Saturday, April 12

Tracing Gaza's chaos to 1948

Tracing Gaza's chaos to 1948

By Mark LeVine






Flag of Israel flies over Gaza before the 2005
withdrawal [GALLO/GETTY]

The roots of Gaza's misery today can be traced back to the
late Ottoman period, decades before the war of 1948
transformed the Gaza Strip from a minor port and agricultural
hinterland into one of the most overcrowded places on earth.

It was then, in the middle of the first great age of globalisation,
that Gaza's fate was sealed, although it would take half a century
for it to unfold.

At the end of the 19th century, the Ottoman empire was
undergoing a process of modernisation that was opening
provinces like Palestine to greater economic and cultural
penetration by Europe.

It was during this period - the heyday of high imperialism -
that Zionism arrived on Palestinian soil.

By the early 20th century, thousands of young and relatively
unskilled East European Jews were arriving each year in Palestine
desperate for work and housing.

While Gaza was never a primary location for Zionist settlement,
Gaza City had a small but longstanding Jewish community, and
several settlements, including Kfar Darom, were established
during the British mandate (1917-1948) period and
re-established after 1967.

Most of the young settlers who came during the first three waves
of Jewish settlement, from the late 1880s until World War I, were
unable to compete with the better-trained and cheaper Palestinian
Arab work force, which itself was sustained by a larger Palestinian
economy that had undergone a significant development, albeit
with ups and downs, in the last century and a half.

This reality led the emerging Socialist Zionist leadership to develop
two strategies, the "conquest of labour" (kibosh ha-avodah) and when
that failed, the "conquest of land" (kibosh ha-karka'a) to ensure the
creation of autonomous, exclusively Jewish settlements that would
be free of competition from non-Jewish workers.

The bourgeois town of Tel Aviv, founded in 1909, copied the Jews-only
policy of the first kibbutz, or collective agricultural settlement, Degania,
which was founded the same year.

Both sought to create modern exclusively Jewish environments
that would, culturally, economically, and politically, be as autonomous
as possible from the surrounding environment - the older
Arab/Sephardi and non-Zionist Ashkenazi Jewish communities
as much as from Palestinian Arabs.

Transforming Zionism

Crucially, this early competition for jobs and land helped
transform Zionism, in the words of Israeli sociologist Gershon
Shafir, into a "militant nationalist movement" by the time Tel
Aviv and Degania were established.

The exclusivist nationalism of the movement was exacerbated
by the reality that Zionism, like American, Australian and South
African nationalisms, was at the same time colonial.



All were examples of "settler colonial" movements
which were unique in their desire to replace rather
than exploit the indigenous population of the
colonised land. This strategy went well with the
socialist ethos of the emerging Zionist leadership,
which was ideologically committed to avoiding
the exploitation of the Palestinian population.


A Jewish security group dedicated to protecting
pioneering Zionist settlements [Getty]











At the same time however, many senior Zionist leaders
had experience working in Europe's African colonies,
which would be put to use in developing Zionist policies
in Palestine.

Following the thinking of other colonial enterprises, Zionist
leaders justified their project by arguing that Zionist Jews
had the right to rule Palestine because they - not the
Palestinians - had the ability to develop the land to its
full potential and usher Palestine out of its supposed slumber
and stagnation into the modern world.

In response, the Palestinian nationalism that emerged
soon after the first stirrings of Zionism was equally exclusivist
in its claim to the right to rule Palestine.

A "spirit of resistance" that had defined Palestinian responses
to foreign incursions, whether by Napoleon's France or
Muhammad Ali's Egypt, became evident as Palestinians
harassed Europeans who bought land in the country even
before the first Zionist settlements were founded.

Conflict with Zionist settlers occurred almost from the start
of the Zionist movement's colonisation efforts.

Transition of rule

Once Palestine transitioned from Ottoman to British rule,
a zero sum conflict over the country's future was inevitable,
especially when the level of Jewish immigration and land
purchases increased dramatically in the 1920s and 1930s.

The fact that the British government was, literally, "mandated"
to facilitate the creation of a Jewish national home in Palestine
while merely protecting the existing civil and religious rights
of the native population, exacerbated this situation.

Thousands of East European Jews arrived in
Palestine desperate for work and housing

The very structure and aims of the British mandate necessitated
that any independent Palestinian leadership should be crushed.

Meanwhile, the most logical and "efficient" way to develop the
economy would be through relying on the development
programmes of the Zionist movement, whose ideology, political
and economic discourses appealed to European imperial
sensibilities and to the powerful Christian Zionist impulses
that had emerged in England in the latter part of the 19th century.

Equally important, the Zionist enterprise brought a huge influx of
capital into the country that enabled its development without great
expense to the British tax-payer.

Ironically, Zionist leaders like Felix Frankfurter, the supreme court
justice, would argue that "no cordon sanitaire" could protect Palestine
from the modern world that he believed only arrived with the Zionist
movement and British rule.

But in truth neither had brought modernity to Palestine
because it had arrived decades earlier.

The Zionists merely replaced an emerging and increasingly
cosmopolitan Ottoman modernity, one which saw Palestine
undergo a rapid development in the last decades of Turkish
rule (in which Arab Jews and early Zionists, as well as
increasing trade and contact with Europe, played a part),
with a European, colonial modernity that would ultimately
push Palestinians off of, and for more than half of them out
of, their land.

In the case of Gaza specifically, this meant herding Palestinians,
first in 1948, then in 1967, and again during the Oslo decade of
"separation" and "divorce" between Israelis and Palestinians, into
a prison from which they are still trying to escape.

Flood of refugees

At the outset of the 1948 war, the population of the Gaza region
was approximately 60,000 to 80,000. By the end of the hostilities,
at least 200,000 refugees had flooded what would become the
Gaza Strip, whose rectangular shape roughly corresponded to
(but was smaller by at least a third than) the area of the Gaza
District during the mandate period.

The exact shape of the Gaza Strip was determined by the position of Egyptian and Israeli forces when the ceasefire was announced.

Israel built 17 settlements in
Gaza from 1970 to 2000 [Getty]

The majority of the refugees came from the almost wholesale
eviction or evacuation of Palestinian towns and villages from
Jaffa southwards to Gaza City and the surrounding villages to the
north and east that were depopulated during the war.

These refugees were housed in the ensuing years in eight camps
throughout the region, many of which were former British
military bases. By 2000, the last year of the Oslo peace
process, the number of refugees and their descendants had
swollen to well over 400,000.

The Gazan hijra

Based on several years of fieldwork interviewing refugees in Gaza,
Ilana Feldman, a New York University professor, describes the
typical experience of becoming a refugee in the Gaza Strip in what
has been described by many Gazans as the "hijra", (adopting the
Islamic terminology for the flight of the still small Muslim
community from Mecca to Medina in 622) as having "happened
almost without awareness...."

"They crossed no international border, but simply went down
the road.... Few people imagined that they would be gone for
longer than a few days or weeks," she wrote. In this thinking,
Gaza's refugees were a microcosm of the larger Palestinian
experience of the Nakhba, or disaster of the 1948 war.

Unlike the West Bank, which was effectively annexed by Jordan
in 1950 and its population offered Jordanian citizenship, Egypt
maintained Gaza under military rule until a legislative council
was elected in 1957.

Moreover, unlike Jordan, Egypt had little ties with or concern for
Gaza, and thus the Strip received little attention or investment in
infrastructure between 1948 and 1967.

Palestinian farmer looks on with his daughter
as Israeli tanks sweep through Gaza [Getty]

Jewish settlements

After its conquest by Israel, 17 Jewish settlements would
be established inside the Gaza Strip between 1970 and 2000.
While housing well under 10,000 settlers, the settlements came
to dominate the geography of the Strip, securing access to much
of the best land, water, and shore areas.

Their presence justified the transfer of only 60 per cent of the
Gaza Strip to Palestinian control during Oslo. The settlers, only
half a per cent of the Strip's population, controlled 40 per cent
of its territory and even more of its resources.

This situation would not change significantly during the Oslo
period, and when the last settler left, five years into
the al-Aqsa intifada in September 2005, Gaza effectively
became the world's largest prison.

Mark LeVine is professor of history at UCI Irvine and author or editor
of half a dozen books dealing with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and
globalisation in the Middle East, including Overthrowing Geography:
Jaffa, Tel Aviv and the Struggle for Palestine, Reapproaching Borders:
New Perspectives on the Study of Israel and Palestine, Why They
Don't Hate Us: Lifting the Veil on the Axis of Evil, and the forthcoming
An Impossible Peace: Oslo and the Burdens of History.

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