This is a very short history of a very long and ongoing problem.
The current humanitarian crisis in Gaza is the result of many questionable and often deceitful actions by individuals and western governments over many years. In fact, it all started nearly four thousand years ago when Moses led the Israelites out of their captivity in Egypt. After forty years wandering in the wilderness, Moses finally arrived in the land of Canaan and told his people that God had given them this land. It was their “Promised Land.” Over several Milenia Canaan became Palestine.
There was no Jewish invasion or dispossession of the indigenous people of Canaan. The Israelis just set up homes in that area and tended their farm animals and crops and mingled with the people already living there. They flourished. In time the Israelis became a dominant social and religious force in that area.
Then the Romans came and ruled over their land, leading to much
unrest and finally revolt. Eventually, in 70 AD, the Romans destroyed the
Temple and Jerusalem became a Roman city. The great Jewish diaspora began,
spreading the Jewish people throughout Europe.
The first World War of 1914-18 had a huge influence on
subsequent Jewish/Palestinian history. In 1916, Britain and France signed the
secret Sykes-Picoult Treaty (with Russian approval). This treaty was a mutual
agreement to divide the Arab lands between Britain and France when the war
ended.
At the same time, Britain wanted to defeat the Ottoman
Empire, centred in Turkey, that had joined Germany in the Great War. In an
effort to get Arab leaders to join the allies in fighting the Ottoman Empire,
Britain told them that after the war they would be given national sovereignty.
In 1917, to get British banks to support the war effort,
Foreign Secretary, Lord Balfour wrote to powerful British Banker, Lord
Rothschild, telling him, among other things, that when the war was over
Palestine could be “a national home for the Jewish people.”
Did someone say, “Perfidious Albion?”
Between the WW1 and WW2 efforts continued to find a Jewish
homeland. In 1939 there was even an attempt to purchase 7 million acres of land
in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. The state premier, John Willcock,
was keen. So was the Durack family which owned the land. Discussions were
conducted before newly appointed Prime Minister, John Curtin, skittled the
idea.
In the Holocaust of World War 2, the Jewish people suffered unspeakable misery and death as the Nazis attempted to exterminate them. People in many countries were sympathetic to Jewish refugees as long as they did nor settler in their country. In 1946, Jewish refugees throughout Europe were seeking a new homeland. Palestine seemed the most likely place. After all, God had given it to them over three thousand years ago. They flooded in to Palestine through the port of Haifa.
Aneurin Bevan was the British Foreign Minister charged with the administration of British mandated Palestine. Two years after the end of WW2, Bevan, along with the British people, was frustrated and angry that British soldiers were being killed in Palestine by Jewish activists and terrorist organisations such as the Stern Gang. Frustrated, Bevan eventually said he would not allow any more Jewish refugees to land at Haifa. At the same time, US President, Harry Truman, was saying that a Jewish homeland in Palestine seemed like a good idea.
Far away in the Kremlin, Josef Stalin noted this apparent rift between his two implacable enemies. Stalin had previously not allowed anyone, including Jews, to migrate out of Russia. Stalin's view was that you worked for Mother Russia or you died. However, Stalin saw a great opportunity to force a wedge between his two enemies, the UK and the USA. He allowed over 700 000 Jews to migrate to Palestine. Not only that, through Czechoslovakia he provided arms and ammunition to the refugees. Israel successfully used these weapons in fighting to establish an Israeli state and in the subsequent 1948-49 Arab-Israeli war.
After two thousand years, Jews from all over Europe flooded it to their “promised land.” With huge numbers of Jewish refugees now pouring in to Palestine, the UK told the United Nations that it could use a part Palestine to establish a Jewish Free State. (The Balfour Declaration). This was very generous of the Britain, considering Palestine was not Britain's to give. However, western governments deemed it to be a very satisfactory situation because it gave the homeless Jews a homeland. Naturally, Paslestinians were not happy because the Jewish homeland had been their homeland for thousands of years.
In 1948 the United Nations partitioned Palestine, giving 56% of it to the Jews to form the free state of Irael, populated by people from all around the globe. Their ancestors had not lived on that land since biblical times but they were happy to claim it as their land. The State of Israel gave civil rights to Jews. Unfortunately, there were no such rights for the Palestinians who now found themselves in living in their homeland which had suddenly become a foreign country. Palestinians protested but their land was given away. A fundamental mistake was made 80 years ago when the United Nations did not establish a Palestinian Free State at the same time as Israel was founded.
In 1948, 750 000 Palestinians were forced to leave their former homeland, leaving their property and possessions behind. The 1948/9 Arab/Israeli war enabled Israel to acquire 78% of Palestine. In the war of 1967 Israel acquired the West Bank, The Gaza Strip, Golan Heights and the Sinai Peninsula. It gave the Sinai Peninsula back to Egypt in 1979. Today Israel, in contravention of United Nations rulings, controls just about 100% of what was Palestine and has established Jewish settlements on those occupied land.
Naturally, the Palestinian people who, over the last 100 years, have been lied to, tricked, cheated and dispossessed of their homeland, are angry at the way they have been treated. As if they have no rights o the land they have always lived on. Understandably they do not place much trust in western powers in their quest for Justice.
At present Israel is attacking Hamas because of the atrocities it commited in October 2024 and because Hamas till holds Jewish hostages. In waging war on Hamas, Israel has almost obliterated Gaza, the last Palestinian territory which is now a heaving sea of human despair. There are some who believe the Israeli government would be quite happy if all the Palestinians left Gaza and went to live somewhere else. Indeed, two Israeli government ministers have stated that is their objective. It would a most unjust outcome for Palestinians who had more than half of the homeland taken from them and then suffered the loss of the rest of it. Justice is not delivered by the philosophy of "an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth." As somebody once said that philosophy will only lead to a land of blind and toothless people.
The past is the past and cannot easily be undone. There must be justice for the Palestinians who have been treated shamefully. Because of that shameful treatment, some Palestinians have also behaved shamefully. The retaliation must cease on both sides and Justice must be given to the Palestinians.
Justice will only come if the Palestinians and the Arab states recognise Israel as a fait accompli, despite its unnatural birth and the displacement of the indigenous Palestinians. Justice will only come if Israel surrenders the occupied territories on which it has built many illegal settlements.. Perhaps the Israelis could remember that the Palestinians lost 56% of their land in 1948. It may give Israelis a greater understanding as to why most Palestinians are still aggrieved at the loss of their homeland. The illegal Jewish settlements on this currently occupied land will be a huge obstacle. But it could be solved if the State of Israel and a new State of Palestine had constitutions not based on religious beliefs but on the premise that all citizens are equal. It's not a new concept!
What an excellent blog/article Noel! Both factually and certainly in the way it was constructed and written. One of your phrases “a heaving sea of human despair“ really struck home with me. And I learnt heaps. You certainly haven’t lost your touch, have you mate.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Murray. I really appreciate your comments. The dire situation in Gaza is beginning to attract attention to the blatantly Unfair manner in which Palestinians have been treated over tne last 100 years. I imagine indigenous Australians are the only Australians who could fully understand having your home unceremoniously taken from you snd given to foreigners.
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