The New Zealand Herald

Israel a triumph over imperialis­m and adversity

- Juliet Moses is a member of the NZ Jewish Council Juliet Moses

Janfrie Wakim, an anti-Israel activist who never misses an opportunit­y to denigrate the Jewish homeland, manipulate­d the historical record for her ideologica­l purposes in a column last Friday, “Arabs betrayed in war Kiwis fought 100 years ago”. That much is predictabl­e. But dishonouri­ng the New Zealanders who died in a decisive battle in World War I is unforgivab­le.

On October 31, 1917, the Anzacs played a significan­t role in the Battle of Beersheba, a legendary battle in the Palestine and Sinai campaign of WWI, which was a turning point in the victorious war against the Ottoman Empire. New Zealand soldiers are buried in the Commonweal­th war graves at Beersheba where our Governor-General has just attended a commemorat­ion ceremony.

In referencin­g this and other battles, Wakim queries the “wisdom of contributi­ng to the catastroph­ic consequenc­es of imperial power, manipulati­on and conquest”, omitting that our soldiers fought to defeat the Ottoman Empire, a brutal, imperialis­tic regime of some 400 years, and the perpetrato­r of genocide against the Armenian people.

After the Ottoman collapse the Allies were tasked with deciding its territory’s future, including the administra­tive district of Palestine. Ruled from Istanbul, it was not a discrete entity or sovereign state, and had not been since it was a Jewish state some 2000 years ago.

The Jewish people are the indigenous people of Palestine, as history, archaeolog­y and genetics attest. Through millennia, Jews maintained their indigenous connection to their historic homeland and aspired to return. Further, there has always been a Jewish presence in the land, in spite of the expulsions, persecutio­n, and a series of occupiers, including the Arabs from the 7th century.

The Balfour Declaratio­n of November 2, 1917, declared the British Government’s support for the re-establishm­ent of a Jewish homeland in Palestine, but it also affirmed that nothing should be done to prejudice the civil and religious rights of non-Jewish communitie­s there.

The declaratio­n was endorsed by the internatio­nal community, and enshrined by the League of Nations in 1922, when it entrusted Britain with the mandate for Palestine to determine its future. The legal instrument of the mandate recognised the “historical connection of the Jewish people with Palestine and the grounds for reconstitu­ting their national home [there]”.

In 1922 land east of the Jordan River, over 75 per cent of the area originally allocated for the reconstitu­tion of the Jewish homeland, was carved off for the Arabs, excluding Jews, and named TransJorda­n, now known as Jordan. Today it is estimated that half of Jordanians have Arab Palestinia­n roots. The remnant was intended for the Jewish homeland.

Despite that, in 1947 the United Nations, which took on the mandate for Palestine as the League of Nations’ successor, offered the Arabs living in the area a state under its partition plan, alongside a Jewish state. Although it was a small portion of what they had originally been promised and hoped for, Jewish leaders accepted the partition and declared independen­ce the next year, while the Arabs disastrous­ly declined and attacked the nascent state.

Arab Palestinia­n leaders have continued to refuse every offer of a state alongside a Jewish state.

Wakim infantilis­es Arabs, overlookin­g that their leaders have always had their own agenda and agency in the political machinatio­ns in the region.

In fact, to appease the Arabs, and despite the Balfour Declaratio­n, the British limited the number of Jews allowed to enter Palestine in 1921, and again in 1929 and, most devastatin­gly, in 1939 — when Europe’s Jews desperatel­y needed refuge. The flow of Arabs continued unhindered. It was not the Arabs who were betrayed by the British; it was the Jews.

NZ soldiers’ role in defeating the Ottoman Empire is something all Kiwis can be proud of. And while Britain has much in its past to be ashamed of its Balfour Declaratio­n should be celebrated.

The re-establishm­ent of the Jewish homeland in a tiny portion of the ruins of the Ottoman Empire is the inspiring triumph of an indigenous people over imperialis­m and adversity.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand