Sheba Medical Centre
Melanie Phillips
Shariah Finance Watch
Australian Islamist Monitor - MultiFaith
West Australian Friends of Israel
Why Israel is at war
Lozowick Blog
NeoZionoid The NeoZionoiZeoN blog
Blank pages of the age
Silent Runnings
Jewish Issues watchdog
Discover more about Israel advocacy
Zionists the creation of Israel
Dissecting the Left
Paula says
Perspectives on Israel - Zionists
Zionism & Israel Information Center
Zionism educational seminars
Christian dhimmitude
Forum on Mideast
Israel Blog - documents terror war against Israelis
Zionism on the web
RECOMMENDED: newsback News discussion community
RSS Feed software from CarP
International law, Arab-Israeli conflict
Think-Israel
The Big Lies
Shmloozing with terrorists
IDF ON YOUTUBE
Israel's contributions to the world
MEMRI
Mark Durie Blog
The latest good news from Israel...new inventions, cures, advances.
support defenders of Israel
The Gaza War 2014
The 2014 Gaza Conflict Factual and Legal Aspects
To get maximum benefit from the ICJS website Register now. Select the topics which interest you.
Today, Palestinians and their supporters, as they have done increasingly over the years, mark what they call the “naqba” (Arabic for catastrophe) day. But commemoration is only one aspect of the day. The clue to the real meaning of the naqba lies on the previous day, May 14, the day Israel declared independence upon the termination of British rule.
On the actual day in 1948 now commemorated as the naqba,neighboring Arab armies and internal Palestinian militias responded to Israel’s declaration of independence with full-scale hostilities. Tel Aviv was bombed from the air, and the head of Israel’s provisional government, David Ben-Gurion, delivered his first radio address to the nation from an air-raid shelter.
Israel successfully resisted invasion and dismemberment - the universally affirmed objective of the Arab belligerents - and Palestinians came off worst of all from the whole venture. At the war’s end, more than 600,000 Palestinians were living as refugees under neighboring Arab regimes.
In the immediate years that followed, the refugees generally resisted the term naqba. That implied a permanence never contemplated. After all, they largely had evacuated the scene of hostilities under the impression that they would be returning speedily on the heels of Israel’s imminent defeat. When that failed to materialize, they yet hoped for a speedy return upon the destruction of Israel in a renewed round of fighting. When that, too, failed to materialize, however, the term naqba and the commemorations around it held on May 15 became fixtures.
So the term naqba is misleading. It smacks of falsehood, inasmuch as it implies a tragedy inflicted by others. The tragedy, of course, was self-inflicted.
As Israel’s U.N. ambassador, Abba Eban, was to put it, “Once you determine the responsibility for that war, you have determined the responsibility for the refugee problem. Nothing in the history of our generation is clearer or less controversial than the initiative of Arab governments for the conflict out of which the refugee tragedy emerged.”
However, the Palestinians do not mourn the ill-conceived choice of going to war to abort Israel. They mourn only that they failed.
This is contrary to normal historical experience of disastrous defeat. Germans today mourn their losses in World War II, but not by lauding their invasion of Poland and justifying the attempt at European subjugation. They do not glorify Nazi aggression.
The Japanese mourn their losses in World War II, but not by lauding their assault on Pearl Harbor and their attempt to subjugate Southeast Asia. They do not glorify Japanese imperialism.
The very fact that naqba commemorations are held today is therefore instructive in a way few realize: It informs us that Palestinians have not admitted or assimilated the fact - as the Germans and Japanese have done - that they became victims as a direct result of their efforts to be perpetrators.
It informs us that Palestinians still would like to succeed today at what they miserably failed to achieve then.
It also informs us that they take no responsibility for their own predicament, which is uniquely maintained to this day at their own insistence.
If readers doubt my word, consider this vignette from January 2001. That month, Palestinian rioters in the West Bank burned in effigy John Manley, then foreign minister in Jean Chretien’s Canadian government. His sin? Mr. Manley had offered to welcome Palestinian refugees and their descendants to Canada after a peace settlement. The Palestinian response? Legislator Hussam Khader of Fatah, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’ party - not Hamas or another of the Islamist groups - threatened Canada, saying, “If Canada is serious about resettlement, you could expect military attacks in Ottawa or Montreal.”
Though scarcely a typical response by a government official to an offer of refugee relief, Mr. Khader’s was nonetheless illuminating. Setting up a Palestinian state and resettling the refugees and their descendants inside it or abroad would remove any internationally accepted ground for conflict. That is why helping to solve the Palestinian refugee problem is regarded as a hostile act - by Palestinians.
Thus, naqba commemorations inform us that the conflict is about Israel’s existence, not about territory, borders, holy places, refugees or any other bill of particulars.
Only when Palestinians accept that Israel is here to stay will the possibility of the conflict’s end come into view.
In the meantime, responsible governments can discourage and repudiate naqba commemorations as a small but important step toward bringing that day closer.
Daniel Mandel is a fellow in history at Melbourne University in Australia and director of the Zionist Organization of America’s Center for Middle East Policy.
Original piece is http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/may/14/perverse-palestinian-pride/?page=all#pagebreak
This is an excellent article.It is just sad that no matter how often this truthful account is told, many prefer to believe lies.
Posted by Fay Ganly on 2012-05-16 07:50:27 GMT
Mr Mandel makes some very relevant analogies in accurately describing Palestinian denial and the course of events that they charted themselves: He states: 'Germans today mourn their losses in World War II, but not by lauding their invasion of Poland and justifying the attempt at European subjugation. They do not glorify Nazi aggression.' No, it is a source of great shame that they make no attempt to deny that fact. It's illegal to deny the holocaust in Germany. Through that honest confrontation with their past, Germany was able to regain legitimacy and again emerge as leading Europe political and economic force. He also points out that: 'The Japanese mourn their losses in World War II, but not by lauding their assault on Pearl Harbor and their attempt to subjugate Southeast Asia. They do not glorify Japanese imperialism.' Similarly, their repudiation of the past was the key to their success in again becoming a viable political force. Finally he rightly addresses: 'they take no responsibility for their own predicament, which is uniquely maintained to this day at their own insistence.' Over 60 years has passed, and instead of building cities, and a viable and dynamic socioeconomic infrastructure, they languish in 'refugee cams, still funded by the UN. The pattern of abuse, denial, and dependence is no different the drunken husband who languishes on welfare, goes home after an idle day drinking, and abuses his wife and children, demanding unreasonable adherence to his rules under the threat of terror, and finds acceptance of his wife's rights and equality, his children's growth and freedoms, beyond his capabilities. A deep rooted sense of inferiority, self hatred and denial predicates every emotion, every action, and every angry outburst. And the ones closest to him, are those who are forced to suffer the most. The 'Palestinians' - Arabs of Syrian, Jordanian and Egyptian decent - are caught in an tyranny of clerics and politicians who use ideological rhetoric, dogma and force as their fundamental and existential platform - much like Europeans in Medieval Europe. As people, they want nothing more than jobs, commerce, a good education for their children, a little fun and the freedoms to express themselves, as all people do. Governed by ignorance, fear and theological dogmas, the real enemy is not Israel, Americans or anyone other than their own leadership. They have been hijacked into believing that force and hatred will pave the way to peace. And they have allowed themselves to be manipulated by dogma and a harsh, antisocial ideology. In the final analysis, as Mr. Mandel points out, the demon is denial. The solution lies solely in the hands of the Palestinians themselves. Much like the Syrians today, they must fight for freedom - not against Israel, but against their leaders. It is they and they alone that need to remove the political belligerents, ideological psychopaths and supposed leaders who find conflict too lucrative to let go of.
Posted
by Brian on 2012-05-15 14:13:36 GMT