of Colonialism in the Middle
East : The Balfour Declaration
The 1917 Balfour Declaration is historically
viewed as the document that first recognized the rights of Jews to a national
home and independence in its historical land Palestine .
Accordingly, it is perceived in the Arab world as a document that began what
was seen as an illegitimate process of dispossessing Arabs from their lands.
What is not popularly recognized, however, is how the Arab world benefited from
the Balfour Declaration and how it helped advance their own independence from
the colonial powers of England and France .
Nowhere is this made clearer than in the Peel Commission Report of 1937, which
stated:
The fact
that the Balfour Declaration was issued in order to enlist Jewish support for
the Allies and the fact that this support was forthcoming are not sufficiently
appreciated in Palestine . The
Arabs do not appear to realize in the first place that the present position of
the Arab world as a whole is mainly due to the great sacrifices made by the
Allied and Associated Powers in the War and, secondly, that, insofar as the 1917
Balfour Declaration helped to bring about the Allies’ victory, it helped to
bring about the emancipation of all the Arab countries from Turkish rule and
provided the Arabs with over five million square miles of territory. If the
Turks and their German allies had won the War, it is improbable that all the
Arab countries, except Palestine , would
now have become or be about to become independent states.10
The 1917
Balfour Declaration, thus, not only served as the stimulus for Jewish
independence, but, curiously enough, served the Arab world in their nationalist
goals as well and provided them with over 5 million square miles of territory.
This was largely seen outside of Palestine , but
insofar as Palestine is
concerned, there was initially an absence of nationalism with a distinct
“Palestinian” identity. The Peel Report notes, “The Arabs had always regarded Palestine as
included in Syria .”11 The plan, under an agreement between Emir Feisal
and Chaim Weizmann (the Feisal-Weizmann agreement), was that the Arabs would
recognize Jewish rights and independence over Western Palestine on both sides
of the Jordan River, as called for in the 1917 Balfour Declaration, while
Feisal’s family would retain control of Syria and the western area about 50
miles east of the Jordan River known as Trans-Jordan. The failure of this
agreement, and the resultant conflict that ensued, was a result of the French
refusal to relinquish their colonial control and recognize the rights of Emir
Feisal in Syria.12
Arab Denial of Jewish Rights and History in Palestine
The
breakdown of the Feisal-Weizmann agreement and the reversal on Arab acceptance
of the 1917 Balfour Declaration launched a period of Arab nationalism accompanied
by violence between Jews and Arabs. Today, despite the documented history of
the Jewish people in the area that was known as Palestine and
Feisal’s acceptance of the Jewish presence there, the Arab world continues to
deny this history, both in official policy and in popular media. The U.S. State
Department International Religious Freedom Report of 2009 notes that
Palestinian Authority textbooks “often ignored historical Jewish connections to
Israel and Jerusalem .”13
This
thinking is reflected in the charters of both leading Palestinian movements.
The Palestinian National Charter of 1968 declared the 1917 Balfour Declaration
null and void and said: “Claims of historical or religious ties of Jews with Palestine are
incompatible with the facts of history and the true conception of what
constitutes statehood.”14 The issue of recognizing Jewish
as opposed to Israeli rights remains a sticking point between Israel and the
Palestinian Authority.15 The Hamas Covenant makes
several statements expressing Islamic hegemony over the area known as
Palestine, along with several references to the Jews usurping Palestine and
challenging Islam.16
Academic
circles in Palestinian Arab society also subscribe to these notions. Al-Quds
University posts a “History of Jerusalem”17 that repeatedly
implies that the Jewish “narrative” is a “myth”; that King David, whose very
existence is questioned, was probably part of an “idealized” community of
“Israelites” that had no connection to Jerusalem; that those “Israelites” never
experienced an exodus from Egypt (Al-Quds claims this “story” was
“appropriated” from a Canaanite legend); that Joshua’s conquest never took
place; that Solomon’s Temple was actually a center of pagan worship; and that
the Western Wall was probably just part of a Roman fortress. In the Al-Quds
rendition of the “conquests” of Palestine , Jews
are not even mentioned, although ancient Egyptians, Hittites, Philistines,
Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, Romans, Muslim Arabs, Mamlukes, Ottomans and
British are. Jews are nowhere to be found in the history of the land and have
nothing to do with its past.
In
popular Palestinian media, the notion of lack of historical connection between
the Jews and Palestine has
also been promoted, such as with television broadcasts denying any Jewish
connection to the Western Wall.18 This belief is
so pervasive that even Israeli-funded institutions have been exposed to it. In
Jerusalem, the Tower of David Museum’s head Arabic-speaking guide was dismissed19 after implying that there were no Jewish roots in
Jerusalem, stating, in a Palestinian television interview, that the museum’s
documentary film was “full of historical lies and historical deceptions.”20
The Connection between the Charge of Colonial Israel and Denial of
Rights
The
concerted effort in Arab circles to deny Jewish roots in Palestine/Israel is
critical to claims of Jewish colonialism in Palestine .
Palestinian spokespersons claim that since Jews are members of a religion and
not a nation, any nationalistic aspirations based on a specific territory are
invalid.21 The notion of Jews as a foreign entity in Palestine
was advanced and popularized through the work of the late Edward Said in his
seminal work, Orientalism,22 which continues to be seen as a
foundation for post-colonial thinking in academia today.
The historical reality is quite different from
what the Arab narrative, which has been adopted by many in academic and
intellectual circles, presents.
The Colonial Background of the Entire Middle East
As a
result of their colonial conquests, much of the Middle
East area was under the control of the Ottoman Turks
from 1516 through 1917. Napoleon was in possession of parts of Palestine and
offered the Jews to regain their own land in 1799; but the British fleet came
to the help of the Turks and Napoleon navy was turned back in Akko . British colonial history includes their
gaining control of the Gulf area between 1861 and 1899, turning the area into
what one source called “a British lake.”23 British
officials would decide which of the prominent tribal families in the Gulf
region would eventually become the rulers of the states that would eventually
emerge. French colonialists took over Algeria in
1830, conquered Tunisia in
1881, and took control of Morocco in
1912.
Neither Jews nor Arabs enjoyed any modern
independence in the area, which, by the end of World War I, had been under
colonial control for many years. As a result of the mandate system that
developed after the war and the secret Sykes-Picot agreement in 1916, British
and French colonial interests were drawn and defined, was never implemented and
replaced..
Decolonialization Following the Ottoman Defeat
Starting
around the period of World War I, the entire Middle
East underwent a process of decolonialization with the
emergence of national movements. Jewish nationalism was consistent with the 1917
Balfour Declaration, which, after being incorporated into the San Remo
Conference as international law and implemented by the League of Nations
Mandate for Palestine ,
uniquely called for settlement of Jews in Palestine as part
of the Jewish National Home, without reference to their place of origin. Just
as the British supported the Jewish national claims to Palestine , a
number of source documents show that they also encouraged Arab nationalism as a
tool in their own conflict against the Ottomans.24 Although most Arabs did not
assist the British or Allied forces in WWI.
The
mechanism for the transformation from colonial independence for the majority of
new states was the mandate system. Both the British and French mandates
eventually yielded sovereignty to the populations of the Middle
East as multiple independent states came into being on
territory of over 5 million square miles. With Israel , the
Jewish state was reconstituted in 1920 in Palestine , while
the various tribal Arab populations that stemmed from the invasion of the
seventh century25 now began carving out areas of influence and
sovereignty. The Jews who are the remaining indigenous people of Palestine
formerly knows as the Land of Israel , far
from being colonialists, were the beneficiaries of a national movement that
aimed to renew Jewish sovereignty, but also which, along with Arab national
movements, ended colonial control by forces that had no historical or
indigenous roots in the region.
Indeed, it is an error to assume that Britain , as the
mandatory power, gave the Jewish people their rights to claim Palestine . The
1922 Palestine Mandate was implementing the 1920 San
Remo international treaty; and specifically
refers to the “historical connection of the Jewish people with Palestine .”
Rather than creating a new right, the Mandate recognized a pre-existing right
that clearly pre-dated the colonial powers.
The Mandate also calls for the Jewish people to
begin “reconstituting of their national home,” essentially stating that they
were going to rebuild a national home that had been there before. Many of the
Arab states, in contrast, were modern fabrications of the British and the
French with no previous history.
The Process of Independence
A look at a map of the Middle
East will show that national movements eventually
became national entities, with tribal factors largely accounting for the
division of the area into independent countries. North
Yemen became independent from the Ottoman
Empire in 1918. The Hashemite monarchy in Iraq was
granted independence in 1932 from England . Saudi
Arabia (originally Hejaz and Nejd ),
although never colonized after World War I, became an independent kingdom in
1932 as well. Egypt ,
occupied by England since
1882, gained full independence in 1952. Lebanon and Syria became
independent from the French Mandate in 1943 and 1946, respectively. Another
Hashemite family in Jordan was illegally
granted independence in 1946 in territory originally a part of the Palestine
Mandate which was allocated to the Jewish people as part of their historical
land. Independence also was eventually achieved by the British protectorates of
Oman (1951), Kuwait (1961), South Yemen (1967), the United Arab Emirates,
Bahrain and Qatar (1971).
In addition to the formation of the various Arab
states noted above, The reconstitution of the National Home for The Jewish
People was mandated in the 1920 San Remo Conference. The Jewish national sovereignty
and self-determination was obtained in Palestine with the
Jewish sovereignty and independence of Israel in
1948. While the dispute with the Arab residents of Palestine
continues, the colonial entity, namely Britain , abandoned
and relinquished control in of the mandate in 1948.
Prior to Israel ’s legal
liberation and occupation of the West Bank and Gaza
following the hostilities of 1967, Jordan
illegally occupied the West Bank and Eastern
Jerusalem , while Gaza was
administered by Egypt and Syria
controlled the Golan Heights .
The fact
of the matter was that in 1948, during its war of independence, Israel acted
as an anti-colonial force. The troops of the Arab Legion of Transjordan fought
under a British commander, and had British as well as Arab officers.26 The British, clearly a colonial power, had treaty
obligations to both Egypt and Jordan . At one
point Hector McNeil, British Minister of State, threatened to “defend Aqaba if
necessary.”27 British units were stationed in Egypt near the Suez
Canal, the British were suspected of supplying sensitive intelligence
information to Egypt, and the Israeli Air Force even clashed with a RAF
squadron based in Egypt, downing five planes in 1949.28 While Israeli
weapons came mostly by way of Czechoslovakia, the Arab states were equipped
with weapons from the old colonial powers, Britain and France.29
Indeed,
at the United Nations in 1949, when Britain and Italy
submitted a draft resolution to put Libya under
UN trusteeship, and deny it independence, Israel refused
to go along with the colonial powers. By Israel
abstaining, the British-Italian resolution did not get the required two-thirds
support and was defeated.30 In short, both militarily and
diplomatically, Israel served
as an anti-colonial force during its early years.
Language and Perception: “Settler-Colonialism”
Despite
the essentially parallel processes of independence from colonial and
protectorate influence over the first half of the twentieth century, only one
of the national movements at the time and only one of the resulting states,
namely Israel , is
accused of being “colonial.” The accusation of colonialism against Israel is not
without difficulty. Since the traditional definition of colonialists exploiting
the native population and resources does not broadly apply to Jews and Zionism,
how then, to continue the narrative of Israeli colonialism? The answer was the
application of another type of colonialism, that of the “settler-colonialist,”
to the Zionist enterprise.31
This term, however, can assume validity only if it
is assumed that the “settlers” have no indigenous roots and rights in the area.
The reality is, that the Jewish settlers are reoccupying their own territory. As
such, this is yet another use of language to shape perceptions and another
example of psychological manipulation for political purposes. Unlike any other
“settler-colonial” state in history, Israel stands
alone in that there is no identifiable foreign power that can be identified as
the colonial entity. It goes without saying that the notion of “settler” also
dismisses any historical or biblical connection of Jews to the area. Hence, the
importance of denial of Jewish rights, history, and claims to the area.
The
notion of Israeli colonialism, however, is so established in certain academic
and political circles that its colonial identity is never questioned, and
“settlers” are automatically considered agents of a colonial effort.32
Lest
there be any confusion about what a “settler” is, despite the impression of
some that the term applies only to those Israelis who have established
communities in Jewish liberated and disputed territory after 1967, those who
use the terminology “settler-colonialist” against Israel clearly mean the
entire Zionist enterprise, including the original territory of the State of
Israel in 1948.33 In fact, many contemporary Palestinian activists
blithely and routinely assume, in their writing, that all Israelis are
colonialists and all of “historic” Palestine has been occupied (e.g., Qumsiyeh,34 Abunimah35).
Reestablishing
Accuracy: Cognitive Dissonance and Confirmation Bias
The
“colonial Israel ” charge
is thus rooted in an ideological and cognitive denial of any Jewish connection
to Palestine and the
ancient historical Land of Israel . This
can be either through a belief that the connection is weak because of the
passage of time,36 or, as has been the case in Arab circles and in
some revisionist Israeli ones,37 by flatly
denying Jewish roots in the area.
Cognitive dissonance is the phenomenon whereby
established beliefs are challenged by new, conflicting information that arouses
a challenge to those core beliefs. Confirmation bias, on the other hand, is the
term applied to seeking evidence that validates prior attitudes and beliefs.
When confronted with dissonance, some may alter their beliefs to conform to the
new information, but many, especially those that are ideologically invested
with and committed to a particular view, continue in their established attitudes
by adding justifications or interpretations that support or “confirm” the
original cognition.
Just as
committed Zionists would not accept a colonial narrative, presenting facts and
arguments in response to accusations against Israel would
not change attitudes for anti-Zionists, even when their core beliefs or
attitudes feeding that position are challenged. In practice, ideologues seem to
respond to challenges through “confirmation bias,” seeking information
consistent with their ideology that supports their core beliefs when dissonance
is aroused.38 Attempting to change attitudes, thus, would appear
to have a chance for success only when these attempts target those who are not
predispositioned or biased towards particular political ideologies and when the
information is accurate, not tendentious, and based on solid data.
The
mechanism of dissonance reduction that is most central to the
“settler-colonialist” argument is the notion that Jews do not constitute a
national entity and thus cannot possibly have legitimate rights to what was
known as Palestine . For
those who are familiar with Jewish history and traditions, such as the
specifics of the Jewish legal system applicable only in Israel or the
role of the “Land of Israel ” in
Jewish liturgy, the speciousness of these notions is self-evident. For many
others, however, this is either not recognized or not relevant.39 Challenging these beliefs involves two overlapping
mechanisms: First, a firm recognition of the reality of Jewish roots and
historical sovereignty in the area, and second, an acknowledgment that the
modern reconstitution of Jewish nationalism was achieved through a legitimate
process consistent with international law and the right to self-determination.
Both tenets are taboo and are not even subject to discussion for many
anti-Zionist ideologues.
Ideology,
when unyielding and unbending, will be resistant to any cognitive dissonance.40 That is why, despite the historical record, the
core notion of Israel as a “settler-colonialist” nation will continue to
resonate in circles where nationalism is frowned upon, where religious history
is irrelevant, where post-modern ideologies are entrenched and philosophically
embraced, and where the notion of Jews as a people is not recognized.
*
* *
Notes
1. I.J. Mansdorf, “The Political Psychology of
Postcolonial Ideology in the Arab World: An Analysis of ‘Occupation’ and the
‘Right of Return’,” Israel
Studies, vol. 13, no. 4 (October 2007):899-915.
2.
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/03/21/opinion/annan-s-careless-language.html?scp=5&sq=George%20P%20Fletcher&st=cse
3.
http://www.nysun.com/editorials/right-of-resistance/10510/
4. R. Lapidoth, “Legal Aspects of the Palestinian
Refugee Question, Jerusalem
Letter/Viewpoints, no. 485, September
1, 2002 .
5. http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article6679.shtml
6. Minority Rights Group International, World
Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples – Israel :
Overview, 2007, http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/docid/4954ce50c.html
7. http://www.chomsky.info/books/dissent01.htm
8. R. Aharonson, “Settlement in Eretz Israel – A
Colonialist Enterprise ?
‘Critical’ Scholarship and Historical Geography,” Israel
Studies, 1(2) (Fall 1996):214-229.
9.
http://hsf.bgu.ac.il/mapmes/uploadDocs/Syllabus-_Yftachel_-_Cohen_2008-9.doc
10. http://unispal.un.org/pdfs/Cmd5479.pdf (ch.
II, para. 19, p. 24).
11. Op. cit., para. 23, p. 2.5
12. Op. cit., para. 25-28, pp. 26-28.
13.
http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2009/127349.htm
14.
http://avalon.law.yale.edu/20th_century/plocov.asp
15. http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1099520.html
16.
http://avalon.law.yale.edu/20th_century/hamas.asp
17.
http://www.alquds.edu/gen_info/index.php?page=jerusalem_history
18. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1wVJviDcVBc
19. P. Cidor, “Obliterated in Translation,” Jerusalem Post, January 7, 2010 .
20. PA TV (Fatah), November 13, 2009 .
21.
http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2007-11-16/news/0711160197_1_islamic-erekat-jewish-state
22. Edward Said, Orientalism (New York: Vintage
Books, 1979).
23. Y. Tareq, J.S. Ismael, and K.A.J.
Ismael, Politics and Government in the Middle East and North Africa (University
Press of Florida, 1991), p. 453.
24. “British Imperial Connexions to the Arab
National Movement,” in G.P. Gooch and Harold Temperley, eds., The Last Years of
Peace – British Documents on the Origins of the War, 1898-1914, Vol. X, Part II
(1938), pp. 824-838.
25. W.I. Saadeh, “The Three Phases of Arab
History, Excerpt from ‘History of Arab Thought’,” Arab-American Affairs, vol.
32, no. 211 (June-July 2004), http://www.arab-american-affairs.net/archives/arab-history.htm
26. T.N. Dupuy, Elusive Victory: The Arab-Israeli
Wars, 1947-1974 (New York: Harper Collins, 1978), p. 121.
27. N. Aridan, Britain , Israel and
Anglo-Jewry 1949-1957 (London : Taylor
and Francis, 2004), p. 8.
28. Z. Tzahor, “The 1949 Air Clash between the
Israeli Air Force and the RAF,” Journal of Contemporary History, 28
(1)(1993):75-101.
29. Zach Levey, “Arms and Armaments in the Middle
East ,” Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North
Africa , 2004, http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3424600327.html.
30. Gideon Rafael, Destination Peace: Three
Decades of Israeli Foreign Policy (New York: Stein and Day, 1981), pp. 21-22.
31. M. Rodinson, Israel : A Colonial-Settler State ?
(Pathfinder Press, 1973). http://www.alternativenews.org/michael-warschawski/2187-israel-colonial-states-and-racism-.html
32.
http://www.borderlands.net.au/vol6no2_2007/veracini_settler.htm
33. Op. cit., 20, 21.
34.
http://www.projo.com/opinion/contributors/content/projo_20050821_21gaza.31eacd0.html
35.
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article7012.shtml
36. http://www.jewishpress.com/pageroute.do/41215
37. S. Sand, The Invention of the Jewish People
(Verso, 2009).
38. C.S. Taber and M. Lodge, “Motivated Skepticism
in the Evaluation of Political Beliefs,” American Journal of Political Science,
50(3) (2006):755-769.
39. F.M. Perko, “Contemporary American Christian
Attitudes to Israel Based on the Scriptures,” Israel Studies, vol. 8, no. 2,
(Summer 2003):1-17, http://muse.jhu.edu/login?uri=/journals/israel_studies/v008/8.2perko.html
40. B. Nyhan and J. Reifler, “When Corrections
Fail: The Persistence of Political Misperceptions, in Political Behavior, in
press. J. Bullock, “The Enduring Importance of False Political Beliefs,” paper
presented at the annual meeting of the Western Political Science Association, Albuquerque , New
Mexico , March 17, 2006 .
*
* *
Irwin J. (Yitzchak) Mansdorf, PhD, is an Israeli
psychologist who has published widely on the subject of political psychology as
it relates to the Israel-Arab conflict.
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