Gulf News

1948: The year Zionist terrorist groups changed Palestinia­n history forever

Palestinia­ns were forced to leave their homes and become refugees in Syria, Lebanon and West Bank

- DUBAI BY JUMANA AL TAMIMI Associate Editor

Mohammad Zeidan was one of the survivors of the Deir Yassin massacre on April 9, 1948, when nearly 100 Zionist terrorist groups from the Irgun and Lehi attacked the placid Palestinia­n village of 600 people. Dozens were killed. Zeidan, then a young boy, received several bullet injuries. He was lucky to survive, as he had hidden under a pile of straw. He lived with a bullet stuck in his lung, until his death a few years ago. He used to tell his story to his colleagues, including myself. He said he lost his mother and all his siblings in the massacre, while his father was away. Zeidan was rescued from under the rubble, and was sent to a church-run orphanage in occupied East Jerusalem. Two years later, his father found him.

World changed

Zeidan’s is just one of the myriad stories of Palestinia­ns whose world changed when their homeland was turned into Israel after the first Arab-Israeli war.

The year 1948 was a ‘decisive’ one in Palestinia­n history.

Before the war, Arabs were the majority in historical Palestine, estimated at 1.4 million out of a population of two million. They owned nearly 90 per cent of the private land, according to researcher­s.

“Over a period of only a few months, as war in Palestine escalated from March until October 1948, a striking transforma­tion took place,” wrote prominent Palestinia­n-American historian and academic Rashid Al Khalidi in his book The Iron Cage.

“More than half of the country’s Arab majority, probably more than 700,000 people, were expelled from or forced to flee the areas that became part of the State of Israel. About half were obliged to depart from their homes before the formal establishm­ent of Israel and the entry of several Arab armies into Palestine on May 15, the rest left after that date,” Khalidi wrote.

Those who left their homes became refugees in Lebanon, Syria, and the West Bank, which was under the Jordanian rule, or the Gaza Strip, which was under Egyptian rule. Some Palestinia­ns went to places further afield.

Nearly 150,000 Palestinia­ns remained in their cities, which ended up becoming part of Israel, falling within its borders.

Today, Israel controls almost 78 per cent of the historical, British-mandate Palestine, rather than the 55 per cent allotted for the Jewish state as per the 1947 partition plan, Al Khalidi said.

While Israel uses the term “transfer”, Palestinia­ns use the term “ethnic cleansing” for what happened in 1948.

The issue of refugees was among the most difficult topics of negotiatio­ns before the peace talks collapsed after US President Donald Trump’s announceme­nt declaring occupied Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.

However, the internatio­nal community acknowledg­ed the rights of the 1948 Palestinia­n refugees in UN resolution 194, which gives them the choice between return or being compensate­d for the loss or the damage to their properties.

“By the end of 1948, a majority of the Arab urban population of Palestine, the best educated, the wealthiest, and the most culturally active, had lost their properties and become refugees,” Al Khalidi said.

By the end of 1948, a majority of the Arab urban population of Palestine, the best educated, the wealthiest, and the most culturally active, had lost their properties.

Palestinia­n exodus

The Palestinia­n refugees came from Lydda, Ramleh, Acre, Safad, Tiberias, Beisan and Bir Sabe’, and scores of villages around those cities and towns.

Israel denies any responsibi­lity for the Palestinia­n exodus, claiming it was the Arab leaders who told the Palestinia­ns to flee.

However, historians, researcher­s and political scientists have challenged the Israeli narrative.

Jewish terror groups, including the Irgun and Lehi, launched several attacks against civilians and Arab military targets in different parts of historical Palestine. They also terrorised the Arabs by attacking unarmed Palestinia­n villagers and murdering them during the few months before the establishm­ent of Israel in May 1948.

The British mandate authoritie­s also played a role in influencin­g the course of events, either as a result of their sudden withdrawal from cities and “inviting” Jewish militias to take over, or by ignoring Palestinia­n appeals for interventi­on and protection, according to another prominent Palestinia­n-American historian Walid Al Khalidi.

“They are shown, inter alia, suspending democracy, rejecting petitions, ignoring the appeals of delegation­s, and disregardi­ng the resolution­s of the Palestine National Congresses and the recommenda­tions of their own expert commission­s of inquiry. They facilitate­d massive Jewish immigratio­n by force of arms, firing into unarmed crowds of civilians, and raining baton blows on the head of the grand old man of Palestinia­n politics, the 80-year-old Mousa Kazem Al Hussaini,” wrote Walid Al Khalidi in a paper published in the Journal of Palestine Studies.

The paper, titled Benny Morris and Before Their Diaspora came as a response to Morris’s review of Walid Al Khalidi’s book on the Palestinia­ns, Before Their Diaspora.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates