Myths
and Facts - Refugees
MYTH
"One million Palestinians were expelled by Israel from 1947-49."
FACT
The Palestinians left their homes in 1947-49 for a variety of reasons.
Thousands of wealthy Arabs left in anticipation of a war, thousands more
responded to Arab leaders' calls to get out of the way of the advancing
armies, a handful were expelled, but most simply fled to avoid being
caught in the cross fire of a battle.
Many Arabs claim that 800,000 to 1,000,000 Palestinians became refugees
in 1947-49. The last census was taken by the British in 1945. It found
approximately 1.2 million permanent Arab residents in all of Palestine.
A 1949 Government of Israel census counted 160,000 Arabs living in the
country after the war. In 1947, a total of 809,100 Arabs lived in the
same area.1 This meant no more than 650,000 Palestinian Arabs could have
become refugees. A report by the UN Mediator on Palestine arrived at an
even lower figure — 472,000, and calculated that only about 360,000 Arab
refugees required aid.2
Although much is heard about the plight of the Palestinian refugees,
little is said about the Jews who fled from Arab states. Their situation
had long been precarious. During the 1947 UN debates, Arab leaders
threatened them. For example, Egypt's delegate told the General
Assembly: "The lives of one million Jews in Muslim countries would be
jeopardized by partition."3
The number of Jews fleeing Arab countries for Israel in the years
following Israel's independence was nearly double the number of Arabs
leaving Palestine. Many Jews were allowed to take little more than the
shirts on their backs. These refugees had no desire to be repatriated.
Little is heard about them because they did not remain refugees for
long. Of the 820,000 Jewish refugees between 1948 and 1972, 586,000 were
resettled in Israel at great expense, and without any offer of
compensation from the Arab governments who confiscated their
possessions.3a Israel has consequently maintained that any agreement to
compensate the Palestinian refugees must also include Arab compensation
for Jewish refugees. To this day, the Arab states have refused to pay
any compensation to the hundreds of thousands of Jews who were forced to
abandon their property before fleeing those countries. Through November
2003, 101 of the 681 UN resolutions on the Middle East conflict referred
directly to Palestinian refugees. Not one mentioned the Jewish refugees
from Arab countries.3b
The contrast between the reception of Jewish and Palestinian refugees is
even starker when one considers the difference in cultural and
geographic dislocation experienced by the two groups. Most Jewish
refugees traveled hundreds — and some traveled thousands — of miles to a
tiny country whose inhabitants spoke a different language. Most Arab
refugees never left Palestine at all; they traveled a few miles to the
other side of the truce line, remaining inside the vast Arab nation that
they were part of linguistically, culturally and ethnically.
MYTH
"The Jews made clear from the outset they had no intention of living
peacefully with their Arab neighbors."
FACT
In numerous instances, Jewish leaders urged the Arabs to remain in
Palestine and become citizens of Israel. The Assembly of Palestine Jewry
issued this appeal on October 2, 1947:
We will do everything in our power to maintain peace, and establish a
cooperation gainful to both [Jews and Arabs]. It is now, here and now,
from Jerusalem itself, that a call must go out to the Arab nations to
join forces with Jewry and the destined Jewish State and work shoulder
to shoulder for our common good, for the peace and progress of sovereign
equals.4
On November 30, the day after the UN partition vote, the Jewish Agency
announced: "The main theme behind the spontaneous celebrations we are
witnessing today is our community's desire to seek peace and its
determination to achieve fruitful cooperation with the Arabs...."5
Israel's Proclamation of Independence, issued May 14, 1948, also invited
the Palestinians to remain in their homes and become equal citizens in
the new state:
In the midst of wanton aggression, we yet call upon the Arab inhabitants
of the State of Israel to preserve the ways of peace and play their part
in the development of the State, on the basis of full and equal
citizenship and due representation in all its bodies and
institutions....We extend our hand in peace and neighborliness to all
the neighboring states and their peoples, and invite them to cooperate
with the independent Jewish nation for the common good of all.
MYTH
"The Jews created the refugee problem by expelling the Palestinians."
FACT
Had the Arabs accepted the 1947 UN resolution, not a single Palestinian
would have become a refugee. An independent Arab state would now exist
beside Israel. The responsibility for the refugee problem rests with the
Arabs.
The beginning of the Arab exodus can be traced to the weeks immediately
following the announcement of the UN partition resolution. The first to
leave were roughly 30,000 wealthy Arabs who anticipated the upcoming war
and fled to neighboring Arab countries to await its end. Less affluent
Arabs from the mixed cities of Palestine moved to all-Arab towns to stay
with relatives or friends.6 By the end of January1948, the exodus was so
alarming the Palestine Arab Higher Committee asked neighboring Arab
countries to refuse visas to these refugees and to seal their borders
against them.7
On January 30, 1948, the Jaffa newspaper, Ash Sha'ab, reported: "The
first of our fifth-column consists of those who abandon their houses and
businesses and go to live elsewhere....At the first signs of trouble
they take to their heels to escape sharing the burden of struggle."8
Another Jaffa paper, As Sarih (March 30, 1948) excoriated Arab villagers
near Tel Aviv for "bringing down disgrace on us all by 'abandoning the
villages.'"9
Meanwhile, a leader of the Arab National Committee in Haifa, Hajj Nimer
el-Khatib, said Arab soldiers in Jaffa were mistreating the residents.
"They robbed individuals and homes. Life was of little value, and the
honor of women was defiled. This state of affairs led many [Arab]
residents to leave the city under the protection of British tanks."10
John Bagot Glubb, the commander of Jordan's Arab Legion, said: "Villages
were frequently abandoned even before they were threatened by the
progress of war."11
Contemporary press reports of major battles in which large numbers of
Arabs fled conspicuously fail to mention any forcible expulsion by the
Jewish forces. The Arabs are usually described as "fleeing" or
"evacuating" their homes. While Zionists are accused of "expelling and
dispossessing" the Arab inhabitants of such towns as Tiberias and Haifa,
the truth is much different. Both of those cities were within the
boundaries of the Jewish State under the UN partition scheme and both
were fought for by Jews and Arabs alike.
Jewish forces seized Tiberias on April 19, 1948, and the entire Arab
population of 6,000 was evacuated under British military supervision.
The Jewish Community Council issued a statement afterward: "We did not
dispossess them; they themselves chose this course....Let no citizen
touch their property."12
In early April, an estimated 25,000 Arabs left the Haifa area following
an offensive by the irregular forces led by Fawzi al-Qawukji, and rumors
that Arab air forces would soon bomb the Jewish areas around Mt.
Carmel.13 On April 23, the Haganah captured Haifa. A British police
report from Haifa, dated April 26, explained that "every effort is being
made by the Jews to persuade the Arab populace to stay and carry on with
their normal lives, to get their shops and businesses open and to be
assured that their lives and interests will be safe."14 In fact, David
Ben-Gurion had sent Golda Meir to Haifa to try to persuade the Arabs to
stay, but she was unable to convince them because of their fear of being
judged traitors to the Arab cause.15 By the end of the battle, more than
50,000 Palestinians had left.
“Tens of thousands of Arab men, women and children fled toward the
eastern outskirts of the city in cars, trucks, carts, and afoot in a
desperate attempt to reach Arab territory until the Jews captured
Rushmiya Bridge toward Samaria and Northern Palestine and cut them off.
Thousands rushed every available craft, even rowboats, along the
waterfront, to escape by sea toward Acre.”
— New York Times, (April 23, 1948)
In Tiberias and Haifa, the Haganah issued orders that none of the Arabs'
possessions should be touched, and warned that anyone who violated the
orders would be severely punished. Despite these efforts, all but about
5,000 or 6,000 Arabs evacuated Haifa, many leaving with the assistance
of British military transports.
Syria's UN delegate, Faris el-Khouri, interrupted the UN debate on
Palestine to describe the seizure of Haifa as a "massacre" and said this
action was "further evidence that the 'Zionist program' is to annihilate
Arabs within the Jewish state if partition is effected."16
The following day, however, the British representative at the UN, Sir
Alexander Cadogan, told the delegates that the fighting in Haifa had
been provoked by the continuous attacks by Arabs against Jews a few days
before and that reports of massacres and deportations were erroneous.17
The same day (April 23, 1948), Jamal Husseini, the chairman of the
Palestine Higher Committee, told the UN Security Council that instead of
accepting the Haganah's truce offer, the Arabs "preferred to abandon
their homes, their belongings, and everything they possessed in the
world and leave the town."18
The U.S. Consul-General in Haifa, Aubrey Lippincott, wrote on April 22,
1948, for example, that "local mufti-dominated Arab leaders" were urging
"all Arabs to leave the city, and large numbers did so."19
An army order issued July 6, 1948, made clear that Arab towns and
villages were not to be demolished or burned, and that Arab inhabitants
were not to be expelled from their homes.20
The Haganah did employ psychological warfare to encourage the Arabs to
abandon a few villages. Yigal Allon, the commander of the Palmach (the
"shock force of the Haganah"), said he had Jews talk to the Arabs in
neighboring villages and tell them a large Jewish force was in Galilee
with the intention of burning all the Arab villages in the Lake Hula
region. The Arabs were told to leave while they still had time and,
according to Allon, they did exactly that.21
In the most dramatic example, in the Ramle-Lod area, Israeli troops
seeking to protect their flanks and relieve the pressure on besieged
Jerusalem, forced a portion of the Arab population to go to an area a
few miles away that was occupied by the Arab Legion. "The two towns had
served as bases for Arab irregular units, which had frequently attacked
Jewish convoys and nearby settlements, effectively barring the main road
to Jerusalem to Jewish traffic."22
As was clear from the descriptions of what took place in the cities with
the largest Arab populations, these cases were clearly the exceptions,
accounting for only a small fraction of the Palestinian refugees.
MYTH
"The Arab invasion had little impact on the Palestinian Arabs."
FACT
Once the invasion began in May 1948, most Arabs remaining in Palestine
left for neighboring countries. Surprisingly, rather than acting as a
strategically valuable "fifth-column" that would fight the Jews from
within the country, the Palestinians chose to flee to the safety of the
other Arab states, still confident of being able to return. A leading
Palestinian nationalist of the time, Musa Alami, revealed the attitude
of the fleeing Arabs:
The Arabs of Palestine left their homes, were scattered, and lost
everything. But there remained one solid hope: The Arab armies were on
the eve of their entry into Palestine to save the country and return
things to their normal course, punish the aggressor, and throw
oppressive Zionism with its dreams and dangers into the sea. On May 14,
1948, crowds of Arabs stood by the roads leading to the frontiers of
Palestine, enthusiastically welcoming the advancing armies. Days and
weeks passed, sufficient to accomplish the sacred mission, but the Arab
armies did not save the country. They did nothing but let slip from
their hands Acre, Sarafand, Lydda, Ramleh, Nazareth, most of the south
and the rest of the north. Then hope fled (Middle East Journal, October
1949).
As the fighting spread into areas that had previously remained quiet,
the Arabs began to see the possibility of defeat. As the possibility
turned into reality, the flight of the Arabs increased — more than
300,000 departed after May 15 — leaving approximately 160,000 Arabs in
the State of Israel.23
Although most of the Arabs had left by November 1948, there were still
those who chose to leave even after hostilities ceased. An interesting
case was the evacuation of 3,000 Arabs from Faluja, a village between
Tel Aviv and Beersheba:
Observers feel that with proper counsel after the Israeli-Egyptian
armistice, the Arab population might have advantageously remained. They
state that the Israeli Government had given guarantees of security of
person and property. However, no effort was made by Egypt, Transjordan
or even the United Nations Palestine Conciliation Commission to advise
the Faluja Arabs one way or the other (New York Times, March 4, 1949).
“The [refugee] problem was a direct consequence of the war that the
Palestinians — and...surrounding Arab states — had launched.”
— Israeli historian Benny Morris, The Guardian, (February 21, 2002)
MYTH
"Arab leaders never encouraged the Palestinians to flee."
FACT
A plethora of evidence exists demonstrating that Palestinians were
encouraged to leave their homes to make way for the invading Arab
armies.
The Economist, a frequent critic of the Zionists, reported on October 2,
1948: "Of the 62,000 Arabs who formerly lived in Haifa not more than
5,000 or 6,000 remained. Various factors influenced their decision to
seek safety in flight. There is but little doubt that the most potent of
the factors were the announcements made over the air by the Higher Arab
Executive, urging the Arabs to quit....It was clearly intimated that
those Arabs who remained in Haifa and accepted Jewish protection would
be regarded as renegades."
Time's report of the battle for Haifa (May 3, 1948) was similar: "The
mass evacuation, prompted partly by fear, partly by orders of Arab
leaders, left the Arab quarter of Haifa a ghost city....By withdrawing
Arab workers their leaders hoped to paralyze Haifa."
Benny Morris, the historian who documented instances where Palestinians
were expelled, also found that Arab leaders encouraged their brethren to
leave. The Arab National Committee in Jerusalem, following the March 8,
1948, instructions of the Arab Higher Committee, ordered women, children
and the elderly in various parts of Jerusalem to leave their homes: "Any
opposition to this order...is an obstacle to the holy war...and will
hamper the operations of the fighters in these districts" (Middle
Eastern Studies, January 1986).
Morris also said that in early May units of the Arab Legion reportedly
ordered the evacuation of all women and children from the town of
Beisan. The Arab Liberation Army was also reported to have ordered the
evacuation of another village south of Haifa. The departure of the women
and children, Morris says, "tended to sap the morale of the menfolk who
were left behind to guard the homes and fields, contributing ultimately
to the final evacuation of villages. Such two-tier evacuation — women
and children first, the men following weeks later — occurred in Qumiya
in the Jezreel Valley, among the Awarna bedouin in Haifa Bay and in
various other places."
Who gave such orders? Leaders like Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Said, who
declared: "We will smash the country with our guns and obliterate every
place the Jews seek shelter in. The Arabs should conduct their wives and
children to safe areas until the fighting has died down."24
The Secretary of the Arab League Office in London, Edward Atiyah, wrote
in his book, The Arabs: "This wholesale exodus was due partly to the
belief of the Arabs, encouraged by the boastings of an unrealistic
Arabic press and the irresponsible utterances of some of the Arab
leaders that it could be only a matter of weeks before the Jews were
defeated by the armies of the Arab States and the Palestinian Arabs
enabled to reenter and retake possession of their country."25
In his memoirs, Haled al Azm, the Syrian Prime Minister in 1948-49, also
admitted the Arab role in persuading the refugees to leave:
“Since 1948 we have been demanding the return of the refugees to their
homes. But we ourselves are the ones who encouraged them to leave. Only
a few months separated our call to them to leave and our appeal to the
United Nations to resolve on their return.”26
"The refugees were confident their absence would not last long, and that
they would return within a week or two," Monsignor George Hakim, a Greek
Orthodox Catholic Bishop of Galilee told the Beirut newspaper, Sada
al-Janub (August 16, 1948). "Their leaders had promised them that the
Arab Armies would crush the 'Zionist gangs' very quickly and that there
was no need for panic or fear of a long exile."
On April 3, 1949, the Near East Broadcasting Station (Cyprus) said: "It
must not be forgotten that the Arab Higher Committee encouraged the
refugees' flight from their homes in Jaffa, Haifa and Jerusalem."27
"The Arab States encouraged the Palestine Arabs to leave their homes
temporarily in order to be out of the way of the Arab invasion armies,"
according to the Jordanian newspaper Filastin (February 19, 1949).
One refugee quoted in the Jordan newspaper, Ad Difaa (September 6,
1954), said: "The Arab government told us: Get out so that we can get
in. So we got out, but they did not get in."
"The Secretary-General of the Arab League, Azzam Pasha, assured the Arab
peoples that the occupation of Palestine and Tel Aviv would be as simple
as a military promenade," said Habib Issa in the New York Lebanese
paper, Al Hoda (June 8, 1951). "He pointed out that they were already on
the frontiers and that all the millions the Jews had spent on land and
economic development would be easy booty, for it would be a simple
matter to throw Jews into the Mediterranean....Brotherly advice was
given to the Arabs of Palestine to leave their land, homes and property
and to stay temporarily in neighboring fraternal states, lest the guns
of the invading Arab armies mow them down."
The Arabs' fear was naturally exacerbated by fabricated stories of
Jewish atrocities following the attack on Deir Yassin. The native
population lacked leaders who could calm them; their spokesmen, such as
the Arab Higher Committee, were operating from the safety of neighboring
states and did more to arouse their fears than to pacify them. Local
military leaders were of little or no comfort. In one instance the
commander of Arab troops in Safed went to Damascus. The following day,
his troops withdrew from the town. When the residents realized they were
defenseless, they fled in panic.28
According to Dr. Walid al-Qamhawi, a former member of the Executive
Committee of the PLO, "it was collective fear, moral disintegration and
chaos in every field that exiled the Arabs of Tiberias, Haifa and dozens
of towns and villages."29
As panic spread throughout Palestine, the early trickle of refugees
became a flood, numbering more than 200,000 by the time the provisional
government declared the independence of the State of Israel.
Even Jordan's King Abdullah, writing in his memoirs, blamed Palestinian
leaders for the refugee problem:
The tragedy of the Palestinians was that most of their leaders had
paralyzed them with false and unsubstantiated promises that they were
not alone; that 80 million Arabs and 400 million Muslims would instantly
and miraculously come to their rescue.30
“The Arab armies entered Palestine to protect the Palestinians from the
Zionist tyranny but, instead, they abandoned them, forced them to
emigrate and to leave their homeland, and threw them into prisons
similar to the ghettos in which the Jews used to live.”
— Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Mahmud Abbas ("Abu Mazen")31
MYTH
"The Palestinian Arabs had to flee to avoid being massacred as were the
peaceful villagers in Deir Yassin."
FACT
The United Nations resolved that Jerusalem would be an international
city apart from the Arab and Jewish states demarcated in the partition
resolution. The 150,000 Jewish inhabitants were under constant military
pressure; the 2,500 Jews living in the Old City were victims of an Arab
blockade that lasted five months before they were forced to surrender on
May 29, 1948. Prior to the surrender, and throughout the siege on
Jerusalem, Jewish convoys tried to reach the city to alleviate the food
shortage, which, by April, had become critical.
Meanwhile, the Arab forces, which had engaged in sporadic and
unorganized ambushes since December 1947, began to make an organized
attempt to cut off the highway linking Tel Aviv with Jerusalem — the
city's only supply route. The Arabs controlled several strategic vantage
points, which overlooked the highway and enabled them to fire on the
convoys trying to reach the beleaguered city with supplies. Deir Yassin
was situated on a hill, about 2,600 feet high, which commanded a wide
view of the vicinity and was located less than a mile from the suburbs
of Jerusalem. The population was 750.32
On April 6, Operation Nachshon was launched to open the road to
Jerusalem. The village of Deir Yassin was included on the list of Arab
villages to be occupied as part of the operation. The following day
Haganah commander David Shaltiel wrote to the leaders of the Lehi and
Irgun:
I learn that you plan an attack on Deir Yassin. I wish to point out that
the capture of Deir Yassin and its holding are one stage in our general
plan. I have no objection to your carrying out the operation provided
you are able to hold the village. If you are unable to do so I warn you
against blowing up the village which will result in its inhabitants
abandoning it and its ruins and deserted houses being occupied by
foreign forces....Furthermore, if foreign forces took over, this would
upset our general plan for establishing an airfield.33
The Irgun decided to attack Deir Yassin on April 9, while the Haganah
was still engaged in the battle for Kastel. This was the first major
Irgun attack against the Arabs. Previously, the Irgun and Lehi had
concentrated their attacks against the British.
According to Irgun leader Menachem Begin, the assault was carried out by
100 members of that organization; other authors say it was as many as
132 men from both groups. Begin stated that a small open truck fitted
with a loudspeaker was driven to the entrance of the village before the
attack and broadcast a warning to civilians to evacuate the area, which
many did.34 Most writers say the warning was never issued because the
truck with the loudspeaker rolled into a ditch before it could broadcast
the warning.35 One of the fighters said, the ditch was filled in and the
truck continued on to the village. "One of us called out on the
loudspeaker in Arabic, telling the inhabitants to put down their weapons
and flee. I don't know if they heard, and I know these appeals had no
effect."36
Contrary to revisionist histories that the town was filled with peaceful
innocents, residents and foreign troops opened fire on the attackers.
One fighter described his experience:
My unit stormed and passed the first row of houses. I was among the
first to enter the village. There were a few other guys with me, each
encouraging the other to advance. At the top of the street I saw a man
in khaki clothing running ahead. I thought he was one of ours. I ran
after him and told him, "advance to that house." Suddenly he turned
around, aimed his rifle and shot. He was an Iraqi soldier. I was hit in
the foot.37
The battle was ferocious and took several hours. The Irgun suffered 41
casualties, including four dead.
Surprisingly, after the “massacre,” the Irgun escorted a representative
of the Red Cross through the town and held a press conference. The New
York Times' subsequent description of the battle was essentially the
same as Begin's. The Times said more than 200 Arabs were killed, 40
captured and 70 women and children were released. No hint of a massacre
appeared in the report.37a
“Paradoxically, the Jews say about 250 out of 400 village inhabitants
[were killed], while Arab survivors say only 110 of 1,000.”38 A study by
Bir Zeit University, based on discussions with each family from the
village, arrived at a figure of 107 Arab civilians dead and 12 wounded,
in addition to 13 "fighters," evidence that the number of dead was
smaller than claimed and that the village did have troops based there.39
Other Arab sources have subsequently suggested the number may have been
even lower.40
In fact, the attackers left open an escape corridor from the village and
more than 200 residents left unharmed. For example, at 9:30 A.M., about
five hours after the fighting started, the Lehi evacuated 40 old men,
women and children on trucks and took them to a base in Sheikh Bader.
Later, the Arabs were taken to East Jerusalem. Seeing the Arabs in the
hands of Jews also helped raise the morale of the people of Jerusalem
who were despondent from the setbacks in the fighting to that point.41
Another source says 70 women and children were taken away and turned
over to the British.42 If the intent was to massacre the inhabitants, no
one would have been evacuated.
After the remaining Arabs feigned surrender and then fired on the Jewish
troops, some Jews killed Arab soldiers and civilians indiscriminately.
None of the sources specify how many women and children were killed (the
Times report said it was about half the victims; their original casualty
figure came from the Irgun source), but there were some among the
casualties.
At least some of the women who were killed became targets because of men
who tried to disguise themselves as women. The Irgun commander reported,
for example, that the attackers "found men dressed as women and
therefore they began to shoot at women who did not hasten to go down to
the place designated for gathering the prisoners."43 Another story was
told by a member of the Haganah who overheard a group of Arabs from Deir
Yassin who said "the Jews found out that Arab warriors had disguised
themselves as women. The Jews searched the women too. One of the people
being checked realized he had been caught, took out a pistol and shot
the Jewish commander. His friends, crazed with anger, shot in all
directions and killed the Arabs in the area."44
Contrary to claims from Arab propagandists at the time and some since,
no evidence has ever been produced that any women were raped. On the
contrary, every villager ever interviewed has denied these allegations.
Like many of the claims, this was a deliberate propaganda ploy, but one
that backfired. Hazam Nusseibi, who worked for the Palestine
Broadcasting Service in 1948, admitted being told by Hussein Khalidi, a
Palestinian Arab leader, to fabricate the atrocity claims. Abu Mahmud, a
Deir Yassin resident in 1948 told Khalidi "there was no rape," but
Khalidi replied, "We have to say this, so the Arab armies will come to
liberate Palestine from the Jews." Nusseibeh told the BBC 50 years
later, "This was our biggest mistake. We did not realize how our people
would react. As soon as they heard that women had been raped at Deir
Yassin, Palestinians fled in terror."45
The village after the attack
The Jewish Agency, upon learning of the attack, immediately expressed
its “horror and disgust.” It also sent a letter expressing the Agency's
shock and disapproval to Transjordan's King Abdullah.
The Arab Higher Committee hoped exaggerated reports about a “massacre”
at Deir Yassin would shock the population of the Arab countries into
bringing pressure on their governments to intervene in Palestine.
Instead, the immediate impact was to stimulate a new Palestinian exodus.
Just four days after the reports from Deir Yassin were published, an
Arab force ambushed a Jewish convoy on the way to Hadassah Hospital,
killing 77 Jews, including doctors, nurses, patients, and the director
of the hospital. Another 23 people were injured. This massacre attracted
little attention and is never mentioned by those who are quick to bring
up Deir Yassin. Moreover, despite attacks such as this against the
Jewish community in Palestine, in which more than 500 Jews were killed
in the first four months after the partition decision alone, Jews did
not flee.
The Palestinians knew, despite their rhetoric to the contrary, the Jews
were not trying to annihilate them; otherwise, they would not have been
allowed to evacuate Tiberias, Haifa or any of the other towns captured
by the Jews. Moreover, the Palestinians could find sanctuary in nearby
states. The Jews, however, had no place to run had they wanted to. They
were willing to fight to the death for their country. It came to that
for many, because the Arabs were interested in annihilating the Jews, as
Secretary-General of the Arab League Azzam Pasha made clear in an
interview with the BBC on the eve of the war (May 15, 1948): “The Arabs
intend to conduct a war of extermination and momentous massacre which
will be spoken of like the Mongolian massacres and the Crusades.”
References to Deir Yassin have remained a staple of anti-Israel
propaganda for decades because the incident was unique.
MYTH
"Israel refused to allow Palestinians to return to their homes so Jews
could steal their property."
FACT
Israel could not simply agree to allow all Palestinians to return, but
consistently sought a solution to the refugee problem. Israel's position
was expressed by David BenGurion (August 1, 1948):
When the Arab states are ready to conclude a peace treaty with Israel
this question will come up for constructive solution as part of the
general settlement, and with due regard to our counterclaims in respect
of the destruction of Jewish life and property, the long-term interest
of the Jewish and Arab populations, the stability of the State of Israel
and the durability of the basis of peace between it and its neighbors,
the actual position and fate of the Jewish communities in the Arab
countries, the responsibilities of the Arab governments for their war of
aggression and their liability for reparation, will all be relevant in
the question whether, to what extent, and under what conditions, the
former Arab residents of the territory of Israel should be allowed to
return.46
The Israeli government was not indifferent to the plight of the
refugees; an ordinance was passed creating a Custodian of Abandoned
Property "to prevent unlawful occupation of empty houses and business
premises, to administer ownerless property, and also to secure tilling
of deserted fields, and save the crops...."47
The implied danger of repatriation did not prevent Israel from allowing
some refugees to return and offering to take back a substantial number
as a condition for signing a peace treaty. In 1949, Israel offered to
allow families that had been separated during the war to return, to
release refugee accounts frozen in Israeli banks (eventually released in
1953), to pay compensation for abandoned lands and to repatriate 100,000
refugees.48
The Arabs rejected all the Israeli compromises. They were unwilling to
take any action that might be construed as recognition of Israel. They
made repatriation a precondition for negotiations, something Israel
rejected. The result was the confinement of the refugees in camps.
Despite the position taken by the Arab states, Israel did release the
Arab refugees' blocked bank accounts, which totaled more than $10
million, paid thousands of claimants cash compensation and granted
thousands of acres as alternative holdings.
MYTH
"UN resolutions call for Israel to repatriate all Palestinian refugees."
FACT
The United Nations took up the refugee issue and adopted Resolution 194
on December 11, 1948. This called upon the Arab states and Israel to
resolve all outstanding issues through negotiations either directly, or
with the help of the Palestine Conciliation Commission established by
this resolution. Furthermore, Point 11 resolves:
that refugees wishing to return to their homes and live at peace with
their neighbors should be permitted to do so at the earliest practicable
date, and that compensation should be paid for property of those
choosing not to return and for loss of or damage to property which under
principles of international law or in equity should be made good by
Governments or authorities responsible. Instructs the Conciliation
Commission to facilitate the repatriation, resettlement and economic and
social rehabilitation of refugees and payment of compensation...
(emphasis added).
The emphasized words demonstrate that the UN recognized that Israel
could not be expected to repatriate a hostile population that might
endanger its security. The solution to the problem, like all previous
refugee problems, would require at least some Palestinians to be
resettled in Arab lands. Furthermore, the resolution uses the word
"should" instead of "shall," which, in legal terms, is not mandatory
language.
The resolution met most of Israel's concerns regarding the refugees,
whom they regarded as a potential fifth-column if allowed to return
unconditionally. The Israelis considered the settlement of the refugee
issue a negotiable part of an overall peace settlement. As President
Chaim Weizmann explained: "We are anxious to help such resettlement
provided that real peace is established and the Arab states do their
part of the job. The solution of the Arab problem can be achieved only
through an all-around Middle East development scheme, toward which the
United Nations, the Arab states and Israel will make their respective
contributions."49
At the time the Israelis did not expect the refugees to be a major
issue; they thought the Arab states would resettle the majority and some
compromise on the remainder could be worked out in the context of an
overall settlement. The Arabs were no more willing to compromise in
1949, however, than they had been in 1947. In fact, they unanimously
rejected the UN resolution.
The UN discussions on refugees had begun in the summer of 1948, before
Israel had completed its military victory; consequently, the Arabs still
believed they could win the war and allow the refugees to return
triumphant. The Arab position was expressed by Emile Ghoury, the
Secretary of the Arab Higher Committee:
It is inconceivable that the refugees should be sent back to their homes
while they are occupied by the Jews, as the latter would hold them as
hostages and maltreat them. The very proposal is an evasion of
responsibility by those responsible. It will serve as a first step
towards Arab recognition of the State of Israel and partition.50
The Arabs demanded that the United Nations assert the "right" of the
Palestinians to return to their homes, and were unwilling to accept
anything less until after their defeat had become obvious. The Arabs
then reinterpreted Resolution 194 as granting the refugees the absolute
right of repatriation and have demanded that Israel accept this
interpretation ever since. Regardless of the interpretation, 194, like
other General Assembly resolutions, is not legally binding.
“The Palestinian demand for the 'right of return' is totally unrealistic
and would have to be solved by means of financial compensation and
resettlement in Arab countries.”
— Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak51
MYTH
"Israel blocked negotiations by the Palestine Conciliation Commission."
FACT
Early in 1949, the Palestine Conciliation Commission (PCC) opened
negotiations at Lausanne. The Arabs insisted that Israel yield the
territory won in the 1948 fighting and agree to repatriation. The
Israelis told the commission the solution of the refugee problem
depended on the conclusion of peace.
Israel did make a substantial repatriation offer during these
negotiations. The government said it would accept 100,000 refugees in a
general settlement of the problem. Israel hoped that each Arab state
would make a similar commitment. This offer was rejected.
On April 1, 1950, the Arab League adopted a resolution forbidding its
members from negotiating with Israel.
The PCC made another effort to bring the parties together in 1951, but
finally gave up. It reported:
The Arab Governments...are not prepared fully to implement paragraph 5
of the said resolution, which calls for the final settlement of all
questions outstanding between them and Israel. The Arab Governments in
their contacts with the Commission have evinced no readiness to arrive
at such a peace settlement with the Government of Israel.52
MYTH
"Palestinians who wanted to return to their homes posed no danger to
Israeli security."
FACT
When plans for setting up a state were made in early 1948, Jewish
leaders in Palestine expected the new nation to include a significant
Arab population. From the Israeli perspective, the refugees had been
given an opportunity to stay in their homes and be a part of the new
state. Approximately 160,000 Arabs had chosen to do so. To repatriate
those who had fled would be, in the words of Foreign Minister Moshe
Sharett, "suicidal folly."53
In the Arab world, the refugees were viewed as a potential fifth-column
within Israel. As one Lebanese paper wrote:
The return of the refugees should create a large Arab majority that
would serve as the most effective means of reviving the Arab character
of Palestine, while forming a powerful fifth-column for the day of
revenge and reckoning.54
The Arabs believed the return of the refugees would virtually guarantee
the destruction of Israel, a sentiment expressed by Egyptian Foreign
Minister Muhammad Salah al-Din:
It is well-known and understood that the Arabs, in demanding the return
of the refugees to Palestine, mean their return as masters of the
Homeland and not as slaves. With a greater clarity, they mean the
liquidation of the State of Israel (Al-Misri, October 11, 1949).
The plight of the refugees remained unchanged after the Suez War. In
fact, even the rhetoric stayed the same. In 1957, the Refugee Conference
at Homs, Syria, passed a resolution stating:
Any discussion aimed at a solution of the Palestine problem which will
not be based on ensuring the refugees' right to annihilate Israel will
be regarded as a desecration of the Arab people and an act of treason
(Beirut al Massa, July 15, 1957).
A parallel can be drawn to the time of the American Revolution, during
which many colonists who were loyal to England fled to Canada. The
British wanted the newly formed republic to allow the loyalists to
return to claim their property. Benjamin Franklin rejected this
suggestion in a letter to Richard Oswald, the British negotiator, dated
November 26, 1782:
Your ministers require that we should receive again into our bosom those
who have been our bitterest enemies and restore their properties who
have destroyed ours: and this while the wounds they have given us are
still bleeding!55
MYTH
"The Palestinian refugees were ignored by an uncaring world."
FACT
The General Assembly subsequently voted, on November 19, 1948, to
establish the United Nations Relief For Palestinian Refugees (UNRPR) to
dispense aid to the refugees. The UNRPR was replaced by the United
Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNWRA) on December 8, 1949, and given a
budget of $50 million.
UNWRA was designed to continue the relief program initiated by the
UNRPR, substitute public works for direct relief and promote economic
development. The proponents of the plan envisioned that direct relief
would be almost completely replaced by public works, with the remaining
assistance provided by the Arab governments.
UNRWA had little chance of success, however, because it sought to solve
a political problem using an economic approach. By the mid-1950s, it was
evident neither the refugees nor the Arab states were prepared to
cooperate on the large-scale development projects originally foreseen by
the Agency as a means of alleviating the Palestinians' situation. The
Arab governments, and the refugees themselves, were unwilling to
contribute to any plan that could be interpreted as fostering
resettlement. They preferred to cling to their interpretation of
Resolution 194, which they believed would eventually result in
repatriation.
Palestinian Refugees Registered By UNRWA56
Field of Operations Official Camps Registered Refugees Registered
Refugees in Camps
Jordan 10 1,780,701 283,183
Lebanon 12 400,582 210,952
Syria 10 424,650 112,882
West Bank 19 687,542 181,241
Gaza Strip 8 961,645 471,555
Agency total 59 4,255,120 1,259,813
MYTH
"The Arab states have provided most of the funds for helping the
Palestinian refugees."
FACT
While Jewish refugees from Arab countries received no international
assistance, Palestinians received millions of dollars through UNRWA.
Initially, the United States contributed $25 million and Israel nearly
$3 million. The total Arab pledges amounted to approximately $600,000.
For the first 20 years, the United States provided more than two-thirds
of the funds, while the Arab states continued to contribute a tiny
fraction. Israel donated more funds to UNRWA than most Arab states. The
Saudis did not match Israel's contribution until 1973; Kuwait and Libya,
not until 1980. As recently as 1994, Israel gave more to UNRWA than all
Arab countries except Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Morocco.
In 2003, the United States pledging more than $134 million of UNRWA's
$326 million budget (41%). Meanwhile, despite their rhetorical support
for the Palestinians, all of the Arab countries combined pledged less
than $11 million (3%) and $7.8 million of that was from Saudi Arabia,
meaning the rest of the Arab world contributed less than $3 million
(1%).57
After transferring responsibility for virtually the entire Palestinian
population in the West Bank and Gaza Strip to the Palestinian Authority,
Israel no longer controlled any refugee camps and ceased contributing to
UNRWA. Meanwhile, in addition to receiving annual funding from UNRWA for
the refugees, the PA has received billions of dollars in international
aid and yet has failed to build a single house to allow even one family
to move out of a refugee camp into permanent housing. Given the amount
of aid (approximately $5.5 billion since 1993) the PA has received, it
is shocking and outrageous that more than half a million Palestinians
are being forced by their own leaders to remain in squalid camps.
MYTH
"The Arab states have always welcomed the Palestinians and done their
best to resettle them."
FACT
Jordan was the only Arab country to welcome the Palestinians and grant
them citizenship (to this day Jordan is the only Arab country where
Palestinians as a group can become citizens). King Abdullah considered
the Palestinian Arabs and Jordanians one people. By 1950, he annexed the
West Bank and forbade the use of the term Palestine in official
documents.58
Although demographic figures indicated ample room for settlement existed
in Syria, Damascus refused to consider accepting any refugees, except
those who might refuse repatriation. Syria also declined to resettle
85,000 refugees in 1952-54, though it had been offered international
funds to pay for the project. Iraq was also expected to accept a large
number of refugees, but proved unwilling. Lebanon insisted it had no
room for the Palestinians. In 1950, the UN tried to resettle 150,000
refugees from Gaza in Libya, but was rebuffed by Egypt.
After the 1948 war, Egypt controlled the Gaza Strip and its more than
200,000 inhabitants, but refused to allow the Palestinians into Egypt or
permit them to move elsewhere. Egypt’s handling of Palestinians in Gaza
was so bad Saudi Arabian radio compared Nasser’s regime in Gaza to
Hitler’s rule in occupied Europe in World War II.59
In 1952, the UNWRA set up a fund of $200 million to provide homes and
jobs for the refugees, but it went untouched.
“The Arab States do not want to solve the refugee problem. They want to
keep it as an open sore, as an affront to the United Nations and as a
weapon against Israel. Arab leaders don't give a damn whether the
refugees live or die.”
— former director of UNRWA in Jordan Ralph Galloway, in August 195860
Little has changed in succeeding years. Arab governments have frequently
offered jobs, housing, land and other benefits to Arabs and non-Arabs,
excluding Palestinians. For example, Saudi Arabia chose not to use
unemployed Palestinian refugees to alleviate its labor shortage in the
late 1970's and early 1980's. Instead, thousands of South Koreans and
other Asians were recruited to fill jobs.
The situation grew even worse in the wake of the Gulf War. Kuwait, which
employed large numbers of Palestinians but denied them citizenship,
expelled more than 300,000 of them. "If people pose a security threat,
as a sovereign country we have the right to exclude anyone we don't
want," said Kuwaiti Ambassador to the United States, Saud Nasir Al-Sabah
(Jerusalem Report, June 27, 1991).
UNRWA Refugee Camps (2003)
Source: UNRWA
Today, Palestine refugees in Lebanon do not have social and civil
rights, and have very limited access to public health or educational
facilities. The majority relies entirely on UNRWA as the sole provider
of education, health and relief and social services. Considered
foreigners, Palestine refugees are prohibited by law from working in
more than 70 trades and professions.61
The Palestinian refugees held the UN responsible for ameliorating their
condition; nevertheless, many Palestinians were unhappy with the
treatment they were receiving from their Arab brethren. Some, like
Palestinian nationalist leader Musa Alami were incredulous: "It is
shameful that the Arab governments should prevent the Arab refugees from
working in their countries and shut the doors in their faces and
imprison them in camps."62 Most refugees, however, focused their
discontentment on "the Zionists," whom they blamed for their predicament
rather than the vanquished Arab armies.
MYTH
"Millions of Palestinians are confined to squalid refugee camps."
FACT
By the middle of 2003, the number of Palestinian refugees on UNRWA rolls
had risen to 4.1 million, several times the number that left Palestine
in 1948. Fewer than one-third of the registered Palestine refugees,
about 1.2 million, live in 59 recognized refugee camps in Jordan,
Lebanon, Syria, the West Bank and Gaza Strip. The other two-thirds of
the registered refugees live in and around the cities and towns of the
host countries, and in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, often in the
environs of official camps.63
MYTH
"Israel forced the Palestinian refugees to stay in camps in the Gaza
Strip."
FACT
During the years that Israel controlled the Gaza Strip, a consistent
effort was made to get the Palestinians into permanent housing. The
Palestinians opposed the idea because the frustrated and bitter
inhabitants of the camps provided the various terrorist factions with
their manpower. Moreover, the Arab states routinely pushed for the
adoption of UN resolutions demanding that Israel desist from the removal
of Palestinian refugees from camps in Gaza and the West Bank. They
preferred to keep the Palestinians as symbols of Israeli "oppression."
Now the camps are in the hands of the Palestinian Authority (PA), but
little is being done to improve the lot of the Palestinians living in
them. Journalist Netty Gross visited Gaza and asked an official why the
camps there hadn't been dismantled. She was told the Palestinian
Authority had made a "political decision" not to do anything for the now
nearly 500,000 Palestinians living in the camps until the final-status
talks with Israel took place (Jerusalem Report, July 6, 1998). To this
day, the PA has not used one dime of the billions of dollars in foreign
aid it has received to build permanent housing for the refugees.
MYTH
"Refugees have always been repatriated, only the Palestinians have been
barred from returning to their homes."
FACT
Despite Arab intransigence, no one expected the refugee problem to
persist. John Blandford Jr., the Director of UNRWA, wrote in his report
on November 29, 1951, that he expected the Arab governments to assume
responsibility for relief by July 1952. Moreover, Blandford stressed the
need to end relief operations: "Sustained relief operations inevitably
contain the germ of human deteioration."64
In fact, the Palestinians are the only displaced persons to have become
wards of the international community.
Israel’s agreement to pay compensation to the Palestinians who fled
during 1948 can be contrasted with the treatment of the 12.5 million
Germans in Poland and Czechoslovakia, who were expelled after World War
II and allowed to take only those possessions they could carry. They
received no compensation for confiscated property. World War II's
effects on Poland’s boundaries and population were considered
"accomplished facts" that could not be reversed after the war. No one in
Germany petitions today for the right of these millions of deportees and
their children to return to the countries they were expelled from
despite the fact that they and their ancestors had lived in those places
for hundreds of years.
Another country seriously affected by the war was Finland, which was
forced to give up almost one-eighth of its land and absorb more than
400,000 refugees (11 percent of the nation’s population) from the Soviet
Union. Unlike Israel, these were the losers of the war. There was no aid
for their resettlement.
Perhaps an even better analogy can be seen in Turkey’s integration of
150,000 Turkish refugees from Bulgaria in 1950. The difference between
the Turks' handling of their refugees and the Arab states' treatment of
the Palestinians was the attitude of the respective governments.
Turkey has had a bigger refugee problem than either Syria or Lebanon and
almost as big as Egypt has....But you seldom hear about them because the
Turks have done such a good job of resettling them....The big difference
is in spirit. The Turks, reluctant as they were to take on the burden,
accepted it as a responsibility and set to work to clean it up as fast
as possible.65
Had the Arab states wanted to alleviate the refugees' suffering, they
could easily have adopted an attitude similar to Turkey’s.
Another massive population transfer resulted from the partition of India
and Pakistan in 1947. The eight million Hindus who fled Pakistan and the
six million Muslims who left India were afraid of becoming a minority in
their respective countries. Like the Palestinians, these people wanted
to avoid being caught in the middle of the violence that engulfed their
nations. In contrast to the Arab-Israeli conflict, however, the exchange
of populations was considered the best solution to the problem of
communal relations within the two states. Despite the enormous number of
refugees and the relative poverty of the two nations involved, no
special international relief organizations were established to aid them
in resettlement.
“...if there were a Palestinian state, why would its leaders want their
potential citizens to be repatriated to another state? From a
nation-building perspective it makes no sense. In fact, the original
discussions about repatriation took place at a time that there was no
hope of a Palestinian state. With the possibility of that state
emerging, the Palestinians must decide if they want to view themselves
as a legitimate state or if it is more important for them to keep their
self-defined status as oppressed, stateless refugees. They really can't
be both.”
— Fredelle Spiegel66
MYTH
“Had the Palestinian refugees been repatriated, the Arab-Israeli
conflict could have ended.”
FACT
Israel consistently sought a solution to the refugee problem, but could
not simply agree to allow all Palestinians to return.
No nation, regardless of past rights and wrongs, could contemplate
taking in a fifth-column of such a size. And fifth-column it would be —
people nurtured for 20 years [in 1967] in hatred of and totally
dedicated to its destruction. The readmission of the refugees would be
the equivalent to the admission to the U.S. of nearly 70,000,000 sworn
enemies of the nation.67
The Arabs, meanwhile, adamantly refused to negotiate a separate
agreement. The crux of the issue was the Arab states’ unwillingness to
accept Israel’s existence. This was exemplified by Egyptian President
Nasser’s belligerent acts toward the Jewish State, which had nothing to
do with the Palestinians. He was only interested in the refugees to the
extent that they could contribute to his ultimate objective. As he told
an interviewer on September 1, 1961: “If refugees return to Israel,
Israel will cease to exist.”68
MYTH
“Israel expelled more Palestinians in 1967.”
FACT
After ignoring Israeli warnings to stay out of the war, King Hussein
launched an attack on Jerusalem, Israel’s capital. UNRWA estimated that
during the fighting 175,000 of its registrants fled for a second time
and approximately 350,000 fled for the first time. About 200,000 moved
to Jordan, 115,000 to Syria and approximately 35,000 left Sinai for
Egypt. Most of the Arabs who left came from the West Bank.
Israel allowed some West Bank Arabs to return. In 1967, more than 9,000
families were reunited and, by 1971, Israel had readmitted 40,000
refugees. By contrast, in July 1968, Jordan prohibited people intending
to remain in the East Bank from emigrating from the West Bank and
Gaza.69
When the Security Council empowered U Thant to send a representative to
inquire into the welfare of civilians in the wake of the war, he
instructed the mission to investigate the treatment of Jewish minorities
in Arab countries, as well as Arabs in Israeli-occupied territory.
Syria, Iraq and Egypt refused to permit the UN representative to carry
out his investigation.70
MYTH
“UNRWA is purely a humanitarian organization that bears no
responsibility for the terror and incitement that originates in the
refugee camps.”
FACT
Peter Hansen, commissioner-general of UNRWA has admitted that the
organization employs members of at least one Palestinian terrorist
organization.“Oh I'm sure that there are Hamas members on the UNRWA
payroll and I don't see that as a crime,” he told the Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation. “Hamas as a political organization does not
mean that every member is a militant and we do not do political vetting
and exclude people from one persuasion against another.”70a Although
Hansen makes specious distinctions between members of Hamas, the United
States and the European Union, the two largest contributors to UNRWA,
have banned the military and civilian wings of the organization.
The chief of the UNRWA Public Information Office, Paul McCann, asserted
that "UNRWA is scrupulous about protecting its installations against
misuse by any person or group. Only once, in Lebanon in 1982, has there
been credible evidence of such misuse by Palestinians, and it was
promptly dealt with."71
The fact is the refugee camps have long been nests of terrorism, but the
evidence was not publicized until after Israel's Operation Defensive
Shield in early 2002. The UNRWA-administered camps in the West Bank were
found to have small-arms factories, explosives laboratories, arms caches
and large numbers of suicide bombers and other terrorists using the
refugees as shields.
Since 2001, 17 Palestinians employed by UNRWA have been arrested for
alleged involvement in terrorist activities. Among them is the agency's
director of food supplies for Gaza refugees, who admitted using his UN
vehicle to transport arms, explosives, and people planning terrorist
acts. A Hamas activist employed as an UNRWA ambulance driver admitted
using his vehicle to transport arms and messages to other members of
Hamas.71a
UNRWA's failure to report on these activities, or to prevent them,
violate the UN's own conventions. Security Council resolutions oblige
UNRWA representatives to take "appropriate steps to help create a secure
environment" in all "situations where refugees [are]…vulnerable to
infiltration by armed elements." With regard to Africa, UN
Secretary-General Kofi Annan, said refugee camps should "be kept free of
any military presence or equipment, including arms and ammunition."72
The same rule applies to the disputed territories.
Schools under UNRWA's jurisdiction are also problematic. UNRWA takes
credit for assisting the development of the Palestinian curricula,
which, among other things, does not show Israel on any maps. The schools
are also filled with posters and shrines to suicide bombers. In 1998,
the State Department requested that UNRWA investigate allegations that
Palestinian Authority curricular materials contained anti-Semitic
references. One book taught that "Treachery and disloyalty are character
traits of the Jews," but UNRWA said this was not offensive because it
described actual "historical events." The State Department ultimately
reported to Congress that "UNRWA review did reveal instances of
anti-Semitic characterizations and content" in the PA textbooks.73
Since the State Department's report, several studies have shown that
while there has been marginal improvement in Palestinian texts, they
still contain troubling content. For example, one report found that
Islamic Culture, a book produced by the Palestinian Authority Ministry
of Education, incites jihad and martyrdom, while another study of 35
books concluded that they lacked any commitment to peace and
reconciliation with Israel.
Notes
1Arieh Avneri, The Claim of Dispossession, (NJ: Transaction Books,
1984), p. 272; Kedar, Benjamin. The Changing Land Between the Jordan and
the Sea. (Israel: Yad Izhak Ben-Zvi Press, 1999), p. 206; Paul Johnson,
A History of the Jews, (NY: Harper & Row, 1987), p. 529.
2Progress Report of the United Nations Mediator on Palestine, Submitted
to the Secretary-General for Transmission to the Members of the United
Nations, General Assembly Official Records: Third Session, Supplement
No.11 (A\648), Paris, 1948, p. 47 and Supplement No. 11A (A\689, and
A\689\Add.1, p. 5; and "Conclusions From Progress Report of the United
Nations Mediator on Palestine," (September 16, 1948), U.N. doc. A/648
(part one, p. 29; part two, p. 23 and part three, p. 11), (September 18,
1948).
3New York Times, (November 25, 1947).
3aAvneri, p. 276.
3bJerusalem Post, (December 4, 2003).
4David Ben-Gurion, Rebirth and Destiny of Israel, (NY: Philosophical
Library, 1954), p. 220.
5Isi Liebler, The Case For Israel, (Australia: The Globe Press, 1972),
p. 43.
6Joseph Schechtman, The Refugee in the World, (NY: A.S. Barnes and Co.,
1963), p. 184.
7I.F. Stone, This is Israel, (NY: Boni and Gaer, 1948), p. 27.
8Ash Sha'ab, (January 30, 1948).
9As Sarih, (March 30, 1948).
10Avneri, p. 270.
11London Daily Mail, (August 12, 1948).
12New York Times, (April 23, 1948).
13Howard Sachar, A History of Israel: From the Rise of Zionism to Our
Time, (NY: Alfred A. Knopf, 1979), p. 332; Avneri, p. 270.
14Secret memo dated April 26, 1948, from the Superintendent of Police,
regarding the general situation in Haifa. See also his April 29 memo.
15Golda Meir, My Life, (NY: Dell, 1975), pp. 267-268.
16New York Times, (April 23, 1948).
17London Times, (April 24, 1948).
18Schechtman, p. 190.
19Foreign Relations of the U.S. 1948, Vol. V, (DC: GPO, 1976), p. 838.
20Tom Segev, 1949: The First Israelis, (NY: The Free Press, 1986), pp.
27-28.
21Yigal Allon in Sefer ha-Palmach, quoted in Larry Collins and Dominique
Lapierre, O Jerusalem!, (NY: Simon and Schuster, 1972), p. 337; Yigal
Allon, My Father's House, (NY: W.W Norton and Company, Inc., 1976), p.
192.
22Benny Morris, "Operation Dani and the Palestinian Exodus from Lydda
and Ramle in 1948," Middle East Journal, (Winter 1986), pp. 82-83.
23Terence Prittie, "Middle East Refugees," in Michael Curtis, et al.,
The Palestinians, (NJ: Transaction Books, 1975), p. 52.
24Myron Kaufman, The Coming Destruction of Israel, (NY: The American
Library Inc., 1970), pp. 26-27.
25Edward Atiyah, The Arabs, (London: Penguin Books, 1955), p. 183.
26The Memoirs of Haled al Azm, (Beirut, 1973), Part 1, pp. 386-387.
27Samuel Katz, Battleground-Fact and Fantasy in Palestine, (NY: Bantam
Books, 1985), p. 15.
28King Abdallah, My Memoirs Completed, (London: Longman Group, Ltd.,
1978), p. xvi. [Abdullah generally, but spelled Abdallah in his memoir].
29Schechtman, p. 186.
30Yehoshofat Harkabi, Arab Attitudes To Israel, (Jerusalem: Israel
Universities Press, 1972), p. 364.
31Falastin a-Thaura, (March 1976).
32“Dayr Yasin,” Bir Zeit University.
33Dan Kurzman, Genesis 1948, (OH: New American Library, Inc., 1970), p.
141.
34Menachem Begin, The Revolt, (NY: Nash Publishing, 1977), pp. xx-xxi,
162-163.
35See, for example, Amos Perlmutter, The Life and Times of Menachem
Begin, (NY: Doubleday, 1987), p. 214; J. Bowyer Bell, Terror Out Of
Zion, (NY: St. Martin’s Press, 1977), p. 292-96; Kurzman, p. 142.
36Uri Milstein, History of Israel's War of Independence. Vol. IV,
(Lanham: University Press of America. 1999), p. 262.
37Milstein, p. 262.
37aDana Adams Schmidt, “200 Arabs Killed, Stronghold Taken,” New York
Times, (April 10, 1948).
38Kurzman, p. 148.
39Sharif Kanaana and Nihad Zitawi, "Deir Yassin," Monograph No. 4,
Destroyed Palestinian Villages Documentation Project, (Bir Zeit:
Documentation Center of Bir Zeit University, 1987), p. 55.
40Sharif Kanaana, "Reinterpreting Deir Yassin," Bir Zeit University,
(April 1998).
41Milstein, p. 267
42Rami Nashashibi, "Dayr Yasin," Bir Zeit University, (June 1996).
43Yehoshua Gorodenchik testimony at Jabotinsky Archives.
44Milstein, p. 276.
45"Israel and the Arabs: The 50 Year Conflict," BBC.
46Sachar, p. 335.
47Schechtman, p. 268.
48Prittie in Curtis, pp. 66-67.
49New York Times, (July 17, 1949).
50Telegraph (Beirut), (August 6, 1948), quoted in Schechtman, p.
210-211.
51Jerusalem Post, (January 26, 1989).
52Palestine Conciliation Commission Report Supplement 18 to the Official
Records of the Sixth Session of the Assembly (A/1985), quoted in Pablo
Azcarate, Mission in Palestine 1948-1952, (DC: Middle East Institute,
1966), p. 177.
53Moshe Sharett, "Israel's Position and Problems," Middle Eastern
Affairs, (May 1952), p. 136.
54Lebanese newspaper, Al Said, (April 6, 1950), quoted in Prittie in
Curtis, p. 69.
55The Writings of Benjamin Franklin, (NY: The Macmillan Company, 1905),
p. 626.
56UNRWA, (as of December 2003).
57UNRWA Finances (as of March 31, 2005).
58Speech to Parliament, April 24, 1950, Abdallah memoirs, p. 13; Aaron
Miller, The Arab States and the Palestine Question, (DC: Center for
Strategic and International Studies, 1986), p. 29.
59Leibler, p. 48.
60Prittie in Curtis, p. 71.
61UNRWA.
62Musa Alami, "The Lesson of Palestine," Middle East Journal, (October
1949), p. 386.
63UNRWA.
64Schechtman, p. 220.
65Des Moines Register editorial, (January 16, 1952).
66Jerusalem Report, (March 26, 2001).
67New York Times editorial, (May 14, 1967).
68Leibler, p. 45.
69UNRWA Annual Reports, (July 1, 1966-June 30, 1967), pp. 11-19; (July
1, 1967-June 30, 1968), pp. 4-10; (July 1, 1968-June 30, 1969), p. 6;
(July 1, 1971-June 30, 1972), p. 3.
70Maurice Roumani, The Case of the Jews from Arab Countries: A Neglected
Issue, (Tel Aviv: World Organization of Jews from Arab Countries, 1977),
p. 34.
70aCanadian Broadcasting Corporation, (October 4, 2004), quoted by
Jewish Telegraphic Agency, (October 4, 2004)
71Paul McCann, letter to the editor of The Weekly Standard, (May 28,
2002).
71aMatthew Levitt, "Terror on the UN Payroll?, Peace Watch, DC: The
Washington Institute for Near East Policy, (October 13, 2004); Greg
Myre, "Israel Feuds With Agency Set Up to Aid Palestinians, New York
Times, (October 18, 2004).
72Isabel Kershner, "The Refugees' Choice?," Jerusalem Report, (August
12, 2002), p. 24.
73David Tell, response to McCann, The Weekly Standard, (May 28, 2002).
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