Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Expelled from home and native land but not from history
Expelled from home and native land but not from history
Dec 15, 2025 2:57 AM

  When asked for a definition of "peace" during a CBC interview, Canadian scientist, educator and renowned activist Ursula Franklin stated: "Peace is not just the absence of war. It is the presence of justice and the absence of fear." This simple definition helps explain why there is still no peace in Palestine. The man-made Palestinian plight has been characterized by a lack of justice and driven by fear and greed, from the decision of colonialist powers to give away more than half of Palestinian land without a referendum -- including the valuable coastal strip -- to the ongoing immoral blockade of Gaza.

  Palestinians around the world commemorated on May 15 their collective national trauma, the forced exodus from their homeland in 1948, or Al Nakba (Catastrophe) -- a historic injustice inflicted on some 750,000 unarmed civilian Palestinians. As they fled in fear, their properties were seized, their religious institutions destroyed, and close to 500 of their villages demolished or emptied.

  By accepting the declaration of independence -- self-proclaimed one day before the end of the British mandate -- and by recognizing the state of Israel, an entity with no defined borders, the international community officially placed the fate of Palestinians at the mercy of Israel. At that point, plans "A" "B" and "C" had already been formulated, and the fourth plan "Dalet" (letter "D" in Hebrew) which called for the systematic expulsion of Palestinians from strategic areas had been finalized in March 1948.

  So, before any Arab forces entered the sectors designated as Arab under the Partition Plan, Zionists -- (Dan Freeman-Maloy quoting David Bercuson) -- carried out terrorist activities and operations within them to ethnically cleanse them of indigenous population. Many well-known terrorists are recognized as Israeli heroes, amongst them Israeli prime ministers. It is odd that Israeli leaders can't see the similarity between their reaction to the British Mandate and that of the Palestinians under occupation.

  The recent Israeli wars and ongoing campaigns of terror are nothing but means to fully realize the Zionist project failed to achieve. In the words of Israeli historian Benny Morris, "If the end of the story turns out to be a gloomy one for the Jews, it will be because Ben-Gurion did not complete the transfer in 1948. Because he left a large and volatile demographic reserve in the West Bank and Gaza and within Israel itself... In certain conditions, expulsion is not a war crime. I don't think that the expulsions of 1948 were war crimes. You can't make an omelet without breaking eggs. You have to dirty your hands." (Survival of the Fittest? An Interview with Benny Morris by Ari Shavit, Haaretz, Jan. 16, 2004)

  In The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem (1987, updated 2004), Morris uses official Israeli documents to refute the myth that Palestinians fled under the orders of Arab leaders. He chronicles the acts of terrorism, rapes, massacres, and ethnic cleansing that went on with a wink and a nod from Zionist leaders eager to acquire land without its people. One of the architects of the Oslo Accord, Yitzak Rabin, had as defense minister urged the country to "create in the course of the next 10 or 20 years conditions which would attract natural and voluntary migration of the refugees from the Gaza Strip and the West Bank to Jordan." (Quoted by Alice Gray in Positive Conditions -- The Water Crisis In Gaza and by Robert I. Friedman.

  The transfer of the Palestinian population is still ‘encouraged' through highly discriminatory policies, some visible, such as home demolitions, closures, checkpoints, attacks on peaceful demonstrations, and others less so, such as the system of registration, permits, etc., special to Palestinians in the Occupied Territory (including Jerusalem) -- a bureaucratic process straight out of Kafka's nightmarish world.

  There are concerns that Canada has moved farther away from international law and UN resolutions on the Arab/Israeli conflict. The process of siding with Israel that started under Martin's Liberals has now turned Canada into Israel's cheerleader, overtaking the U.S. The undermining of the work of Rights and Democracy, the de-funding of internationally respected NGOs such as KAIROS, the decision to withdraw funding for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency [UNRWA] -- when the USA announced an initial contribution of $40 million that will provide critical health, education, and humanitarian services to 4.7 million Palestinian refugees across the region -- have raised concerns that the current government sees human rights not as universal, and peaceful advocacy in zones of conflict such as Israel/Palestine as something Canada should not support or fund.

  Rhetorically, the Canadian government supports a two-state solution as does the Israeli government (See official Israeli Ministry of Tourism's map of Israel), even as Israel expropriates and builds illegal Jews-only settlements on occupied Palestinian territory. It also supports the boycott of besieged Gaza while condemning calls for boycott of and divestment from Israel.

  Contrary to Golda Meir's famous sentence ("There is no such thing as a Palestinian people... It is not as if we came and threw them out and took their country. They didn't exist." -- Golda Meir, statement to The Sunday Times, 15 June, 1969), Palestine was a land with a thriving people. Holding onto shards of memory for six decades of exile, Palestinians, in the words of British-Palestinian filmmaker Omar Al-Qattan, know it "is clearly impossible to return to point zero... But it is also impossible for any Palestinian to honestly pretend that the trauma of 1948, or of the subsequent dispossessions and forced exiles which afflicted us and continue to do so, are no longer central to our lives. Nothing makes much sense without those memories and that history." (Nakba: Palestine, 1948, and the Claims of Memory, by Ahmad H. Sa'di and Lila Abu-Lughod, quoted in PulseMedia).

  Canada has been engaged in the Middle East, in the roles of peacekeeping as well as peacemaking, ever since the fateful UN Partition resolution through then representative, Ivan C. Rand, Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada, and Lester B. Pearson, who shepherded the resolution to adoption. The only Middle East expert in the Department of External Affairs, Elizabeth P. MacCallum, objected ("because we didn't give two hoots for democracy") and warned that the partition would create chaos for 40 years, a conservative estimate, but her advice was ignored.

  Canada may become relevant again as a player in the region when we stop looking at the conflict only through the Israeli prism. As Canadian political leaders once again join in Israel's celebration, they must also acknowledge that May 15th is a day of mourning for all Palestinians, and that their continued plight is a source of much sorrow and anger in the region and beyond.

  Whatever the competing historical interpretations, it remains that for the past six decades one of these peoples has enjoyed its independence and the other has been denied it, and the most basic human rights.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Israeli soldiers stand behind a barrier as Palestinian children hold signs during a rally marking the anniversary of the 'Nakba', Arabic for catastrophe, in the West Bank city of Hebron, Saturday, May 15, 2010.

  By Bahija Reghai

  Source: commondreams.org

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Glimpse of Syria's Qubayr massacre
  A young man describes how his town became the latest horrific headline to emerge from Syria.   Mohammad, a 20-year-old from a small village in Hama province, left for work on Wednesday morning not knowing that he would find most residents of his town dead when he returned.   When Mohammad came...
Palestinian village faces demolition by Israel
  Palestinians in this hamlet have clung to their arid acres for decades, living without proper electricity or water while Israel provides both to Jewish settlers on nearby hills. But the end now seems near for Susiya: Demolition orders distributed last week by the Israelis aim to destroy virtually the entire...
Evolving tactics of Syrian opposition fighters
  As violence appears to have escalated in Syria, the BBC's Ian Pannell reports on the situation in the north of the country, where he has just spent the last two weeks with some of the opposition fighting groups in Idlib province.   The commander had "gone to ground" and we sat...
Syria: 'Why is the world not doing anything to help us?'
  By Donatella Rovera   "Why is the world not doing anything to help us? We demonstrated peacefully and from the first day we were beaten and shot at. Then the army came into our villages and fired at us with tanks and helicopters and burned and destroyed our homes. Is the...
Syria running '27 torture centers'
  A new report by Human Rights Watch (HRW) said that Syrian intelligence agencies are running torture centers across the country where detainees are beaten with batons and cables, burned with acid, sexually assaulted, and their fingernails torn out.   The report released on Tuesday by the New York-based group identified 27...
Did Egyptians vote against their revolution?
  The results of the first round of voting in Egypt's presidential elections appear to have taken many by surprise, both at home and abroad.   Many had expected Egypt's first ever democratic presidential election would be the final battle in the war against the former regime, a battle Mubarak's allies were...
On the front lines of Syria's guerrilla war
  Dawn broke over the northern mountains of Jabal al-Zawiya late last month to find a group of anti-government fighters hiding along a ridge line, waiting for their remote-controlled bomb to destroy an army convoy on the road below.   The roughly 100 guerrillas were members of a larger group known as...
Amid the ruins in Homs, Syrian anger burns
  Burnt houses, collapsed buildings and rubble line streets strewn with broken glass and spent shells in Homs' devastated neighborhoods, for months the front line in the revolution against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.   On a 10-minute drive through Baba Amr district on Thursday, as journalists accompanied United Nations truce observers, two...
Houla massacre
  The village of Taldou, near the town of Houla in Syria's Homs province was the scene of one of the worst massacres in the country's 14-month-long uprising.   United Nations observers on the ground have confirmed that at least 108 people were killed, including 49 children and 34 women. Some were...
Assad forces widen attacks after massacre
  With the international community expressing outrage over the massacre of at least 108 civilians in the village of Houla, fresh outbreaks of fighting were being reported in other conflict hotspots.   On Monday, activists in the opposition stronghold of Hama reported an intensified government bombardment of the city, saying that at...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved