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Op woensdag 27 december 2023 17:12 schreef slashdotter3 het volgende:A truth that no Palestinian will ever admit:
In 1948, during the Declaration of Independence of the state of Israel, David Ben-Gurion extended an invitation to the Arab inhabitants of the region.
He appealed for peace and coexistence, urging them to remain in their homes and become active, equal contributors to the development of Israel.
Most did not take his advice, opting instead to follow the Arab leaders' suggestion to temporarily leave their homes during the conflicts.
They believed the conquest of the Jews would be swift and that, following the destruction of the young State of Israel, the entire territory would be theirs.
Sadly for them, they met with bitter failure
Of course, the Arab leaders ignored the Arabs who fled, leaving them in refugee status without assisting them in finding a permanent solution.
In contrast, the Arabs who stayed now hold Israel's blue identity card.
As equal Israeli citizens, they constitute 20% of Israel's population today and enjoy all the benefits that the State of Israel offers. (As detailed in the post I will share in the first comment.)
And the Palestinians?
They envy the Israeli Arabs.
Not one Palestinian wouldn't swap their Palestinian Authority's green identity card for Israel's blue one.
(I can already predict that their comments will say the exact opposite, but we Israelis, Jews, Christians, and Arabs - know the truth.)
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Lekker eenzijdig beeld. Ja een deel is gebleven maar ook zijn er bv 50.000 Arabieren door Ben-Gurion verdreven uit Ramie en Lydda (nu Lod). Rabin schreef erover in zijn memoires wat vervolgens werd gecensureerd door de Israelische overheid.
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A censorship board composed of five Cabinet members prohibited former Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin from including in his memoirs a first‐person account of the expulsion of 50,000 Palestinian civilians from their homes near Tel Aviv during the 1948 Arab‐Israeli war.
In it, Mr. Rabin attributes the final decision on expulsion to David Ben‐Gurion, one of Israel's founders and its first Prime Minister, who died in 1973. Mr. Rabin says that some Israeli soldiers refused to participate in driving out the Arabs and that afterward, propaganda sessions were required to soothe the consciences of embittered troops.
The account does not appear in either the Hebrew edition of Mr. Rabin's memoirs or in the American edition, which was published in the United States this month by Little, Brown & Company under the title “The Rabin Memoirs.”
Sympathy for Palestinians
Although reports of such expulsions have been published by authors not subject to censorship, Israel remains highly sensitive to the issue, especially when it threatens to bolster Palestinian claims to territory that is now part of Israel. The anxiety is particularly acute at a time of growing sympathy for the Palestinians.
The Rabin account involves two Arab towns, Ramie and Lydda, now called Lod. Both are near the Tel Aviv airport and were in strategic positions when the Arabs attacked the new nation in 1948.
Mr. Rabin was then commander of the Hare! Brigade, assigned to eliminate Arab Legion bases along the JerusalemTel Aviv Road. A copy of his manuscript was provided to The New York Times by Peretz Kidron, who translated the book from Hebrew to English.
Under Israeli law, those who have served in government must submit written material to two sets of censors: the military, which cleared the paragraphs in question, and then a board composed of Cabinet ministers and headed by Justice Minister Shmuel Tamir.
‘I Can't Violate the Law’
“I was puzzled,” Mr. Rabin said of the deletion. “But they decided and I had to obey because 1 can't violate the law of the country.” He said discussing the order with a reporter would also be illegal.
His narrative opens with a meeting that included him, Mr. Ben‐Gurion and Yigal Alton, who later became Foreign Minister. The text is as follows:
“While the fighting was still in progress, we had to grapple with a troublesome problem, for whose solution we could not draw upon any previous experience: the fate of the civilian population of Lod and Ramie, numbering some 50,000.
“We walked outside, Ben‐Gurion accompanying us. Alton repeated his question: ‘What is to be done with the population?’ B.G. waved his hand in a gesture which said, ‘Drive them out!’
“Allon and I held a consultation. I agreed that it was essential to drive the inhabitants out. We took them on foot towards the Bet Horon Road, assuming that the legion would be obliged to look after them, thereby shouldering logistic difficulties which would burden its fighting capacity, making things easier for us.
“'Driving out’ is a term with a harsh ring,” the manuscript continues. “Psychologically, this was one of the most difficult actions we undertook. The population of Lod did not leave willingly. There was no way of avoiding the use of force and warning shots in order to make the inhabitants march the 10 to 15 miles to the point where they met up with the legion.
“The inhabitants of Ramie watched and learned the lesson. Their leaders agreed to be evacuated voluntarily, on condition that the evacuation was carried out by vehicles. Buses took them to Latrun, and from there, they were evacuated by the legion.
“Great suffering was inflicted upon the men taking part in the eviction action. Soldiers of the Yiftach Brigade included youth‐movement graduates, who had been inculcated with values such as international brotherhood and humaneness. The eviction action went beyond the concepts they were used to.
“There were some fellows who refused to take part in the expulsion action. Prolonged propaganda activities were required after the action, to remove the bitterness of these youth‐movement groups, and explain why we were obliged to undertake such a harsh and cruel action.”
Survivors’ Reports Confirmed
Mr. Rabin's account does not differ markedly from others. In “0 Jerusalem,” Larry Collins and Dominique Lapierre described “a calculated Israeli policy” to drive Arab residents from their homes, and they confirmed reports by some survivors that many elderly people and small children died in the overpowering heat during the forced march.
in both “0 Jerusalem” and “Genesis 1948” by Dan Kurzman, the eviction from Lod was attributed to the local residents’ opening fire on the Israelis shortly after surrendering. Fouzi el‐Asmar, in his book “To Be an Arab in Israel,” also documented the expulsion, which he witnessed as a child.
Throughout the rest of the country, however, the pattern was mixed. In some places, the Israelis expelled the Palestinians, while in others they encouraged them to stay. Many left in panic after the Israeli massacre at the village of Deir Yassin outside Jerusalem, which remains a name of infamy in the Arab world.
There, contingents of the extremist Stern gang and Irgun attacked the village and lined men, women and children up against walls and shot them, according to Red Cross and British documentation.
Menachem Begin, now the Prime Minister but then the leader of the Irgun, staunchly denied in his book, “The Revolt,” that any atrocities had been committed at Deir Yassin by his followers. He said that the village was a legitimate military target and that the story of a massacre was a “lie” spread by “Jewhaters all over the world.”
En dat de Arabieren voor de wet gelijke rechten hebben wil niet zeggen dat ze in de praktijk niet gediscrimineerd worden zoals wel vaker bij minderheden het geval is.
[ Bericht 5% gewijzigd door Kijkertje op 28-12-2023 05:37:42 ]
“The fundamental cause of the trouble in the modern world today is that the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt.”— Bertrand Russell