Jump to content

The Holocaust and the Nakba: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m seems like both should begin with "the" but only one wiki name does
Added background, increased neutrality and addded more sources
Tags: Reverted Visual edit
Line 1: Line 1:
{{use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
[[The Holocaust]] has been compared to the [[Nakba]]. The appropriateness and nature of this comparison is widely debated.
[[The Holocaust]], the killing of six million European Jews, has been compared to the [[Nakba]], the exodus of 700,000 Palestinians during and shortly after the [[1948 Palestine war]]. The appropriateness and nature of this comparison is widely debated.


==Background==
==Historical relation==
Prior to the Holocaust, Zionists had opposed founding an ethnocentric Jewish state, but this changed rapidly in the 1940s.{{sfn|Shumsky|2018|p=231}} [[David Ben-Gurion]] changed his view on Arab self-determination, deciding that it could not be allowed in a Jewish state.{{sfn|Shumsky|2018|p=23}} In one of his speeches addressing the [[Biltmore Program]], he stated that after the Holocaust, "do we not have the right this time to demand rectification for our historical indignity, for the discrimination that all the nations have committed against us, and to demand that they give us the same status as all the other nations?"{{sfn|Shumsky|2018|p=216}} In 1947 and 1948, 700,000 Palestinians—80 percent of the territory's Arab population—[[1948 Palestinian exodus|fled or were expelled]] from the territory that became Israel.{{sfn|Moses|2021b|p=332}}{{sfn|Fischer|2020|p=2}} Both during the Holocaust and the Nakba, there was large-scale looting of the property of the victims.{{sfn|Confino|2018|p=143}}
Prior to the Holocaust, Zionists had opposed founding an ethnocentric Jewish state, but this changed rapidly in the 1940s.{{sfn|Shumsky|2018|p=231}} [[David Ben-Gurion]] changed his view on Arab self-determination, deciding that it could not be allowed in a Jewish state.{{sfn|Shumsky|2018|p=23}} In one of his speeches addressing the [[Biltmore Program]], he stated that after the Holocaust, "do we not have the right this time to demand rectification for our historical indignity, for the discrimination that all the nations have committed against us, and to demand that they give us the same status as all the other nations?"{{sfn|Shumsky|2018|p=216}}


Following the [[1947–1948 civil war in Mandatory Palestine]], which began on 30 November 1947, a day after the [[United Nations]] voted to adopt the [[United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine|Partition Plan for Palestine]], the [[Yishuv|Jewish]] and [[Arabs|Arab communities]] of [[Palestine (region)|Palestine]] clashed, with the first casualties being [[Fajja bus attacks|passengers on a Jewish]]. During this phase, 250,000–300,000 Palestinians fled or were expelled. The second phase of the war began when the British terminated the Mandate at the end 14 May 1948 and Jewish leadership in Palestine [[Israeli Declaration of Independence|declared the establishment of the State of Israel]]. This was followed the next day by the invasion of Palestine by the surrounding Arab armies and expeditionary forces. In total, between 1947 and 1948, 700,000 Palestinians—80 percent of the territory's Arab population—[[1948 Palestinian exodus|fled or were expelled]] from the territory that became Israel.{{sfn|Moses|2021b|p=332}}{{sfn|Fischer|2020|p=2}}
In 1949, the Polish–Jewish Holocaust survivors Genya and Henryk Kowalski arrived in Israel. They were offered a formerly Palestinian house in [[Jaffa]], but refused to move in. Genya Kowalski later explained, "it reminded us how we had to leave the house and everything behind when the Germans arrived and threw us into the ghetto... I did not want to do the same thing that the Germans did."{{sfn|Confino|2018|pp=135, 139}} Their choice to refuse looted Palestinian property was exceptional.{{sfn|Confino|2018|p=136}}


Both during the Holocaust and the Nakba, there was large-scale looting of the property of the victims.{{sfn|Confino|2018|p=143}} In 1949, the Polish–Jewish Holocaust survivors Genya and Henryk Kowalski arrived in Israel. They were offered a formerly Palestinian house in [[Jaffa]], but refused to move in. Genya Kowalski later explained, "it reminded us how we had to leave the house and everything behind when the Germans arrived and threw us into the ghetto... I did not want to do the same thing that the Germans did."{{sfn|Confino|2018|pp=135, 139}} Their choice to refuse looted Palestinian property was exceptional.{{sfn|Confino|2018|p=136}}
In contrast to the Holocaust, which ended, the Nakba is still ongoing.{{sfn|Wermenbol|2021|p=304}}

In contrast to the Holocaust, which ended, some scholars consider the Nakba to still be ongoing.{{sfn|Wermenbol|2021|p=304}}


In discussions of the [[Israeli–Palestinian conflict]], [[the Holocaust]] and the [[Nakba]] have come to be regarded as interrelated events, both historically and in the way these two tragedies have influenced perceptions of the conflict by both parties.{{sfn|Bashir|Goldberg|2014|p=78}}
In discussions of the [[Israeli–Palestinian conflict]], [[the Holocaust]] and the [[Nakba]] have come to be regarded as interrelated events, both historically and in the way these two tragedies have influenced perceptions of the conflict by both parties.{{sfn|Bashir|Goldberg|2014|p=78}}
Line 19: Line 21:
According to [[Zionist historiography]], the formation of the State of Israel in 1948 was the "culmination of the long Jewish quest for rights and justice".{{sfn|Bartov|2019|p=25}} Israeli historian [[Benny Morris]] argues that the Zionist fighters were motivated by the Holocaust, among other factors.{{sfn|Bergen|Eley|Jockusch|Ther|2021|p=172}} The Israeli view of the [[1948 Arab–Israeli war]] holds that Israel had "no alternative" in the war and fought with [[purity of arms]].{{sfn|Wermenbol|2021|pp=307–308}} The mainstream view in Israel is that Arabs left the country voluntarily in response to calls from the Arab leadership, although in the twenty-first century more diverse views have been expressed.{{sfn|Fischer|2020|p=3}} The Israeli statehas made an effort to erase the memory of the Nakba, destroying Palestinian villages and avoiding mentioning the issue in history books. While some Israelis acknowledge a tragedy while denying Zionist responsibility for it, others proclaim the Nakba a myth and "a collection of tall tales".{{sfn|Confino|2018|p=138}}
According to [[Zionist historiography]], the formation of the State of Israel in 1948 was the "culmination of the long Jewish quest for rights and justice".{{sfn|Bartov|2019|p=25}} Israeli historian [[Benny Morris]] argues that the Zionist fighters were motivated by the Holocaust, among other factors.{{sfn|Bergen|Eley|Jockusch|Ther|2021|p=172}} The Israeli view of the [[1948 Arab–Israeli war]] holds that Israel had "no alternative" in the war and fought with [[purity of arms]].{{sfn|Wermenbol|2021|pp=307–308}} The mainstream view in Israel is that Arabs left the country voluntarily in response to calls from the Arab leadership, although in the twenty-first century more diverse views have been expressed.{{sfn|Fischer|2020|p=3}} The Israeli statehas made an effort to erase the memory of the Nakba, destroying Palestinian villages and avoiding mentioning the issue in history books. While some Israelis acknowledge a tragedy while denying Zionist responsibility for it, others proclaim the Nakba a myth and "a collection of tall tales".{{sfn|Confino|2018|p=138}}


Portrayal of Arabs as Nazis is common in the discourse of the Arab–Israeli conflict,{{sfn|Stav|2012|p=89}}{{sfn|Marwecki|2020|p=93}} as is depicting Palestinian [[anti-Zionism]] as motivated by antisemitism.{{sfn|Marwecki|2020|pp=93–94}} According to [[Joseph A. Massad]], "Israel's insistence on its vulnerability reflected a conscious strategy".{{sfn|Stav|2012|p=89}} The [[Eichmann trial|1961 trial]] of Holocaust perpetrator [[Adolf Eichmann]] was an opportunity to connect Arabs to Nazis.{{sfn|Marwecki|2020|pp=93–94}} The descriptive Nazification of the [[Palestinian people]] was a hallmark of the policy of [[Menachem Begin]]'s [[Likud Party]].{{sfn|Marwecki|2020|p=161}} The height of this phenomenon occurred in 2015 when Israeli Prime Minister [[Benjamin Netanyahu]] falsely accused the Palestinian [[Amin al-Husseini]] of starting the Holocaust.{{sfn|Marwecki|2020|p=225}}
Portrayal of Arabs as Nazis is common in the discourse of the Arab–Israeli conflict,{{sfn|Stav|2012|p=89}}{{sfn|Marwecki|2020|p=93}} as is depicting Palestinian [[anti-Zionism]] as motivated by antisemitism.{{sfn|Marwecki|2020|pp=93–94}} According to [[Joseph A. Massad]], "Israel's insistence on its vulnerability reflected a conscious strategy".{{sfn|Stav|2012|p=89}} The [[Eichmann trial|1961 trial]] of Holocaust perpetrator [[Adolf Eichmann]] was an opportunity to connect Arabs to Nazis.{{sfn|Marwecki|2020|pp=93–94}} The descriptive Nazification of the [[Palestinian people]] was a hallmark of the policy of [[Menachem Begin]]'s [[Likud Party]].{{sfn|Marwecki|2020|p=161}} The height of this phenomenon occurred in 2015 when Israeli Prime Minister [[Benjamin Netanyahu]] falsely accused the Palestinian [[Amin al-Husseini]] of starting the Holocaust, although he did maintain contacts with Hitler and sought his help in preventing the establishment of Israel.{{sfn|Marwecki|2020|p=225}}


Many Israelis argue that the Holocaust and the Nakba cannot be compared.{{sfn|Stav|2012|p=89}} According to [[Shira Stav]], one flaw with Israeli representations that attempt to bridge this gap is the absence of Palestinian voices and the tendency to present Israeli soldiers as traumatized victims.{{sfn|Stav|2012|pp=95–96}} According to a paper by Israeli Holocaust, conflict and peace researcher [[Dan Bar-On]] and [[Rutgers]] professor Saliba Sarsar, it was only at the turn of the 21st century Israeli Jewish and Palestinian intellectuals "found the courage" to bridge the gap, conceptually, between the Holocaust and the Nakba.{{sfn|Bar-On|Sarsar|2004}} On the Israeli–Jewish side, Bar-On and Sarsar cite Ilan Gur-Zeev and [[Ilan Pappé]]'s 2003 paper ''Beyond the Destruction of the Other's Collective Memory: Blueprints for a Palestinian-Israeli Dialogue'' as an early call for the Holocaust and the Nakba "to be examined within a mutual context", that highlighted, without claiming equivalence, "the thread that ties them to the collective psyche of both people".{{sfn|Bar-On|Sarsar|2004}}
Many Israelis argue that the Holocaust and the Nakba cannot be compared.{{sfn|Stav|2012|p=89}} According to [[Shira Stav]], one flaw with Israeli representations that attempt to bridge this gap is the absence of Palestinian voices and the tendency to present Israeli soldiers as traumatized victims.{{sfn|Stav|2012|pp=95–96}} According to a paper by Israeli Holocaust, conflict and peace researcher [[Dan Bar-On]] and [[Rutgers]] professor Saliba Sarsar, it was only at the turn of the 21st century Israeli Jewish and Palestinian intellectuals "found the courage" to bridge the gap, conceptually, between the Holocaust and the Nakba.{{sfn|Bar-On|Sarsar|2004}} On the Israeli–Jewish side, Bar-On and Sarsar cite Ilan Gur-Zeev and [[Ilan Pappé]]'s 2003 paper ''Beyond the Destruction of the Other's Collective Memory: Blueprints for a Palestinian-Israeli Dialogue'' as an early call for the Holocaust and the Nakba "to be examined within a mutual context", that highlighted, without claiming equivalence, "the thread that ties them to the collective psyche of both people".{{sfn|Bar-On|Sarsar|2004}}
Line 61: Line 63:


Elias Khoury states that "The Holocaust and the Nakba are not mirror images, but the Jew and the Palestinian are able to become mirror images of human suffering if they disabuse themselves of the delusion of exclusionist, national ideologies." He views setting aside these ideologies as part of a universal struggle against racism.{{sfn|Khoury|2020|p=13}}<!--{{sfn|Mikel Arieli|2020|pp=334–353}}{{sfn|Fischer|2020}} -->
Elias Khoury states that "The Holocaust and the Nakba are not mirror images, but the Jew and the Palestinian are able to become mirror images of human suffering if they disabuse themselves of the delusion of exclusionist, national ideologies." He views setting aside these ideologies as part of a universal struggle against racism.{{sfn|Khoury|2020|p=13}}<!--{{sfn|Mikel Arieli|2020|pp=334–353}}{{sfn|Fischer|2020}} -->

== Criticism ==
Many Jewish scholars argue that comparisons between the Holocaust and the Nakba follow a broader pattern of erasure of Jewish indigeneity to Israel<ref>{{Cite web |date=2018-06-04 |title=Counterpoint: The native people of Israel |url=https://thecjn.ca/perspectives/opinions/counterpoint-the-native-people-of-israel/ |access-date=2023-03-08 |website=The Canadian Jewish News |language=en-US}}</ref>, Jewish history in Israel<ref>{{Cite web |last=Bellerose |first=Ryan |date=8 Feb 2017 |title=Are Jews Indigenous to the Land of Israel? |url=https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/israel-middle-east/articles/bellerose-aboriginal-people |url-status=live}}</ref>, and Jewish struggle for self-determination, particularly by portraying Jewish return and statehood as being "facilitated by the West out of guilt over the Holocaust." Canadian sociologist Joseph Spoerl describes this phenomena writing that: <blockquote>Thus, the ''nakba''—the tragedy of the Palestinian refugees who were displaced by the war of 1948—is entirely the fault of the Zionists and their Western supporters, not of the Palestinians themselves. According to this narrative, in 1948, the Zionists were waging a war of preplanned ethnic cleansing, not a war of self-defense against Palestinian aggressors with genocidal intentions and a history of Nazi collaboration. Therefore, any accusation of genocide and genocidal hatred should be directed only at Westerners and Zionists, not at Palestinians or Arabs.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Spoerl |first=Joseph S. |date=2014 |title=Palestinians, Arabs, and the Holocaust |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/44289822 |journal=Jewish Political Studies Review |volume=26 |issue=1/2 |pages=14–47 |issn=0792-335X}}</ref></blockquote>Other scholars have also critiqued the validity of the narratives, norms and imaginaries used in postcolonial theory which themselves have been used to justify territorial [[Jewish exodus|exclusion, expulsion and extermination of Jews]] and other populations: <blockquote>The story of the liquidation of the Jews from the Arab-Muslim world confers a historical, political, regional, and national meaning, internal to the Arab-Muslim world, on the history of these same Jews, who have become the majority in the state of Israel and are therefore the true interlocutors of the Palestinians with respect to the controversy about the “original sin.” They too have the keys to their houses from which they were driven out; they too were despoiled, and infinitely more than the Palestinians! The Palestinians’ claims against Israel do not impress them; they reinforce all the more their own political, national, and financial claims. Those who find themselves accused of colonialism and of racism, of the “original sin,” are the very people whom the Arab-Muslim world, with the complicity of the Palestinians, discriminated against, persecuted, and drove from their homes, and who found in Israel an opportunity to recover.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Trigano |first=Shmuel |date=2019 |title=Deconstructing the Three Stages of the Nakba Myth |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26801117 |journal=Jewish Political Studies Review |volume=30 |issue=3/4 |pages=45–54 |issn=0792-335X}}</ref></blockquote>A growing number of publications also challenge the view that the Palestinian nationalist cause had no relationship with Nazi Germany or the Holocaust.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Miller |first=Rory |date=2011-09 |title=The Mufti of Jerusalem and the Nazis: The Berlin Years |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00263206.2011.606611 |journal=Middle Eastern Studies |volume=47 |issue=5 |pages=835–837 |doi=10.1080/00263206.2011.606611 |issn=0026-3206}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |date=2011-04-01 |title=Nazi Palestine: the plans for the extermination of the Jews in Palestine |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/choice.48-4650 |journal=Choice Reviews Online |volume=48 |issue=08 |pages=48–4650-48-4650 |doi=10.5860/choice.48-4650 |issn=0009-4978}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Herf |first=Jeffrey |url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/697463751 |title=Nazi propaganda for the Arab world |date=2011 |publisher=Yale University Press |isbn=978-0-300-16805-1 |oclc=697463751}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |last=Herf |first=Jeffrey |title=Nazi Propaganda to the Arab World During World War II and the Holocaust: and Its Aftereffects |date=2017 |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-48866-0_8 |work=Antisemitism Before and Since the Holocaust |pages=183–204 |access-date=2023-03-08 |place=Cham |publisher=Springer International Publishing |isbn=978-3-319-48865-3}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Verfasser |first=Schwanitz, Wolfgang G. 1955- |url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/896872837 |title=Islam in Europa, Revolten in Mittelost Islamismus und Genozid von Wilhelm II. und Enver Pascha über Hitler und al-Husaini bis Arafat, Usama Bin Ladin und Ahmadinejad sowie Gespräche mit Bernard Lewis |isbn=978-3-86464-018-6 |oclc=896872837}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Rubin |first=Barry M. |url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/940828691 |title=Nazis, Islamists, and the making of the modern Middle East |isbn=978-0-300-14090-3 |oclc=940828691}}</ref>


==Citations==
==Citations==

Revision as of 08:58, 8 March 2023

The Holocaust, the killing of six million European Jews, has been compared to the Nakba, the exodus of 700,000 Palestinians during and shortly after the 1948 Palestine war. The appropriateness and nature of this comparison is widely debated.

Background

Prior to the Holocaust, Zionists had opposed founding an ethnocentric Jewish state, but this changed rapidly in the 1940s.[1] David Ben-Gurion changed his view on Arab self-determination, deciding that it could not be allowed in a Jewish state.[2] In one of his speeches addressing the Biltmore Program, he stated that after the Holocaust, "do we not have the right this time to demand rectification for our historical indignity, for the discrimination that all the nations have committed against us, and to demand that they give us the same status as all the other nations?"[3]

Following the 1947–1948 civil war in Mandatory Palestine, which began on 30 November 1947, a day after the United Nations voted to adopt the Partition Plan for Palestine, the Jewish and Arab communities of Palestine clashed, with the first casualties being passengers on a Jewish. During this phase, 250,000–300,000 Palestinians fled or were expelled. The second phase of the war began when the British terminated the Mandate at the end 14 May 1948 and Jewish leadership in Palestine declared the establishment of the State of Israel. This was followed the next day by the invasion of Palestine by the surrounding Arab armies and expeditionary forces. In total, between 1947 and 1948, 700,000 Palestinians—80 percent of the territory's Arab population—fled or were expelled from the territory that became Israel.[4][5]

Both during the Holocaust and the Nakba, there was large-scale looting of the property of the victims.[6] In 1949, the Polish–Jewish Holocaust survivors Genya and Henryk Kowalski arrived in Israel. They were offered a formerly Palestinian house in Jaffa, but refused to move in. Genya Kowalski later explained, "it reminded us how we had to leave the house and everything behind when the Germans arrived and threw us into the ghetto... I did not want to do the same thing that the Germans did."[7] Their choice to refuse looted Palestinian property was exceptional.[8]

In contrast to the Holocaust, which ended, some scholars consider the Nakba to still be ongoing.[9]

In discussions of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, the Holocaust and the Nakba have come to be regarded as interrelated events, both historically and in the way these two tragedies have influenced perceptions of the conflict by both parties.[10]

Historiography

The Holocaust is a universalized memory in Western culture and has tended to block out the memory of the Nakba.[11][12] According to Nina Fischer, both events "function as cultural traumas and are central to the collective memory and identity of the two peoples".[5] Both the Hebrew word for Holocaust, Shoah, and Nakba translate as "catastrophe".[13]

Israel

In Israel, all Israeli Jews are considered survivors of the Holocaust who must implement the imperative of never again in regards to being a Jewish victim.[14] The uniqueness of the Holocaust is emphasized, non-Jewish victims of Nazi Germany are sidelined, and any linkage between the Holocaust and the Nakba is rejected.[15][16]

According to Zionist historiography, the formation of the State of Israel in 1948 was the "culmination of the long Jewish quest for rights and justice".[17] Israeli historian Benny Morris argues that the Zionist fighters were motivated by the Holocaust, among other factors.[18] The Israeli view of the 1948 Arab–Israeli war holds that Israel had "no alternative" in the war and fought with purity of arms.[19] The mainstream view in Israel is that Arabs left the country voluntarily in response to calls from the Arab leadership, although in the twenty-first century more diverse views have been expressed.[20] The Israeli statehas made an effort to erase the memory of the Nakba, destroying Palestinian villages and avoiding mentioning the issue in history books. While some Israelis acknowledge a tragedy while denying Zionist responsibility for it, others proclaim the Nakba a myth and "a collection of tall tales".[21]

Portrayal of Arabs as Nazis is common in the discourse of the Arab–Israeli conflict,[22][23] as is depicting Palestinian anti-Zionism as motivated by antisemitism.[24] According to Joseph A. Massad, "Israel's insistence on its vulnerability reflected a conscious strategy".[22] The 1961 trial of Holocaust perpetrator Adolf Eichmann was an opportunity to connect Arabs to Nazis.[24] The descriptive Nazification of the Palestinian people was a hallmark of the policy of Menachem Begin's Likud Party.[25] The height of this phenomenon occurred in 2015 when Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu falsely accused the Palestinian Amin al-Husseini of starting the Holocaust, although he did maintain contacts with Hitler and sought his help in preventing the establishment of Israel.[26]

Many Israelis argue that the Holocaust and the Nakba cannot be compared.[22] According to Shira Stav, one flaw with Israeli representations that attempt to bridge this gap is the absence of Palestinian voices and the tendency to present Israeli soldiers as traumatized victims.[27] According to a paper by Israeli Holocaust, conflict and peace researcher Dan Bar-On and Rutgers professor Saliba Sarsar, it was only at the turn of the 21st century Israeli Jewish and Palestinian intellectuals "found the courage" to bridge the gap, conceptually, between the Holocaust and the Nakba.[28] On the Israeli–Jewish side, Bar-On and Sarsar cite Ilan Gur-Zeev and Ilan Pappé's 2003 paper Beyond the Destruction of the Other's Collective Memory: Blueprints for a Palestinian-Israeli Dialogue as an early call for the Holocaust and the Nakba "to be examined within a mutual context", that highlighted, without claiming equivalence, "the thread that ties them to the collective psyche of both people".[28]

Germany

After the 1952 Reparations Agreement with Germany, Moshe Sharett suggested paying some of the reparations money to Palestinian refugees. This was rejected because it would have meant linking the Holocaust and the Nakba.[29][30] Ian S. Lustick argues that the Reparations Agreement could serve as a model for a future Israeli–Palestinian peace deal. Lustick argues additionally that "if reconciliation has been possible between Israel and Germany, it cannot be said to be impossible for Israel and Palestine".[31]

Germany's criticism in the 1970s of Israel's unilateral border changes and settlement policies in the Palestinian territories it had occupied, influenced in part, it has been argued, the De facto annexation of Jerusalem in July 1980 with the Jerusalem Law. This may also have been a response to the Venice Declaration a month earlier, in June, when the European Economic Community recognized the right of Palestinians to self-determination and to participate in peace negotiations. A harsh official Israeli communiqué branded the latter as a second Munich (where European powers acknowledged the German Annexation of Sudetenland): Palestinians were framed as regenerated Nazis and Europeans favorable to their cause likened to Neville Chamberlain.[25] When West Germany eventually moved towards recognition of the PLO and the Palestinian right to self-determination in the 1980s, Israel retaliated by again bringing up the Nazi past.[32]

Daniel Marwecki argues that in the twenty-first century, the German "Staatsräson means viewing the Israel-Palestine conflict through the lens of German Holocaust memory", but the majority of Germans do not share this perspective.[33][34]

Palestine

In contrast, Palestinian writers draw a direct connection from the Holocaust to the Nakba and see themselves as the ultimate victim of the Nazis.[19] On the Palestinian side, Bar-On and Sarsar credit Azmi Bishara (1996), Edward Said (1997) and Naim Ateek (2001) as early pioneers of the notion of connecting Palestinian acknowledgement of the Holocaust to Israeli Jewish recognition of the Nakba. In his 1992 work Between Place and Space, Bishara is quoted as arguing: "In order for the victim to forgive, he must be recognized as a victim. That is the difference between a historic compromise and a cease-fire."[28] In an essay, Said criticized the use of comparisons between the two events as a means of delegitimizing the other side or justifying present-day violence and oppression.[35] He stated that connecting the Holocaust to the Nakba was "understanding what is universal about a human experience under calamitous conditions. It means compassion, human sympathy, and utter recoil from the notion of killing people for ethnic, religious, or nationalist reasons".[36]

One response in Palestine and the Arab world to the Western view of the Holocaust as the ultimate evil is Holocaust denial. According to Israeli sociologist Sammy Smooha, Holocaust denial by Palestinians is a kind of protest "to express strong objection to the portrayal of the Jews as the ultimate victim and to the underrating of the Palestinians as a victim".[37] According to Gilbert Achcar, Israel especially and other Western countries to a lesser extent underestimate Arab expressions of sympathy for Holocaust victims.[37]

International perspectives

Raphael Lemkin, the inventor of the concept of genocide, supported Zionism and likely considered the Nakba justified in line with mainstream Zionist views. Although he championed the independence of "small nations", especially the Jews, Lemkin did not believe in granting independence to groups, such as Palestinian Arabs, that he thought were not sufficiently developed to qualify as nations.[38] In his 2021 book The Problems of Genocide, historian A. Dirk Moses argues that the universalization of the Holocaust in the definition of genocide has served to exclude other acts—including the Nakba—from moral opprobrium. Moses writes, "Today, this regime ascribes Palestinians the role of the villains in a global drama about preventing genocide and a 'second Holocaust' for resisting colonization of and expulsion from their land."[39]

Some historians such as Moses and Donald Bloxham have criticized the perceived uniqueness of the Holocaust, and instead view it and the Nakba as part of broader trends of settler colonialism and ethnic nationalism leading to genocide and ethnic cleansing in the European rimlands.[40] There is a general consensus that colonialism is a valuable frame of analysis for Nazism and the Holocaust.[41] Historian Omer Bartov writes that various competing nationalisms in east-central Europe excluded Jews. Their negative treatment by non-Jewish neighbors during and after the Holocaust "by all accounts... rendered many of them indifferent and callous and at times vengeful toward the Arab population they encountered in Palestine".[42]

Literature

Warsaw Ghetto boy, which has been used in comparisons between the Holocaust and the Israeli–Palestinian conflict

Some Israeli–Jewish writers have addressed both the Holocaust and Nakba in their work. As early as 1949, in his novella Hirbet Hiz‘ah S. Yizhar dealt with the expulsion of Palestinians by Israeli forces, the narrator directly comparing the plight of Palestinian refugees to that of Jewish refugees.[43] In an interview, Yizhar explained that the action of expelling Palestinians contradicted his earlier beliefs about what Zionism would be.[44] In a letter, Israeli minister of agriculture Aharon Zisling expressed his revulsion at the al-Dawayima massacre, stating: "Nazi acts have been committed by Jews as well".[45] In 1952, Avot Yeshurun published the poem "Passover on Caves" in Haaretz, he later explained the poem: "The Holocaust of European Jewry and the Holocaust of Palestinian Arabs, a single Holocaust of the Jewish People. The two gaze directly into one another's face."[46] These few dissenting responses came soon after the Nakba, when the Holocaust also was a recent event.[47]

In 1969 the Palestinian novelist Ghassan Kanafani published a novel, Return to Haifa in which a Palestinian couple who had fled Haifa during the nakba, return to their home city, and encounter a Jewish couple – the husband is a Holocaust survivor- who, on finding their empty home, occupied it and raised the young boy they found there as a Jew. This son of the Palestinian couple, Dov, is engaged in military service with the IDF, while their other son in Ramallah has joined the PLO's fedayeen. The novel explores the tensions that arise from the interactions of these two traumatically displaced families.[48]

Lebanese novelist Elias Khoury's epic novel Bab Al-Shams (Gate of the Sun), originally published in 1998, tells the history of Palestine.[5]

Palestinian-American writer Susan Abulhawa's bestselling novel Mornings in Jenin (2010) covers the history of a Palestinian family from the 1930s until 2002. Although the book portrays anti-Arab racism and settler colonialism, it also engages with the Holocaust.[49] The novel's protagonists are a Jewish couple who are Holocaust survivors and a Palestinian couple displaced by the Nakba. The latter have one child, David, who is separated from his parents and adopted by the Jewish couple who are infertile. David later fights against his younger Palestinian brothers after the 1967 war during the Israeli occupation of the West Bank. By the third generation, the families achieve reconciliation with some of them living together in the United States.[50]

The Warsaw Ghetto boy, an iconic image of the Holocaust, has been used in comparisons with the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, especially in the award-winning film Waltz with Bashir.[51]

The 2018 book The Holocaust and the Nakba makes the case that "unless we can hold these two moments in our hearts and minds as part of the same story, there can be no moving forward in the seemingly unmovable conflict that is Israel-Palestine".[16]

Consequences

Hannah Arendt wrote that the formation of Israel solved the Jewish question in Europe, but "merely produced a new category of refugees, the Arabs, thereby increasing the number of stateless".[52] She criticized the way that Jewish historians had portrayed Jews "not [as] history-makers but history-sufferers, preserving a kind of eternal identity of goodness whose monotony was disturbed only by the equally monotonous chronicle of persecutions and pogroms". In her view, this perception of Jewish history allowed the Holocaust and the Arab–Israeli conflict to be presented as parts of a continuum of persecution of Jews.[53]

According to Bashir Bashir and Amos Goldberg "a joint Arab-Jewish public deliberation on the traumatic memories of these two events is not only possible, however challenging and disruptive it may be, but also fundamental for producing an egalitarian and inclusive ethics of binationalism in Israel/Palestine".[54]

Elias Khoury states that "The Holocaust and the Nakba are not mirror images, but the Jew and the Palestinian are able to become mirror images of human suffering if they disabuse themselves of the delusion of exclusionist, national ideologies." He views setting aside these ideologies as part of a universal struggle against racism.[55]

Criticism

Many Jewish scholars argue that comparisons between the Holocaust and the Nakba follow a broader pattern of erasure of Jewish indigeneity to Israel[56], Jewish history in Israel[57], and Jewish struggle for self-determination, particularly by portraying Jewish return and statehood as being "facilitated by the West out of guilt over the Holocaust." Canadian sociologist Joseph Spoerl describes this phenomena writing that:

Thus, the nakba—the tragedy of the Palestinian refugees who were displaced by the war of 1948—is entirely the fault of the Zionists and their Western supporters, not of the Palestinians themselves. According to this narrative, in 1948, the Zionists were waging a war of preplanned ethnic cleansing, not a war of self-defense against Palestinian aggressors with genocidal intentions and a history of Nazi collaboration. Therefore, any accusation of genocide and genocidal hatred should be directed only at Westerners and Zionists, not at Palestinians or Arabs.[58]

Other scholars have also critiqued the validity of the narratives, norms and imaginaries used in postcolonial theory which themselves have been used to justify territorial exclusion, expulsion and extermination of Jews and other populations:

The story of the liquidation of the Jews from the Arab-Muslim world confers a historical, political, regional, and national meaning, internal to the Arab-Muslim world, on the history of these same Jews, who have become the majority in the state of Israel and are therefore the true interlocutors of the Palestinians with respect to the controversy about the “original sin.” They too have the keys to their houses from which they were driven out; they too were despoiled, and infinitely more than the Palestinians! The Palestinians’ claims against Israel do not impress them; they reinforce all the more their own political, national, and financial claims. Those who find themselves accused of colonialism and of racism, of the “original sin,” are the very people whom the Arab-Muslim world, with the complicity of the Palestinians, discriminated against, persecuted, and drove from their homes, and who found in Israel an opportunity to recover.[59]

A growing number of publications also challenge the view that the Palestinian nationalist cause had no relationship with Nazi Germany or the Holocaust.[60][61][62][63][64][65]

Citations

  1. ^ Shumsky 2018, p. 231.
  2. ^ Shumsky 2018, p. 23.
  3. ^ Shumsky 2018, p. 216.
  4. ^ Moses 2021b, p. 332.
  5. ^ a b c Fischer 2020, p. 2.
  6. ^ Confino 2018, p. 143.
  7. ^ Confino 2018, pp. 135, 139.
  8. ^ Confino 2018, p. 136.
  9. ^ Wermenbol 2021, p. 304.
  10. ^ Bashir & Goldberg 2014, p. 78.
  11. ^ Fierke 2014, pp. 787–788.
  12. ^ Moses 2021b, pp. 16, 482.
  13. ^ Fierke 2014, p. 804.
  14. ^ Wermenbol 2021, pp. 306–307.
  15. ^ Wermenbol 2021, p. 307.
  16. ^ a b Rose 2018, p. 353.
  17. ^ Bartov 2019, p. 25.
  18. ^ Bergen et al. 2021, p. 172.
  19. ^ a b Wermenbol 2021, pp. 307–308.
  20. ^ Fischer 2020, p. 3.
  21. ^ Confino 2018, p. 138.
  22. ^ a b c Stav 2012, p. 89.
  23. ^ Marwecki 2020, p. 93.
  24. ^ a b Marwecki 2020, pp. 93–94.
  25. ^ a b Marwecki 2020, p. 161.
  26. ^ Marwecki 2020, p. 225.
  27. ^ Stav 2012, pp. 95–96.
  28. ^ a b c Bar-On & Sarsar 2004.
  29. ^ Marwecki 2020, p. 55.
  30. ^ Lustick 2006, p. 54.
  31. ^ Lustick 2006, pp. 67–68.
  32. ^ Marwecki 2020, p. 168.
  33. ^ Marwecki 2020, p. 196.
  34. ^ Moses 2021a.
  35. ^ Stav 2012, p. 90.
  36. ^ Khoury 2020, pp. 13–14.
  37. ^ a b Fischer 2020, p. 4.
  38. ^ Moses 2021b, pp. 357–358.
  39. ^ Moses 2021b, pp. 508–511.
  40. ^ Khoury 2020, p. 14.
  41. ^ Bergen et al. 2021, p. 176.
  42. ^ Bartov 2019, pp. 32–33, 36.
  43. ^ Stav 2012, pp. 85–86.
  44. ^ Stav 2012, p. 87.
  45. ^ Stav 2012, p. 88.
  46. ^ Confino 2018, p. 137.
  47. ^ Stav 2012, pp. 88–89.
  48. ^ Ghanim 2019, pp. 92–113.
  49. ^ Fischer 2020, pp. 2–3.
  50. ^ Fischer 2020, pp. 4–5.
  51. ^ Stav 2012, pp. 93–94.
  52. ^ Khoury 2020, pp. 14–15.
  53. ^ Stav 2012, pp. 90–91.
  54. ^ Bashir & Goldberg 2014, p. 77.
  55. ^ Khoury 2020, p. 13.
  56. ^ "Counterpoint: The native people of Israel". The Canadian Jewish News. 4 June 2018. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  57. ^ Bellerose, Ryan (8 February 2017). "Are Jews Indigenous to the Land of Israel?".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  58. ^ Spoerl, Joseph S. (2014). "Palestinians, Arabs, and the Holocaust". Jewish Political Studies Review. 26 (1/2): 14–47. ISSN 0792-335X.
  59. ^ Trigano, Shmuel (2019). "Deconstructing the Three Stages of the Nakba Myth". Jewish Political Studies Review. 30 (3/4): 45–54. ISSN 0792-335X.
  60. ^ Miller, Rory (2011-09). "The Mufti of Jerusalem and the Nazis: The Berlin Years". Middle Eastern Studies. 47 (5): 835–837. doi:10.1080/00263206.2011.606611. ISSN 0026-3206. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  61. ^ "Nazi Palestine: the plans for the extermination of the Jews in Palestine". Choice Reviews Online. 48 (08): 48–4650-48-4650. 1 April 2011. doi:10.5860/choice.48-4650. ISSN 0009-4978.
  62. ^ Herf, Jeffrey (2011). Nazi propaganda for the Arab world. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-16805-1. OCLC 697463751.
  63. ^ Herf, Jeffrey (2017), "Nazi Propaganda to the Arab World During World War II and the Holocaust: and Its Aftereffects", Antisemitism Before and Since the Holocaust, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 183–204, ISBN 978-3-319-48865-3, retrieved 8 March 2023
  64. ^ Verfasser, Schwanitz, Wolfgang G. 1955-. Islam in Europa, Revolten in Mittelost Islamismus und Genozid von Wilhelm II. und Enver Pascha über Hitler und al-Husaini bis Arafat, Usama Bin Ladin und Ahmadinejad sowie Gespräche mit Bernard Lewis. ISBN 978-3-86464-018-6. OCLC 896872837. {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  65. ^ Rubin, Barry M. Nazis, Islamists, and the making of the modern Middle East. ISBN 978-0-300-14090-3. OCLC 940828691.

Sources

Further reading