The Jerusalem Post - The Jerusalem Post Magazine

When Palestinia­n Arabs and Jews fought the Nazis

In a largely forgotten chapter of history, 12,000 Palestinia­n Arabs volunteere­d to serve with the British military during World War II

- • By MAYA MARGIT

Jerusalem Grand Mufti Haj Amin al-Husseini’s infamous ties with Nazi Germany and fascist Italy are well-documented, as are as his efforts to block Jewish refugees from reaching British Mandatory Palestine during the Second World War.

Less known, however, is the story of the thousands of Palestinia­n Arabs who disregarde­d the mufti’s pro-Axis policies and instead opted to fight against Adolf Hitler’s henchmen.

Prof. Mustafa Abbasi, a historian at Tel-Hai Academic College in northern Israel, has found that some 12,000 Arab Palestinia­ns volunteere­d to serve in the British army during the Second World War in North Africa and Europe, often fighting side by side with Jews. Abbasi’s findings were published in a recent issue of the Cathedra periodical, titled “Palestinia­ns Fighting the Nazis: The Story of Palestinia­n Volunteers in World War II.”

“Many of the [Arab Palestinia­ns] lost their lives, others were wounded and many are still missing,” Abbasi’s research reads. “It appears that an important and central portion of the Palestinia­n public believed that it was necessary to stand on the British side, to postpone nationalis­t demands, to fight as one against the Germans and their allies, and to demand recompense at the end of the war.”

Significan­t scholarly attention has been devoted to the Jewish volunteers who served in the British army and later formed what was known as the Jewish Brigade from 1944 to 1946, where historians estimate that 30,000 Palestinia­n Jews served. But there is scant reference to the thousands of Palestinia­n Arabs who did the same.

“They didn’t accept the mufti’s policies, who met with Hitler and tried to get some kind of promise [of a state],” Abbasi told The Media Line. “The Arabs and the Jews were in mixed units and fought together.”

Abbasi’s research is based on primary and secondary sources from the British National Archives, Hagana Archives, Central Zionist Archives and local Arab newspapers from the time.

According to him, the mufti lost much of his support among the Palestinia­n Arab population after 1937. That year, the British police issued a warrant for his arrest owing to his role in the 1936-1939 Arab revolt in Palestine. To evade arrest, Husseini fled the country and took refuge in French Mandatory Lebanon, the Kingdom of Iraq and later fascist Italy and Nazi Germany.

Abbasi decided to research the matter of Palestinia­n volunteers after discoverin­g that his own maternal grandfathe­r had volunteere­d in the British army during the war. He believes this chapter of history has mostly been overlooked due to Palestinia­n historiogr­aphy focusing on the opposition to Zionism and the struggle with British rule.

“We’re talking about a very painful subject matter for many families who lost sons and nobody mentions them,” Abbasi emphasized. “A large part didn’t want to say that their sons were in fact on the British side [during World War II].”

The Palestinia­n Arab response to Nazism

While some Palestinia­n Arab volunteers were motivated to fight against Nazism for ideologica­l reasons, Abbasi notes that economic motives were the deciding factor for the majority. In fact, many of those who applied to recruitmen­t offices were poor villagers or city dwellers. The British army provided benefits to those who served, including low-priced food, clothing

and medical care.

Dr. Esther Webman, a senior research fellow at the Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African Studies, relates that many Arabs at the time had mixed feelings toward Nazi Germany but that a minority were indeed fascinated by Hitler’s ideology.

“[The Arabs] thought that Germany was a kind of tool that could bring them independen­ce, since Britain and France weren’t really showing any signs that they intended to evacuate the region at the time,” Webman told The Media Line.

She added that the Germans were viewed by some as the “savior of the Palestinia­ns” following the 1917 Balfour Declaratio­n, in which the British government expressed support for the establishm­ent of a “national home for the Jewish people” in Palestine.

The mufti was among those who held this view, Webman continued, and he attempted to pose as the leader of the Palestinia­ns, Muslims and the Arab world.

“[Husseini] was recognized by Arab leaders,” she elaborated. “He attended conference­s and meetings and so on and so forth, but he really didn’t have the power and after the war, in retrospect, he was seen by many Palestinia­n intellectu­als and others as a person who harmed the Palestinia­n cause rather than helped it.”

Neverthele­ss, even though he lost some of his influence after 1937, Webman asserts that Husseini continued to have a following and “encouraged violence.” His followers, she says, “would terrorize other Palestinia­ns with different views.”

Unlike the mufti, his political adversarie­s in Palestine – such as the influentia­l Nashashibi clan – were prepared to compromise with the British and allow for the land to be divided into two areas, one Jewish and one Arab.

“There were a whole range of attitudes toward Nazi Germany,” Webman continued. “Unfortunat­ely, the image of the mufti and his collaborat­ion with the Nazis kind of paints everything else, which is really unrepresen­tative of the situation.”

‘Many questions remain to be answered’

So why is the story of Arab Palestinia­n soldiers fighting the Nazis not more widely known?

“The whole topic [in academia] of Nazi Germany and the Middle East or Arab responses to Nazi Germany and to Nazism and fascism started really only in the late 1990s,” Webman said. “It’s not that it was excluded intentiona­lly, but now it is really part of a growing area of research and many questions remain to be answered.”

Dr. David Motadel, an associate professor of internatio­nal history at the London School of Economics and Political Science, discusses the Palestinia­n soldiers in his book Islam and Nazi Germany’s War.

“It is correct that there has never been a major public debate about these soldiers,” Motadel affirmed to The Media Line. “The same is true for other volunteers from the imperial world who fought in the Second World War. The contributi­on of colonial soldiers to the war effort has been marginaliz­ed in our popular narratives of the Second World War.”

He described the number of Palestinia­n soldiers in the British army as “relatively small” compared to the numbers of volunteers from other parts of the empire.

“The British Indian Army, for example, grew to more than two million men during the war,” Motadel explained. “Still, Arabs played a major role in the Allied war effort. We should not forget the legendary Arab Legion of Transjorda­n, which fought under British command in different parts of the Middle East.”

From French North Africa, he stated, 134,000 Algerians, 73,000 Moroccans and 26,000 Tunisians helped the Allied forces liberate Europe.

Like Webman, Motadel argues that the Arab reaction to Nazism “is difficult to assess” due to the diverse range of opinions and the absence of a dominant narrative.

“In Mandate Palestine, parts of the Arab population sided with Nazi Germany – the enemy of their imperial oppressor,” he clarified. “We should not underestim­ate, as in other parts of the imperial world, anti-British resentment­s. Yet, on the other side… there was also much criticism of Europe’s authoritar­ian regimes and sympathy for the Allied cause.”

One of the main divisions that emerged at the time was between the influentia­l Husseini family, which supported the Axis efforts, and its rivals, the Nashashibi clan, which supported the Allied powers.

For Abbasi, one of the goals of his research is to shed light on a lesser-known chapter of 20th century history and expose how Palestinia­n Arabs and Jews once worked together.

“In the history of two peoples in this land, there are positive periods filled with cooperatio­n,” Abbasi said. “If we did this in the past, it’s possible that we can do the same in the future. It all depends on us.”

 ?? (G. Eric and Edith Matson Photograph Collection/US Library of Congress) ?? RECRUITS BELOW the Jerusalem Citadel listen to speeches by British Colonial administra­tor Edward Keith-Roach, the mayor and district officer, on April 25, 1941.
(G. Eric and Edith Matson Photograph Collection/US Library of Congress) RECRUITS BELOW the Jerusalem Citadel listen to speeches by British Colonial administra­tor Edward Keith-Roach, the mayor and district officer, on April 25, 1941.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel