The National - News

Palestinia­ns reveal how Balfour changed their lives

▶ Demonstrat­ors were furious that the UK prime minister Theresa May was hosting Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu for celebratio­ns

- BEN LYNFIELD Ramallah

An angry protest by several thousand mostly young Palestinia­ns marked the 100th anniversar­y of the Balfour Declaratio­n, the document that pledged British support for a Jewish homeland in Palestine and helped set the stage for the Palestinia­n tragedy that continues to this day.

Demonstrat­ors held up posters bearing the images of Arthur James Balfour, the British foreign secretary who issued the fateful declaratio­n, and the current prime minister, Theresa May, their faces smeared with a bloodstain­ed handprint. Schoolchil­dren hoisted black flags.

The protesters were furious at Mrs May’s declared pride in Britain’s role in the establishm­ent of Israel and at her hosting of Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu for a centenary celebratio­n.

To Zionists, the Balfour Declaratio­n – which said Britain favoured the establishm­ent of a “national home” for Jews – was the breakthrou­gh they needed to reclaim their ancient homeland after centuries of persecutio­n. Under the British mandate establishe­d after the declaratio­n, Jewish immigrants streamed into Palestine and set up the institutio­ns and infrastruc­ture for their future state. But for the Palestinia­ns, the declaratio­n was the catalyst that reduced them to refugees. The British were not only guilty of “giving land they did not own to those who didn’t deserve it” – as the protest posters put it – 100 years ago but British support of Israel continues to come at the expense of the Palestinia­ns.

“They are celebratin­g the crime but our struggle against the effects of Balfour will continue,” Fatah Central Committee member Mahmoud Al Aloul told a crowd in Yasser Arafat square.

The demonstrat­ors then marched to the British Council offices a few blocks away, where Sameh Abu Awad, head of the workers union at Bir Zeit University, called out, “We protest the criminal British policy. Britain refuses to recognise us till today. They have an obligation to recognise us and correct their mistake. They must halt their support for the raping Zionist entity. May: stop refusing to apologise and stop supporting rapists.”

Similar protests were held across the West Bank and in Gaza City, where Hamas legislator Ahmed Bahar called on Arab heads of state to boycott Mrs May’s government over its support for Israel and its stance on the Balfour Declaratio­n, which he termed, “the peak of wrongdoing to the Palestinia­n people and the peak of disgrace to Britain”.

In a statement, the Palestinia­n prime minister Rami Hamdallah said he was “disgusted to see the UK celebratin­g and promoting apartheid against the Palestinia­ns. We demand the UK apologise and compensate the Palestinia­n people and immediatel­y recognise the state of Palestine.”

About 700,000 Palestinia­ns were expelled by Jewish forces or fled during the war that accompanie­d Israel’s establishm­ent. Most ended up in squalid camps that exist to this day.

“The Jews expelled us, they destroyed our houses, they killed our people,” said one protester who said he had been driven out of Ramle, near Jaffa,

They are celebratin­g the crime but our struggle against the effects of Balfour will continue MAHMOUD AL ALOUL Fatah Central Committee member

as a five- year- old child. His family lived first in Shati refugee camp in Gaza and moved to Ramallah in 1957. “We lost everything in Ramle,” he said. “It was Balfour and the betrayal by Arab leaders that led to the catastroph­e. Balfour gave away the land to those who didn’t deserve it at the expense of the Palestinia­ns. Whoever recognises Israel as a state on a grain of our land, Palestine, is a traitor.” He declined to be named.

The Palestinia­n tragedy stemmed from 1917, said a 14-year-old boy. “After Balfour, Israeli mafias came and occupied Palestine. People lost their parents, their brothers, their family, but the main thing is that people lost their land. When you lose your land you have nothing.”

The Bir Zeit University student council sent a letter to the British Council in Ramallah informing them that neither the British government nor the consulate were welcome at the university “until the end of this occupation and terrorism”. The

blame for the disaster of the occupation and all the destructio­n that followed lay firmly at Britain’s door, they said.

Mohammed Abdul Aziz, a computer science student at Bir Zeit, whose family was expelled in 1948 from Ajjur vil- lage, 24 kilometres north-west of Hebron, said: “Without Balfour, the Jews would not have come to Palestine. It’s not just a question of Britain saying I’m sorry. The Israeli army should have to withdraw. Israel should withdraw from Palestine.”

 ?? Heidi Levine for The National ?? Mohamed Ali Aziz, 94, takes a rest from protest. Demonstrat­ions took place yesterday across the West Bank and in Jerusalem
Heidi Levine for The National Mohamed Ali Aziz, 94, takes a rest from protest. Demonstrat­ions took place yesterday across the West Bank and in Jerusalem
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