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 Have the Occupied Palestinian Territories Become 
	  the Native American Reservation of our Time?  By Ridwan Sheikh Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, July 23, 2012 
 Israel’s refusal to stop building illegal settlements in 
	  occupied West Bank and Jerusalem is a poignant reminder the Palestinians 
	  could share a fate similar to the indigenous American Indian people of the 
	  1800’s.
 
 According to the author, James W. Loewen, the U.S 
	  government’s model of wiping out nearly 54 million [1] indigenous people, 
	  with the remaining numbers relocated to desolate reservations, inspired 
	  Adolf Hitler to do the same against the Jews.
 
 “Hitler admired the 
	  American concentration camps set up for Indians in the West and often 
	  lauded them to his inner circle for the effectiveness of American aptitude 
	  for promoting starvation and unequal combat, which inspired him for his 
	  own extermination of Jews and Gypsies.[2] [Romani people],” Loewen wrote.
 
 Noam Chomsky, the political author and professor of linguistics at 
	  Massachusetts Institute of Technology, (MIT), believes today’s role 
	  reversal of the Palestinians becoming the indigenous American Indian 
	  people is merited, but up to a point.
 
 “It’s bad enough, but not 
	  that bad. The leading figures of the US conquests were quite explicit 
	  about taking over everything, and ‘exterminating’-their word-anyone who 
	  stood in the way. What we’d call ‘genocide’ if anyone else were to try 
	  it,” Chomsky said.
 
 By mid-2011, 131 illegal 
	  settlements were in the region, housing 498,000 Israeli Jews, of which the 
	  majority of settlements are on privately owned Palestinian land, not part 
	  of Israel.[3]
 
 Israel occupies 77.5% of expropriated land, it 
	  terms, “State land”. This demographic change took more than 50 years of 
	  planning by the World Zionist organisation, a Jewish nationalist movement, 
	  exploiting Judaism, to advance colonisation in Palestine for a Jewish 
	  nation.
 
 Integral to Israel’s land drive is an 8 metre concrete 
	  wall enclosure that surrounds illegal settlements. The idea was suggested 
	  in 1923, by the Polish Zionist, Vladimir Jabotinsky, founder of the Jewish 
	  terrorist group, Irgun, in the Jewish Herald, stating: “This colonization 
	  can develop only under the protection of a force independent of the local 
	  population – an iron wall which the native population cannot break 
	  through.”[4]
 
 Israel’s colonisation depends on exploiting natural 
	  resources. The Jordan Valley and the Dead Sea area have 37 illegal 
	  settlements of 9,500 settlers and up to 56,000 Palestinians, yet Israel 
	  pumps most of the water to its settlements, forcing the Arabs to ration 
	  water supplies. When supplies end, families risk contamination from 
	  polluted streams or make up the 67% forced to buy water in tanks from the 
	  Mekorot Company, which is expensive. [5]
 
 To Palestinian 
	  farmer’s, water shortages limit the variety of crops grown, affecting an 
	  already crumbling economy, which Israel controls, to almost $1.83bn in 
	  lost annual revenue, [6] with complete losses in the West Bank and Gaza 
	  totalling around £4.4bn. [7]
 
 Nazism rise to 
	  power in Germany was an important juncture for Zionism. Although, the 
	  persecution of Jews didn’t interest the Zionists, Hitler’s demise in 1945 
	  provided the opportunity to take advantage of Jewish suffering, by 
	  sabotaging efforts to relocate Jews to other parts of Europe, instead 
	  increased Jewish migration into Palestine.
 
 By 1946 the Jewish 
	  population rose to 602,586,[8] which was nearly four times the 1931 
	  British Mandate population figure of 174,610, with 65% (approximately 
	  1,339,763) being Arab as opposed to 759,717 (73.5%) in 1931.[9]
 
 “There are multiple motives behind the settlement enterprise, such as 
	  cheap housing, but nationalist and religious ideologies (e.g. the belief 
	  the West Bank, or ‘Judea and Samaria,’ is part of the biblical ‘Eretz 
	  Israel’ play a very significant role,” said Human Rights Watch spokesman, 
	  Bill Van Esveld.
 
 The Judaic significance refers to, ‘chosen 
	  people’ and ‘promised land’, prominent among settler motives, and forms 
	  the basis of Israeli claims over Palestinian land. Most Rabbis peddle 
	  Zionist interpretation in the Jewish Holy book, the Tanakh, focusing on 
	  (Genesis 15:18) that, ‘God promised Abraham's descendants the land between 
	  the River of Egypt and the Forat (Euphrates)’, and in (Exodus 23:31), 
	  where ‘the border was set from the Red Sea to the sea of the Philistines; 
	  the inhabitants of the land would be delivered into your hand; and the 
	  people shall be driven out’.
 
 According to traditional Jewish 
	  scholars it is not for the Jewish people to fulfil this promise but a pact 
	  between God and the prophet Elijah, yet to be delivered. Once delivered, 
	  it would signal the later arrival of the Messiah, who would redeem the 
	  Jews and all of mankind. Until then, God commands the Jews to remain in 
	  exile until it is time to be redeemed.[10] The term, ‘exile’, refers to 
	  Jews being loyal subjects to their nation of residence, and not 
	  establishing rule over the native population, including the land of 
	  Palestine. [11]
 
 To gain unconditional public support, exploiting 
	  Judaism wasn’t enough. Zionism needed land. In 1901, a proposal was 
	  accepted by Zvi Hermann Schapira, a rabbi and professor of mathematics, to 
	  establish an institute, the Jewish National Fund (JNF), to aggressively 
	  purchase land for Jewish settlement,[12] and form a ‘Jewish territory’ in 
	  the process.
 
 By the 1930’s the JNF using its leading influence, 
	  persuaded other land agencies to adopt its practices of retaining the 
	  legal title of the land, with leases granted to Jewish settlers.[13]
 
 The first Zionist land purchase was in the Jezreel Valley, bought 
	  from the Sursuk family in 1925. The Judaic importance and its nearly 
	  100,000 acres, of which at least 93,000 acres were fertile and arable, 
	  made it one of the most fertile lands in Palestine. The Sursuk family 
	  bought the land from the Turkish government for 18,000 Palestinian pounds 
	  (roughly $50,000). The Zionist movement offered Sursuk an obscene amount 
	  of 726,000 Palestinian pounds (approximately $2 million), which was 
	  accepted by the Sursuk family. [14] This kind of exploitive dealings was 
	  common practice.
 
 Most land purchases were followed by Arab 
	  expulsion. A secret memorandum in 1930, written by Dr. A. Rupin, the 
	  Jewish Agency agriculture and settlement expert, to his Agency, confirms 
	  expulsion is built into Zionism, when he said, “Since there are hardly any 
	  more arable unsettled lands in Palestine, we are bound in each case of 
	  purchase of land and its settlement to remove the peasants who cultivated 
	  the land thus far, both owners of the land and tenants.”
 
 It is 
	  believed 1270 Palestinian Arab families were removed from 13 villages. To 
	  avoid a public scandal, each family was compensated 24 Palestinian pounds 
	  (just above $50), seen as an exception to the rule, as normally Arab 
	  families received nothing, for example the land purchase of Hefer Valley, 
	  saw about 2000 Arab peasants dispossessed. [15]
 
 The Israeli 
	  historian, Ilan Pappe, dismisses the argument of the Palestinians leaving 
	  on their own accord. In his research paper, later included in his book, 
	  ‘The ethnic cleansing of Palestine’, he reveals the official version of 
	  the 1948 Arab expulsion.
 
 “On 10 March 1948, a group of 11 veteran 
	  Zionist leaders and Jewish officers put the finishing touches to a large 
	  scale military operation for the ethnic cleansing of Palestine.[16] 
	  Military orders that evening, were despatched to units, preparing 
	  Palestinian expulsion from vast areas of the country. The detailed methods 
	  included: large-scale intimidation; laying siege to and bombarding 
	  villages and population centers; setting fires to homes, properties, and 
	  goods; expelling residents; demolishing homes; and finally planting mines 
	  in the rubble to prevent the expelled Arabs from returning. Each unit was 
	  issued its own list of villages and neighbourhoods to target in keeping 
	  with the master plan, Code-named Plan D (Dalet in Hebrew)”.[17]
 
 Taking six months to complete its mission, more than half of Palestine’s 
	  population, over 750,000 people, had been uprooted, 531 villages 
	  destroyed, and 11 urban neighbourhoods had been emptied of their 
	  inhabitants.[18]
 
 The squeezing of Arab lands, especially during 
	  1948-1959, further expanded Israeli territory. Some of the villages 
	  included, the village of Umm Al-Fahm, with a population of 7000 and a land 
	  of 140,000 dunam*, by 1959 its population increased to 11,000 but the land 
	  was reduced to an astonishing 1500 dunam. The village of Tayyiba inhabited 
	  3,500 people, with 45,000 dunam of land, by 1959 the population climbed to 
	  7,000 but were left with only 13,000 dunam of land. The village of Tira 
	  with a population of 3100 people, owned 28,000 dunam, by 1959 the 
	  population rose to 5100 but only occupied 7,500 dunam of land. [19]
 
 Deception was also used to expel Arab villagers, as witnessed in the 
	  Arab-Christian village of Ikrit in December 1948. The villagers were 
	  instructed by the Israeli army to leave their village temporarily, for two 
	  weeks, alleging land mines where found in the area and needed to be 
	  cleared for their safety. The residents moved to the nearby village of 
	  Rama, which became the Rama Refugee Camp, until it was safe to return.
 
 Two weeks has now become 64 years. Instead of being resigned to their 
	  fate, in 1952 the villagers filed a lawsuit action, as they were 
	  instructed to leave for a limited time, so their property couldn’t be 
	  considered ‘absentee property’. The judges deceived the plaintiffs ruling 
	  in favour of the plaintiffs’ right of return to their land, but on 
	  condition of attaining a permit issued by the military governor. In 
	  reality, the Governor would never issue a permit. [20] The case still goes 
	  on.  The court’s decision underlines how complicit the legal system is 
	  with Zionism’s policies.
 
 Resistance also came from individuals, 
	  such as the Syrian, Shaykh Muhammad Izz ad-Din al-Qassam. He was an Imam 
	  of a local mosque in Haifa and an educator by night, teaching literacy to 
	  labourers. It was his student’s experiences, largely ex-farmers, recalling 
	  how they had to leave their lands by the JNF, which had a profound impact 
	  on Al-Qassam, who decided armed Jihad, (resistance) was necessary to end 
	  Arab dispossession, and in 1930, he formed a small militant group.
 
 By 1935, the group raided Jewish settlements and sabotaged British rail 
	  lines, but Al-Qassam wanted a national revolution and wrote to the Arab 
	  leadership in Jerusalem, to support an armed struggle, but was rejected, 
	  as the leadership felt Arab rights could still be achieved through 
	  negotiations.
 
 When news reached the British of al-Qassam’s 
	  vision, military units were deployed around a cave near Ya'bad in Jenin, 
	  where he was hiding, with twelve of his followers. Soon afterwards, the 
	  British soldiers pounded the area with heavy artillery. Al-Qassam, rather 
	  than surrender, took a last stand and was killed.
 
 Al-Qassam’s 
	  efforts were not in vain, who instantly became a symbol of resistance, 
	  epitomising the Palestinian land struggle. His martyrdom triggered the 
	  great Arab Revolt (1936-1939). His legacy lives on with the military wing 
	  of Hamas named after him, Ezzedeen al-Din Al-Qassam Brigades.
 
 By 
	  the time Britain’s rule expired on 14 May 1948, the newly Zionist-aligned 
	  U.S government emerged as the leading global political power, and using 
	  its influence, forced the voting U.N nations to accept the two-state 
	  resolution, which the Palestinians rejected, giving 56% of the land to the 
	  Jews and 42% to the Arabs, the remaining land went to Christian and other 
	  small minority groups.[21]
 
 The pressure for U.N Nations to 
	  vote was acknowledged by James Forrestal, the U.S Minister of Defense at 
	  the time, in his memoirs, stating, “The methods used to pressure and to 
	  constrain the other nations within the U.N. were close to scandalous.” 
	  [22]
 
 Since then, political elites have conspired to view the 
	  Palestinians as the ‘unseen’ people, which is emphasised with the ‘peace’ 
	  broker, the U.S government, forging strong economic and political ties 
	  with Israel, while ensuring there are no Palestinian agreements in 
	  dismantling illegal settlements and reclaiming civil rights equal to the 
	  Israeli citizens.
 
 Palestine’s full admission to UNESCO (the United 
	  Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation), in October 
	  2011 is a historic small step for the Palestinians to address its rights 
	  with some authority, and with at least 112 countries endorsing Palestinian 
	  statehood, the pressure to be given full U.N membership, is growing and 
	  cannot be ignored for much longer.
 
 Notes
 
 *One dunam is approximately 1,000 square metres
 
 1 Denevan, 
	  William. “The Native Population of the Americas in 1492”. 2nd edition 
	  Publication. 1992.
 2 Loewen, James W., “Lies My Teacher Told Me:  Everything Your 
	  American History Textbook Got Wrong”. Touchstone, Simon & Schuster. 1995. 3 Peace Now Settlement Watch Team, Report-“Construction of Settlements 
	  upon Private Land-Official Data”, March 2007. 4 Jabotinsky, Vladimir. The Jewish Herald (South Africa). “The Iron 
	  Wall (We and the Arabs)”. November 26, 1937. 5 Ma’an Development Center, Parallel Realities: Israeli Settlements and 
	  Palestinian Communities in the Jordan Valley, 2012.  6 7 The economic cost of the Israeli occupation for the occupied 
	  Palestinian territory, A bulletin published by the Palestinian Ministry of 
	  National Economy in cooperation with the Applied Research 
	  Institute-Jerusalem (ARIJ), September 2011.  8 Palestine 1946: District and District Centers during the Mandate 
	  period. Source: Palestine Remembered 9 Census of Palestine 1931, Volume I. British Mandate of Palestine. 10 Leizer Fishberg, Jews Against Zionism group. 11 Rabbi Cohen, Ahron. “Declaration 
	  on ‘the Palestine issue’ by Neturei Karta of the UK”. 25 June, 2003. 
	  (Accessed 26 June 2012). 12 The composition of the group that met is the product of a mosaic 
	  reconstruction of several documents, as demonstrated in my book, The 
	  Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine (Oxford: Oneworld Publications, 2006). The 
	  document summarizing the meeting is found in the Israel Defense Force 
	  Archives [IDFA], GHQ/Operations branch, 10 March 1948, File no. 
	  922/75/595, and in the Haganah Archives [HA], File no. 73/94. The 
	  description of the meeting is repeated by Israel Galili in the Mapai 
	  center meeting, 4 April 1948, found in the HA, File no. 80/50/18. Chapter 
	  4 of my book also documents the messages that went out on 10 March as well 
	  as the eleven meetings prior to finalizing of the plan, of which full 
	  minutes were recorded only for the January meeting. 13 Lehn and Davis 1988: 24, 86-7. 14, 19 Fouzi el-Asmar, “Zionist land-aggression in Israel/Palestine”, 
	  4th Edition. English translation by Uri Davis, 4th Edition. 15 Arakhim, (Hebrew Newspaper), “The Arab Population in Israel”, No. 3, 
	  1971, p.10 16 The historian Meir Pail claims, in From Haganah to the IDF [in 
	  Hebrew] (Tel Aviv: Zemora Bitan Modan, n.d.), p.307, the orders were sent 
	  a week later. For the dispatch of the orders, see also Gershon Rivlin and 
	  Elhanan Oren, The War of Independence: Ben-Gurion’s Diary, vol. 1 (Tel 
	  Aviv: Ministry of Defense, 1982), p.147. The orders dispatched to the 
	  Haganah brigades to move to State D—Mazav Dalet—and from the brigades to 
	  the battalions can be found in HA, File no.73/94, 16 April 1948. 17 On Plan Dalet, which was approved in its broad lines several weeks 
	  before that meeting, see Uri Ben-Eliezer, The Emergence of Israeli 
	  Militarism, 1936–1956 (Tel Aviv: Dvir, 1995), p. 253: “Plan Dalet aimed at 
	  cleansing of villages, expulsion of Arabs from mixed towns.”18 Ilan 
	  Pappe, white paper, p.7, “The 1948 Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine”.
 20 Yediot Aharonot, Hebrew newspaper. 30 June 1972.  21 Pappe, 2006, p. 35 Pappe speech given by the Pakistani 
	  representative to the U.N Sir Zafrullah Kahn on 28 November 1947 22 "Forrestal's Memoirs", p.363, N.Y., The Viking Press. 1951. 
 Author's Short Bio
 
 Ridwan Sheikh, former editor 
	  of grassroots U.K activist group, Stop political terror, (Cease to Exist), 
	  which focused on U.K terrorism legislation and highlighted cases of 
	  prisoners detained without charge. He is currently the editor of
	  www.policyelite.co.uk and 
	  contributor focusing on Muslim issues and American and British policies.
 
 The author holds a post graduate diploma in Journalism from London 
	  School of Journalism. He has also visited Israel and the Palestinian 
	  occupied territories in his student activism days, in conjunction with 
	  Birzeit University, near Ramallah.
 
 Contact e-mail address:
 ridwan.sheikh@gmail.com
	  ridwan.sheikh@policyelite.co.uk
 
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