(L-R) Reps. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY). Tlaib has made it her mission to destroy the US-Israel relationship
Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) has taken to Twitter to
announce that she will introduce a House resolution that calls for
official recognition of the “Nakba,” which she—like most Palestinian
nationalists—describes as the “catastrophe” that occurred in 1948 when
Israel demolished 400 Palestinian communities and made refugees out of
700,000 Palestinians. She frames this as an issue of human rights and
justice, but in reality, it is an issue of ignorance of recent
historical events in the region and the antisemites that prey upon it
for personal gain.
The resolution’s supporters were the normal cadre of Israel-haters
and antisemites—Reps. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez (D-N.Y.), Ilhan Omar
(D-Minn.), Betty McCollum (D-Minn.), Marie Newman (D-Ill.), Jamaal
Bowman (D-N.Y.) and Cori Bush (D-Mo.). Most, if not all, of these
co-sponsors have consistently sided against Israel,
endorsed the BDS movement, labeled Israel an apartheid state and worked
to dissolve the strong alliance between Israel and the United States.
The resolution itself is a sophomoric diatribe filled with propaganda
typical of both the Palestinian Authority and anti-Israel Jewish groups
like J Street and IfNotNow. It lacks the context of the events that
preceded and succeeded Israel’s 1948 War of Independence and places all
blame for the subsequent crises of the Palestinian people on their
existential enemy—the Jews.
The phrase “Nakba” means “catastrophe” in Arabic. Tlaib describes it
in the resolution as the “experience of uprooting, dispossession and
refugeedom,” which she alleges were caused by Israel. This, the
resolution says, refers “not only to a historical event but to an
ongoing process of Israel’s expropriation of Palestinian land and its
dispossession of the Palestinian people that continues to this day.” An
examination of the real story behind this “catastrophe,” however,
explains why the Palestinians are the only people in the history of the
world to still be refugees four generations after they were displaced.
Kind of hard to make peace with a group of
people who think your nation’s establishment is an ongoing
“catastrophe.”
Prior to the 1947 U.N. partition plan, which sought to
create two states—Jewish and Arab—in British Mandatory Palestine,
antisemitic attacks in Europe and Russia forced thousands of Jews to
emigrate to their historical homeland. Palestine, however, was not a
sovereign state, but an area controlled by a number of empires for two
millennia, most recently the Ottomans and then the British. In fact,
prior to 1948, the last sovereign state in that land was called Judea,
and it maintained its sovereignty for 102 years. From the expulsion of
the Jews after the destruction of the Second Temple until May 15, 1948,
the land of Palestine was under the domination of no less than nine
different imperial rulers, none of whom thought much of the ancient
Jewish homeland. Indeed, the name “Palestine” itself was coined because
the Romans wanted to add insult to injury. They renamed Judea after the
historical enemies of the Jews—the Philistines.
In the time that led up to the establishment of the State of Israel,
the army that would one day become the Israel Defense Forces prepared
themselves for the invasion that they knew would come. The Arabs who
lived in the area knew it would come as well, so they did what they were
told to do—they got out of the way. The Palestinian refugee situation
was a crisis of their own making, because they assumed that the Arab
armies of Jordan, Syria, Iraq, Lebanon and Egypt would wipe out all the
Jews and they would return to their homes, now Jew-free.
They believed this because their leaders told them so over and over
again. “We will smash the country with our guns and obliterate every
place the Jews seek shelter in,” said Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Saif. “The Arabs should conduct their wives and children to safe areas until the fighting has died down.” The Jordanian newspaper Filastin
admitted the same after the ceasefire that ended the war: “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.” It was the
Arabs’ failure to slaughter the Jews that the Palestinians came to call
their “catastrophe.” All Arabs that remained in Israel became citizens
with full rights. Those who fled were left to the tender mercies of
their new host countries.
After the war, the Arab refugees went to other Arab nations: 100,000
to Lebanon, 75,000 to Syria and 70,000 to Jordan. 280,000 went to the
West Bank, which Jordan annexed, and 190,000 went to the Gaza Strip,
over which Egypt maintained military control. Not one of these Arab
nations resettled these people. At the same time, Arab nations expelled their Jewish populations in droves,
without the pretext of war in their lands. Morocco expelled 260,000,
Iraq expelled 129,000 and so on. This is not to mention the hundreds of
thousands of European Jews who were displaced after the Holocaust. None of these people languished in camps and demanded to be returned to their homes.
They made their way to Israel, where a nation in its infancy—and still
reeling from an existential war—resettled them and gave them full rights
as citizens.
The Arabs continued their effort to destroy Israel, and told the
refugees situated in their countries not to worry—once all the Jews are
dead, you can go home. All of this was under the watchful eye of the
United Nations, which created useless organizations
to help facilitate the continued oppression of the Palestinian people
by other Arab nations and their own leaders. When Israel won the Six-Day
War, they did not conquer Palestinian lands in the West Bank and Gaza
Strip—they conquered Jordanian and Egyptian lands that contained a
Palestinian population that had languished in refugee camps for two
decades. Unlike Jordan and Egypt, they did not annex this land and leave
the refugees as second-class citizens.
The Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) then chose to launch
decades of terrorism against the Jewish people. Israel attempted peace
with the PLO and the Palestinian Authority many times over the years.
When land was offered, it was rejected and terrorist attacks were
launched. When Israel left Gaza in 2005, it became a safe haven for
Hamas and thousands of rocket attacks.
As this counter-protester at Tel Aviv University
noted, Israel will not mourn the Arabs’ failure to drive the Jews into
the sea
The problems the Palestinian people face are numerous indeed. They lack resources, jobs, education and healthcare. This is not the fault of Israel.
It is due to decades of exploitation by Arab nations that used them as
political pawns until they realized that Israel isn’t going anywhere.
Now the Arab world is bored with the Palestinian “catastrophe”
and has begun to sign peace agreements with Israel to ensure their
survival against an emboldened Iran. Israel has become an economic and
technological powerhouse with a military envied by almost every other
country in the world. Yet the Palestinians are trapped in the past, and
blame the Jews for the problems inflicted upon them by their own
leaders.
Tlaib’s parents emigrated to America and appear to have infused their
daughter with the falsehood that all the problems faced by their people
were the fault of the Jews. The resolution she has filed has nothing to
do with facts, history or the correction of injustices. It’s about the
use of her position as a member of Congress to settle her vendetta
against a people who didn’t have the courtesy to allow themselves to be
pushed into the Mediterranean Sea. Tlaib has chosen not to use her power
and position to help the Palestinians, she uses them as a weapon
against the Jewish state. In doing so, she is as bad—if not worse—than
the nations that refused to help her great-grandparents after 1948, and
her actions will ensure that the Palestinian people continue to live in
abject poverty for generations to come.
1 comment:
Of course she does. It will be easier to destroy Israel if they have no friends at all willing to stand with them.
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