Selected Quotes
from and
about
Judaism,
Zionism, Israel, Jewish Apartheid...
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"There is no such thing
as a Palestinian people... It is not as if we came and threw
them out and took their country. They didn't exist."
-- Golda Meir, statement to
The Sunday Times, 15 June, 1969.
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"How can we return the
occupied territories? There is nobody to return them
to."
-- Golda Meir (quoted in
Chapter 13 of The Zionist Connection II: What Price
Peace by Alfred Lilienthal).
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"We shall try to spirit
the penniless population across the border by procuring
employment for it in the transit countries, while denying it
any employment in our own country .... expropriation and the
removal of the poor must be carried out discreetly and
circumspectly."
-- Theodore Herzl (from
Rafael Patai, Ed. The Complete Diaries of Theodore Herzl,
Vol I).
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"... it is the duty of the
[Israeli] leadership to explain to the public a number of truths.
One truth is that there is no Zionism, no settlement, and no Jewish
state without evacuating Arabs, and without expropriating lands and
their fencing off."
-- Yesha'ayahu
Ben-Porat, (Yedi'ot Aharonot 07/14/1972)
responding to public controversy regarding the Israeli
evictions of Palestinians in Rafah, Gaza, in 1972. (Cited in
Nur Masalha's "A Land Without A People", 1997, p.98)
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Speaking about Zionism, and
its effects on the indiginous Palestinians: (quotes from
Alfred Lilienthal's The Zionist Connection II: What Price
Peace):
"We seem to have
thought of everything -- except the Arabs" -
- Judah Magnes
"If this be the
Messiah, then I do not wish to see his coming"
-- Ahad Ha'am speaking
of Zionism.
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"I have learned that the
state of Israel cannot be ruled in our generation without
deceit and adventurism."
-- Moshe Sharett, Israel's
first Foreign Minister and later a Prime Minister (p.51
Simha Flapan, "The Birth of Israel", 1987).
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"The very point of
Labor's Zionist program is to have as much land as possible
and as few Arabs as possible!"
--Yitzhak Navon
("moderate" ex-Israeli president and a leading labor
party politician.) Cited on p.179 of Nur Masalha's A Land
without a People who cites Bernard Avishai's The
Tragedy of Zionism, 1985, p.340.
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"Israel must decide on
the source of the authority of the Israeli state and
society: either democracy or theocracy. The corrupt
combination of state and religion had corrupted both the
state and the religious establishment"
-- Knesset Speaker Avraham
Burg quoted in The Jerusalem Post of Oct 7,
1999.
(http://www.jpost.com/com/Archive/07.Oct.1999/).
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"We declare openly that
the Arabs have no right to settle on even one centimeter of
Eretz Israel.... Force is all they do or ever will
understand. We shall use the ultimate force until the
Palestinians come crawling to us on all fours ... When we
have settled the land, all the Arabs will be able to do will
be to scurry around like drugged roaches in a bottle."
-- Israeli Chief of Staff
Rafael Eitan (Gad Becker, Yediot Ahronot
4/13/1983, N.Y. Times 4/14/1983).
"Arabs tend to confess;
it's part of their nature"
-- Moshe Etzioni, an
Israeli high court justice, in an interview with Amnesty
International, when asked about the unusually high rate of
confessions from Palestinians (indicating Israel's use of
torture), 1977. Quote from a Noam Chomsky interview
in the progressive.
"One million Arabs are
not worth a Jewish fingernail."
-- Rabbi Ya'acov Perin in
his eulogy at the funeral of mass murderer Dr. Baruch
Goldstein (Cited in N.Y. Times, Feb. 28, 1994, p.
1).
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Discrimination Against
Non-Jews (Israeli-Arabs)
citizens of Israel:
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Israeli-Arabs are
discriminated against based on military service.
Israeli-Arabs don't serve in the Israeli Army and most job
applications require, implicitly at least, army service for
employment. Also,
"Arab towns and villages have been disadvantaged in the
allocation of budgets and services, leading to wide gaps in
development between most Arab localities and their Jewish
neighbors"
-- Alouph Hareven, Near
East Report (AIPAC newsletter), 10/11/1993.
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The Christian population of
(the ever expanding) Jerusalem was 30,000 in 1948; today it
is 2000, due to the systematic ethnic cleansing of
Palestinians from that and other areas around Israel.
(Paul Findley's Deliberate Deceptions, 1996)
Unlike Jews, Arabs are always denied a permission to build
and expand.
92% of the land in Israel
falls under the Administration of the Jewish National Fund,
where the land can not be sold to non-Jews. Result: the 18%
Israeli-Arabs own only 4% of the land.
If, say, a Peruvian converts
to Judaism and emigrates to Israel, he immediately has more
rights than Israeli-Arabs who have lived in the land for
many centuries.
"Israel was among the
countries cited for discrimination in the U.S. State
Department's first annual assessment of religious
persecution around the world. While Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran,
Serbia and Burma were subject to some of the report's
harshest criticism, Israel was cited for denying its Arab
population the same quality of social services that the
nation's Jews receive."
-- The Jewish Telegraphic
Agency (9/13/1999).
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"The long-standing gap in
levels of income between Jewish and non-Jewish citizens
continues.... The Arab minority still does not share fully
in the rights granted to, and the obligations imposed on,
Jewish citizens... The authorities continue to hold and
mistreat Palestinian security detainees, and detention and
prison conditions, particularly for Palestinians, are
poor."
-- U.S. Department of
State, Israel and the Occupied Territories: Report on
Human Rights and Practices for 1996.
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"[My]
awareness of the essential nature of Judaism resists the
idea of a Jewish state."
-- Albert Einstein, quoted
in an article
by Mordecai Briemberg published in The Outlook,
04/01-0/15, 1998.
"We consider ourselves no
longer a nation, but a religious community, and therefore
expect neither a return to Palestine, nor a sacrificial
worship under the sons of Aaron, nor the restoration of any
of the laws concerning the Jewish state."
-- The Pittsburgh Platform,
1885, the classic statement of the protestant or Reform
Judaism)
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Zionism had roots in
Jewish Messianism. It, however, translated this Messianism
into plans for colonization. Most Jews (reform and orthodox)
opposed Zionism until WWII. Even though Orthodox Jews wanted
to live in Jerusalem, they still considered Zionism a
heresy, as the return of Jewish political control of the
land of Israel would take place only by the Messiah in his
coming. Their desire to live in Israel was only for the
purpose of more effective prayer in the Holy land. Ashkenazi
Orthodox Jews in addition were offended by Zionism's effort
to transform Hebrew into a modern secular language.
(-- Paraphrased from "The
Wrath of Jonah " by Rosemary and Herman
Ruether, 1989)
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Zionist-Nazi-Fascist
Alliance
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"In working for
Palestine, I would even ally myself with the devil"
-- Vladimir Jabotinsky
founder of Revisionist Zionism (Likud party roots)
responding to condemnation for his alliance with Ukranian
pogromist Petlyura.
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"If I knew that it was
possible to save all the children of Germany by transporting
them to England, and only half by transferring them to the
Land of Israel, I would choose the latter, for before us
lies not only the numbers of these children but the
historical reckoning of the people of Israel."
-- Ben-Gurion (Quoted on pp
855-56 in Shabtai Teveth's Ben-Gurion in a slightly
different translation).
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In 1941, Yitzhak
Shamir committed:
"an unforgivable crime from the moral point of view: he
preached an alliance with Hitler, with Nazi Germany, against
Great Britain."
-- Bar Zohar "Le
prophète armé: Ben Gourion." (Fayard.
Paris 1966, p.99.).
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"The saving of the Jews
in Europe did not figure at the head of the list of
priorities of the ruling class. It was the foundation of the
State which was primordial in their eyes."
-- Tom Segev. "Le
septième million" (the Seventh Million) Ed. Liana
Levi, Paris, 1993, p.539.
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Zionism emerged in response
to anti-Semitism. However, Zionism then turned to
anti-Semitism as a means to achieve its goals. Zionists
looked at anti-Semites as allies in helping them get the
Jews out of Europe. This alliance indicates that the
Zionists were not really interested in eliminating the
suffering of the Jews.
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Vladimir Jabotinsky
Despite his alliance with Ukranian pogromist Petlyura,
it wasn't Jabotinsky who perpetrated the worst alliance with
the Nazis, but the Labor Zionists: Ben-Gurion and Weizmann.
In 1933 a world boycott German goods spontaneously emerged.
Had this boycott been supported by all Jews, Zionists and
non-Zionists, some believe that the German economy would
have cracked and Hitler toppled. However, it was thanks to
Labor Zionist and their "transfer" (ha'avara) agreements
with the Nazis, that led to many trade agreements which
resulted in the failure of the world boycott against the
Nazis. Jabotnisky opposed the transfer agreement, and wanted
to champion the boycott. However, during WWII, his heirs
(e.g. Begin, Stern, Shamir) attempted their own alliance
with the Nazis against the British who were occupying
Palestine at the time.
(Paraphrased from "The Wrath of
Jonah" by Rosemary and Herman Ruether, 1989). This
information can also be found in Brenner's Zionism in
the Age of the Dictators; 1983.
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Zionism's
Indifference to the Genocide of Jews.
Pointing fingers at the
world for its indifference to the genocide of the Jews,
while busy using the Holocaust for political gains at the
expense of the Palestinians, Zionists have a lot to hide
about their indifference, even collaboration, with
the Nazis and the Fascists, as their fellow Jews were being
sent to concentration camps. It seems that this
finger-pointing by the Zionists is nothing more than a smoke
screen to hide their dark past of allowing other Jews
to die, while the Zionists were lobbying to rob Palestinians
of their country. Excellent books on the topic are
Zionism in the Age of the Dictators by Lenni
Brenner and The Seventh Million by Tom
Segev; (both authors are Jews).
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From the Jewish Telegraphic Agency
(10/23/2000) www.jta.org:
"The U.S. House of Representatives dropped a resolution
that would have blamed Turkey for a genocide of Armenians 85
years ago. The Turkish Jewish community asked U.S. lawmakers
to consider the ramifications of the resolution after
Turkey, an ally of Israel and the United States, threatened
trade sanctions and withdrawing military cooperation with
the United States."
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John Roth U.S.
Holocaust Museum director-elect, was going to become
director in 08/1998, but resigned due to a fiasco resulting
from a "controversial" comment he made in 1988 where he
compared treatment of the Palestinians by Israel to that of
the Jews by the Nazis. Here's a portion of an article by
Jacqueline Trescott in the June 18, 1998 issue of the
Washington Post.
"The storm that
erupted around Roth started when the Forward, a
Jewish weekly, reported that the scholar [Roth]
had compared the treatment of the Jews by Nazi
Germany during World War II to the present-day treatment
of the Palestinians by Israel. The article in question
first appeared in 1988, and when the essay was
resurrected Roth publicly apologized. Still the
opposition escalated last week when two congressmen told
the museum officials that they were offended by that view
and others of Roth and that the museum should reconsider
its choice." (my emphasis)
The leaders of opposition to
Roth were pro-Zionist/pro-Israel organizations who benefit
politically from the Holocaust such as the Anti-Defamation
League and the Zionist Organization of America. Conclusion:
it is not allowable to be both anti-Israel and a Holocaust
scholar simultaneously (hence, equating anti-Zionism with
anti-Semitism). Here again is a fine example of the
Zionists' effort of hiding their dark ideology of racism and
history of alliance with anti-Semites and racism against
Palestinian (manifested as the state of Israel), behind the
motto of fighting the persecution of Jews. At least Hitler
didn't hide his racism behind a human rights
front!
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"In our country there is
room only for the Jews. We shall say to the Arabs: Get out!
If they don't agree, if they resist, we shall drive them out
by force."
-- Professor Ben-Zion Dinur,
Israel's First Minister of Education, 1954, from History
of the Haganah.
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"After the Palmach men
left [Deir Yassin], the men of the
[Irgun and Stern Gang] started a shameful
massacre of the inhabitants...[The massacre]
was carried out...when the village was in Jewish hands, and
without the inhabitants having taken any provocative
action..."
-- Meir Pa'il, official
Haganah observer on the scene, Yediot Ahranot, April
29, 1972)
"All of the killed, with
very few exceptions, were old men, women or children. The
dead we found were all unjust victims, and
none of them had died with a weapon in their hands."
-- Eliyahu Arieli,
Haganah member who arrived at Deir Yassin shortly after the
massacre, O Jerusalem, Collins and Lapierre, 1972.
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"There is no doubt that
many sexual atrocities were committed by the attacking Jews.
Many young girls were raped and later slaughtered. Old women
were also molested."
-- General Richard Catling,
British Army Assistant Inspector after interrogating several
female survivors (The Palestinian Catastrophe,
Michael Palumbo, 1987).
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Hebron Massacre
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" Here lies the saint,
Doctor Baruch Kapal Goldstein, blessed be the memory of the
righteous and holy man, may the Lord revenge his blood, who
devoted his soul for the Jews, Jewish religion and Jewish
land. His hands are clean and his heart is clear. He was
killed as a martyr of God on the 14th of Adar, Purim, in the
year 5754. "
-- Thus goes the inscription on the
grave, (made as a shrine visited by pilgrims), of the mass
murderer Baruch Goldstein. An American Physician and
an Israeli settler of Hebron, Goldstein indiscriminately
murdered 29 worshipers kneeling in a mosque in
1994.
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Few notes on the
Hebron Massacre by Baruch Goldstein:
- Allowing the extremists
and settlers to crown Goldstein a hero, by building him a
shrine, Israel is giving a "green light" to other
extremists -- all heavily and legally armed, with
extensive criminal record-- to follow suit.
- The American media was
careful to label Goldstein an extremist rather than a
terrorist.
- Still the U.S. and
Israel continue to ignore the security needs of the
Palestinians
- Don't expect the Israeli
authorities to demolish the house of the family of this
terrorist.
Only recently (May 1998)
the Israeli government voted to remove the memorial at
the site, (octagonal stone plaza, candles, book holders,
water fountain), but not the grave itself or the
tombstone. The reason for Israel's sudden conscientious
action is, in my opinion, due to the shrine attracting
some world attention, which could mean the attention of
U.S. public, a major source of Israel's income. The
shrine was finally dismantled on December 29, 1999,
almost six years after the massacre.
As of June 1998, the Hebron
Massacre was the last time, a U.N. resolution passed
condemning Israel (all others were shot down by U.S.
vetos)
Graveside
Party Celebrates Hebron Mass
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"Because we Jews know
what it is to suffer, we must not oppress others."
-- Felicia Langer,
Israeli Jew human rights activist.
UN Human Rights Commisson
"declares that Israel's greave breaches of the Geneva
Convention relative to the protection of civilian persons in
the time of war of 12 August, 1949, are war crimes and an
affront against humanity."
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In Israel, torture, (or as
Israel calls it "moderate physical and psychological
pressure" to avoid world/U.S. outcry), is legal and
systematic. Some of the methods used are: tie detainees into
a kindergarten chair for many hours; shake them violently;
cover their heads with a rag bag soaked in vomit (or other
foul odored substances); expose them to painfully loud music
for extended periods of time; hang them in contorted
positions; deprive them from sleep. Attractive methods of
torture also include anything that will leave little or no
immediately visible markings recognizable by an average
reporter.
On September 6, 1999, Israel
"banned torture". However, since the "culture of torture" is
deeply-ingrained in Israel, then a serious punishment of
interrogators who violate this law must be instituted.
Sadly, signs indicate otherwise, as interrogators are
already given a wink, since "a court might accept the
argument that physical force was necessary." (AP, Sep
6).
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Henry Kissinger,
former U.S. Secretary of State recommended that Israel put
down the Palestinian uprising "as quickly as
possible--overwhelmingly, brutally and rapidly. The
insurrection must be quelled immediately, and the first step
should be to throw out television, a la South Africa. To be
sure, there will be international criticism of the step, but
it will dissipate in short order." He added: "There are no
awards for losing with moderation."
-- Quoted in 12/1997 article by
Donald Neff in The
Washington Report on Middle
East Affairs.
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When the subject is
torture, there can be no "middle-of-the-road" policy, no
compromise, no putting our head in the sand, no flexible and
lenient formulas. The considerable experience that has been
accumulated on this issue clearly demonstrates the need for
a vigilant and uncompromising moral stance.
-- Ha'aretz Editorial,
12/13/1999, on Israel's attempt to find ways to allow
torture under "special circumstances".
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"It's not a matter of
maintaining the status quo. We have to create a dynamic
state, oriented towards expansion."
-- David Ben Gurion,
Israel´s first Prime Minister.
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"Take the American
declaration of Independence. It contains no mention of
territorial limits. We are not obliged to fix the limits of
the State."
-- Moshe Dayan,
"Jerusalem Post", 08/10/1967.
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"Every school child knows
that there is no such thing in history as a final
arrangement -- not with regard to the regime, not with
regard to borders, and not with regard to international
agreements."
-- Ben Gurion, War
Diaries, 12/03/1947 following Israel's "acceptance" of
the U.N. Partition of 11/29/1947 (Simha Flapan, "Birth of
Israel", 1987, p.13).
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"The settlement of the
Land of Israel is the essence of Zionism. Without
settlement, we will not fulfill Zionism. It's that simple."
-- Yitzhak Shamir, Ma'ariv,
02/21/1997.
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Purpose of Settlement, in pure and simple language:
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"In strategic terms, the
settlements (in Judea, Samaria, and Gaza) are of no
importance." What makes them important, he added, was
that "they constitute an obstacle, an unsurmountable
obstacle to the establishment of an independent Arab State
west of the river Jordan."
--Binyamin Begin, (son
of the late Menahem Begin and a prominent voice in the Likud
party writing in 1991, Quoted on page 159 of Findley's
Deliberate Deceptions)
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"Without them
[the settlements] the IDF [Israeli
Defense Force] would be a foreign army ruling a
foreign population."
-- Defense Minister Moshe Dayan
(quoted in Geoffrey Aronson's Settlements and the
Israeli-Palestinian Negotiations, Institute for
Palestinian Studies).
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Moshe Dayan:
"the settlements
established in the territories are there forever, and the
future frontiers will include these settlements as part of
Israel"
Dayan also stated that he
"preferred Sharm el-Sheikh without peace to a peace
without Sharm el-Sheikh".
"From the point of view
of the security of the state, the establishment of the
settlements has no great importance.".
-- Dayan's statements all
quoted in Chomsky's "The Fateful Triangle" pp.
104-5.
"Our fathers had reached
the frontiers recognized in the partition plan; the Six-Day
War generation has managed to reach Suez, Jordan, and the
Golan Heights. This is not the end. After the present
cease-fire lines, there will be new ones. They will extend
beyond Jordan ... to Lebanon and ... to central Syria as
well."
-- Moshe Dayan to Zionist
youth at a meeting in the Golan Heights July,
1968.
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"Jewish villages were
built in the place of Arab villages. You do not even know
the names of these Arab villages, and I do not blame you
because geography books no longer exist, not only do the
books not exist, the Arab villages are not there either.
Nahlal arose in the place of Mahlul; Kibbutz Gvat in the
place of Jibta; Kibbutz Sarid in the place of Huneifis; and
Kefar Yehushu'a in the place of Tal al-Shuman. There is not
one single place built in this country that did not have a
former Arab population."
-- Moshe Dayan, addressing
the Technion (Israel Institute of Technology), Haifa. Quoted
in Ha'aretz, 04/04/1969.
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Israel presents Jerusalem
as a "unified" city whose indivisibility derives from its
role as the Jews' sacred and historical capital. It is true
that the Jews have a claim to the holy places in and around
the Old City. But that historical core represents only three
percent of the area of municipal Jerusalem. The other 97
percent was by no means exclusively Jewish. "West"
Jerusalem, the 38 square kilometers ruled by Israel as its
capital from 1948-67, was built only in the second half of
the nineteenth century. Although West Jerusalem is almost
exclusively Jewish (the main exception being part of Beit
Safafa village), before 1948 about 40 percent of it was
owned by Palestinians. As for "East" Jerusalem, although 70
square kilometers was annexed in 1967, only 6.5 square
kilometers thereof actually constituted the Jordanian part
of the city. The other 63.5 square kilometers -- 90 percent
of the land annexed by Israel as "East Jerusalem" -- in fact
belonged to 28 Palestinian West bank villages which suddenly
found themselves part of an "indivisible," "historic" and
"sacred" Jewish city. Wallejeh, Sawakhreh and Kafr 'Amr,
Palestinian villages which until today Israelis have never
heard of, suddenly acquired the same historical significance
for the Jewish people as the Western Wall, making Israeli
claims to the entire area of "municipal" Jerusalem seem
unassailable. An "inner ring" of settlements has been built
on the land of this fictitious "East Jerusalem" since 1967.
This series of large satellite cities -- Ramot, Rekhes
Shuafat, Pigat Ze'ev, Neveh Ya'akov, East Talipot, Har Homa
and Gilo, not to mention the incipient Israeli
"neighborhoods" in Ra's al-Amud, Silwan and Shaykh Jarrah --
means that "East Jerusalem" now contains more Israelis
(about 200,000) than Palestinians. Municipal Jerusalem is an
artificial entity, the product of recent military conquest
and settlement, rather than an organic city of historic
value to the Jewish people.
-- Professor Jeff Halper
from a Merip
article (Fall
2000).
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Ha'aretz Editorial
09/24/1998: on settler violence:
"The old cry of the late
Prof. Yeshayahu Leibowitz that "the occupation corrupts" is
today correct in the full sense of the word. Israel can no
longer live with the illusion that it is maintaining a
democratic way of life while at the same time a separate
normative system exists for the settlers that tramples human
rights in the territories to the point where those who kill
are treated forgivingly".
"They [Israel]
have typically concealed the continually expansionist nature
of their project from their western sponsors and pursued a
"step by step" process toward these goals. While pointing to
militant Arab rhetoric to frighten Jews and convince them
that the Arab world is genocidal against Jews and that no
peace is possible with them, Israeli leaders have been quite
aware of the actual inability of the Arab world to deliver
on this militant rhetoric. "
-- Rosemary and Herman
Ruether in "The Wrath of Jonah" (1989)
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Ethnic Cleansing ("transfer"), the "Demography
Problem", Home Demolitions, Tree
Uprooting
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"The main difference
between Bosnia and Palestine is that ethnic cleansing in the
former took place in the form of dramatic massacres and
slaughters which caught the world's attention, whereas in
Palestine what is taking place is a drop-by-drop tactic in
which one or two houses are demolished daily, a few acres
are taken here and there every day, a few people are forced
to leave"
-- Edward Said (Washington
Report 09/1998).
"The human rights
organization Amnesty International said in a report in
December that Israel has made about 16,700 Palestinians
homeless by destroying at least 2,650 houses since
1987"
-- From an AP report on
home demolitions by Israel dated 04/23/2000.
"The demolition and
sealing of houses are among the most severe methods of
punishment used by the authorities against Palestinians in
the Occupied Territories. To our knowledge, this harsh form
of punishment is unique to Israel and is not employed by any
other nation. Demolition and sealing of houses in the
territories contravene international law that prohibits
collective punishment and arbitrary injury to
property."
-- B'Tselem, an Israeli
Human Rights Organization.
(http://www2.iol.co.il/btselem/).
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"... we have no solution,
that you shall continue to live like dogs, and whoever wants
to can leave -- and we will see where this process leads? In
five years we may have 200,000 less people -- and that is a
matter of enorous importance."
-- Moshe Dayan encouraging
the transfer of Gaza Strip refugees to Jordan (from Noam
Chomsky's Deterring Democracy, 1992, p.434, quoted in
Nur Masalha's A Land Without A People, 1997
p.92).
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"It is an open secret
that Israeli policy makers hoped for a massive emigration of
Palestinians as a result of economic and demographic
pressure. Therefore, they also developed a clever system
which caused numerous Palestinians born here to lose their
residency rights when they went to work or study abroad."
-- Amira Hass in 08/26/1998
Ha'aretz Op'Ed titled The Settlers are Not to
Blame.
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While campaigning for the
prime ministership, Binyamin Netanyahu Criticized his Labor
party opponents for missing an opportunity during the
Tiannamen Square massacre. "Had he been prime minister,
he said, he would have seized the chance then, while the
world was watching China, to carry out the transfer of the
Palestinians."
-- p. 137 Washington Report
09/1998.
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"I don't sign orders to
destroy the houses of Jews, only of Arabs,"
-- Haim Miller, deputy
mayor of Jerusalem and acting mayor in Olmert's absence,
quoted in Yediot Aharonot, Feb. 7, 1998.
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"[Israel
will] create in the course of the next 10 or 20 years
conditions which would attract natural and voluntary
migration of the refugees from the Gaza Strip and the west
Bank to Jordan. To achieve this we have to come to agreement
with King Hussein and not with Yasser Arafat."
-- Yitzhak Rabin (a "Prince
of Peace" by Clinton's standards), explaining his method of
ethnically cleansing the occupied land without stirring a
world outcry. (Quoted in David Shipler in the New York
Times, 04/04/1983 citing Meir Cohen's remarks to the
Kenesset's foreign affairs and defense committee on March
16.)
(Apparently, Rabin's method of
"creating conditions that will prompt Palestinian migration"
wasn't as efficient as desired, therefore, house demolitions
and rejection of building permits to Palestinians were
adopted as additional measures.In 1900 there were about
550,000 Palestinians and 50,000 Jews. Palestinians. Today,
despite the extremely high birth-rate of the Palestinians,
there are about 900,000 Palestinians (Israeli-Arabs, who own
4 percent of Israel) in Israel, 4.5 million Jews (owning 96
percent of Israel), and about 2.5 million Palestinians
crammed in a small, highly-dense and disconnected areas in
the occupied territories.)
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Since its founding one of
Israel's main goals was to change the demography of
Palestine and Jerusalem, by luring -- even by forcing
-- Jews to emigrate to Israel, (over other countries,)
hence, dispossessing more Palestinians. In a visit to the
U.S. in Feb 1987 Yitzhak Shamir asked secretary Shultz to
stop offering special refugee status to Soviet Jews. (See
New York Times article Israel Asking U.S. to Bar Soviet
Jews by Ari Goldman 03/01/1987) Hence, once again
Zionism is interested in Jews as number-boosters rather than
caring about their well being and "freedom." In addition,
there were indications that Israel's madness in forcing Jews
(especially Arab Sephardic ones) to go to Israel, have
reached the level of sending Israeli secret agents to
terrorize some Arab Jewish communities in their countries.
Examples of this are in the case of Iraqi Jews, 125,000 of
whom (97%) fled to Israel in the early 50's. (See David
Hirst The Gun and the Olive Branch pp. 155-64, 1984
quoted in Ruether's The Wrath of Jonah,
1989).
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"Nahum
Goldman, an eminent Zionist Leader, suggested in
1971 that rather than stressing the emigration [of
Russian Jews to Israel] issue, the Zionist movement
should concentrate on securing human rights for Jews
remaining inside the USSR. His invitation to address the
World Zionist Congress was promptly withdrawn"
-- p. 187, A. Cockburn,
Dangerous Liaison, 1991, quoting p. 737 of Howard
Sacher's A History of Israel, 1988.
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Rabbi Meir Kahane vs. the
USSR In December 1969, a messenger from Israel, Geula
Cohen, arrived to tell Kahane to cease squabbling with
American blacks and to direct the JDL's (Jewish Defense
League, founded by Kahane) violent energies at a more
important target: the Soviet Union. (Geula Cohen once
withdrew her support for Begin in his urban guerilla days
because she found his policies to be "too mild." While
publicly Golda Meir disassociated herself from Kahane's
activities, "according to Kahane's biographer Robert
Friedman, however, no fewer than three senior active-duty
Mossad officers were involved in the group superintending
the JDL's violent campaign.... Kahane's activities, which
included in 1971 four bombings attacks in New York City
alone."
-- pp. 184-6, A
Cockburn, Dangerous Liaison, 1991.
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Israel's Aggressions
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"I know how at least 80%
of all the incidents with Syria started. We were sending a
tractor to the demilitarized zone and we knew that the
Syrians will shoot. If they did not shoot, we would instruct
the tractor to go deeper, till the Syrians finally got upset
and start shooting. Then we employed artillery, and later
also the air-force... I did that... and Yitzhak Rabin did
that, when he was there..."
-- Moshe Dayan in a 05/1997
revelation.
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"Is this a way to occupy
Hebron? A couple of artillery bombardments on Hebron and not
a single 'Hebronite' would have remained there. Is this a
way to occupy Jerusalem [without driving the Arabs
out]?"
-- Yigal Allon, Labor
deputy Prime minister of Israel chiding the IDF leadership.
Cited on p.179 of Nur Masalha's A Land without a
People who cites Shiloah Ashmat Yerushalayim pp.
53 and 281. Shiloah remarked that Allon's comment also
applied to Nablus (p.54).
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Aggression: "The
Jews again today appeared to be on the offensive, roughly
two-thirds of the incidents being initiated by them and in
their operations they showed evidence of planning, something
absent in general from the Arab attacks."
-- The New York Times,
12/12/1947 from p. 53 of Fallen Pillars by Donald
Neff, (1995).
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1967 War (Six-Day War)
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"To solidify their gains
after the 1967 war, according to UN figures, the Israelis
destroyed during the period between June 11, 1967 and
November 15, 1969 some 7,554 Palestinian Arab homes in the
territories seized during that war; this figure excluded
thirty-five villages in the occupied Golan Heights that were
razed to the ground. In the two years between September 1969
and 1971 the figure was estimated to have reached 16,312
homes."
-- From The Zionist Connection
II, by Alfred Lilienthal, p.160. 1978.
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"Israeli forces occupied
[the Golan Heights] during the 1967 war. With
its occupation of the Golan Heights, Israel expelled over
120,000 inhabitants - mostly Syrians but also several
thousand Palestinian refugees. At the same time, Israel
destroyed two cities, 133 villages and 61 farms. After this
devastation, only 6,396 inhabitants remained in the six
villages left standing. On December 14, 1981, the Israeli
Knesset unilaterally annexed the Golan Heights in clear
contravention of international law. The UN Security Council
subsequently declared the annexation illegal and, to date,
not a single state has recognized it. Israel has so far
built more than 40 settlements, housing over 15,000 settlers
in the Golan Heights."
-- New Yorkers for a Just
Middle East Peace (NYJMEP) from a letter dating
08/13/1998 sent to Perry Odak, Chief Executive Officer of
Ben and Jerry's, protesting a reported agreement between the
popular ice cream company and Eden Springs water company,
based on the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.
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1973 War (Yom Kippur War)
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" The Yom Kippur War was
not fought by Egypt and Syria to threaten the existence of
Israel. It was an all out use of their military force to
achieve a limited political goal. What Sadat wanted by
crossing the canal was to change the political reality and,
thereby, to start a political process from a point more
favorable to him than the one that existed. ."
-- Yitzhak Rabin Quoted on
p.306 of Donald Neff's Warrior Against
Israel.
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Israel's Terrorism
1948, Israel's Birth Myths, the "New Historians", and the Palestinian Nakba (Catastrophe)
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"Jews came and took, by
means of uprooting and expulsion, a land that was Arab. We
wanted to be a colonialist occupier, and yet to come across
as moral at the same time... The Arab armies -- chiefly from
Egypt, Syria, Iraq and Transjordan, now Jordan -- totaled
just over 20,000 men. The core of the Arab nations' fighting
forces remained behind, in part to ensure the internal
stability of their own fledgling regimes.... Crucially,
Israel had a quiet agreement with Transjordan that its Arab
Legion, the strongest of the invading armies, would take
over only the West Bank, which the U.N. partition plan had
intended as the center of a Palestinian Arab
State."
-- Ilan Pappe', Israeli
Historian at Haifa University.
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"Till then everyone in
Israel spoke about Arabs who had just run away in 1948, but
there existed no real historical research on it. There were
two conflicting propaganda versions, one Arab and another
Jewish. As one who received his education in Israel, I
thought I knew that the Arabs had 'run away.' But I knew
nothing else. The Jewish generations of 1948, however, knew
the truth and deliberately misrepresented it. They knew
there were plenty of mass deportations, massacres and rapes
. . . . The soldiers and the officials knew, but they
suppressed what they knew and were deliberately
disseminating lies."
-- Israeli Historian Benny
Morris in an interview with Rami Tal published in
Israeli Daily Yediot Ahronot, December
1994.
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"For it was precisely the
unignorable plight and suffering of the Palestinian Arabs
during April-May of that year that forced the hand of the
reluctant Arab political and military leaders to take the
plunge and invade Palestine on 15-16 May.
-- Israeli Historian
Benny Morris in an 03-04/1998 article in
Tikkun available here.
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"in 1948, we
deliberately, and not just in the heat of the war, expelled
Arabs. Also in 67 after the Six-Day War, we expelled many
Arabs."
-- Tzvi Shiloah, a senior
veteran of the Mapai Party and a former deputy mayor of the
town of Hertzeliyah. (Modelet, no.12, October
1989).
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Expulsion:
"Nazareth, all-Palestinian with 17,000 residents was
captured on 16 July [1948]. However,
Palestinian residents were allowed to remain, the only major
Palestinian town where this happened. In most areas the
Palestinians were actively forced to flee or deliberately
panic-stricken into fleeing with reminders of Deir
Yassin" This happened because "the local Jewish
commander who captured Nazareth, Ben Dunkelman, two days
after the city's fall he was ordered to force its civilians
to evacuate [but refused to obey orders]"
-- Donald Neff in his book
Fallen Pillars, (1995) p.65., p.288 and supported on
pp. 201-202 of Benny Morris' Birth of the Palestinian
Refugee Problem.
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The Result:
"Israel's conquests included not only such major cities
as Jaffa, Lydda and Acre, but also 418 Palestinian villages
that were destroyed and another 100 villages that were
occupied by Jews. In all Israelis took over more than 50,000
homes, 10,000 shops and 1,000 warehouses. It was estimated
that about a quarter of the buildings in the new state were
originally the property of the Palestinians."
-- p. 72 of Fallen Pillars
by Donald Neff.
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Looting:
"Indiscriminate plundering of Palestinian property by
Jews [in 1948] was so common that it caused Prime
Minister David Ben-Gurion to confide to his diary that he
was 'bitterly surprised' by the 'mass robbery' in which all
parts of the population participated. [...] Tom
Segev reported: 'In Haifa, Jaffa and Jerusalem there were
many civilians among the looters.' Another Israeli writer,
Moshe Smilanky, reported: 'Individuals, groups and
communities, men, women and children, all fell on the
spoils. Doors, windows, lintels, brinks, roof-tiles,
floor-tiles, junk and machine parts ...' Segev commented
that Smilansky 'could have also added to the list toilet
bowls, sinks, faucets and light bulbs.'"
-- p.68 of Fallen Pillars
by Donald Neff.
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Partition: "after
the formation of a large army in the wake of the
establishment of the state, we will abolish partition and
expand to the whole of Palestine "
-- Ben Gurion, p.22,
"The Birth of Israel",
1987, Simha Flapan.
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"The acceptance of
partition does not commit us to renounce Transjordan. One
does not demand from anybody to give up his vision. We shall
accept a state in the boundaries fixed today -- but the
boundaries of Zionist aspirations are the concerns of the
Jewish people and no external factor will be able to limit
them."
-- p.53,
"The Birth of Israel",
1987, Simha Flapan.
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Arab Exodus "At no
point during the war did the Arab leaders issue a blanket
call to Palestine's Arabs to leave their homes and villages
and wander into exile. Indeed, I have found no trace of such
a campaign, and had it taken place, had there been such
broadcasts, they would have been quoted or at least left
traces in the documentation."
from the book 1948 and After: Israel and the
Palestinians by Benny Morris.
Upon examining all of the British and American monitoring of
broadcasts [the BBC recorded them and kept transcripts
as did the American government] in the area at that
time, Irish journalist, Erskine Childers concluded that
"There was not a single order, or appeal, or suggestion
about evacuation from Palestine from any Arab radio station,
inside or outside Palestine, in 1948."
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Summary "Jews came
and took, by means of uprooting and expulsion, a land that
was Arab. We wanted to be a colonialist occupier, and yet to
come across as moral at the same time."
-- Israeli Professor Ilan
Pappe (from
http://www.middleeast.org/1999_01_29.htm).
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"Only then [after
an internal revolution] will the young and old in our
land realize how great was our responsibility to those
miserable Arab refugees in whose towns we have settled from
afar; whose homes we have inherited, whose fields we now sow
and harvest; the fruit of whose gardens, orchards and
vineyards we gather; and in whose cities that we robbed, we
put up houses of education, charity and prayer." -
-- Philosopher Martin Buber
addressing fellow Jews in 1961.
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Israel Murders Prisoners of War
Labor vs Likud: No Difference in Actions. Israel's "Left"
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"You are exactly like the
Likud. Don't you think that the Arabs need someplace to
live?" member of Knesset Shulamit Aloni complained to Rabin
after he made up his wide settlement plan of 1995, on
01/25/1995, Rabin Responded "I think about
Israelis,".
(Quoted in Settlements
and the Israel-Palestinian
Negotiations by
Geoffrey Aronson, 1996)
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Likud
vs. Labor: Any
Difference?
Israel's Labor Party "Cleverly Concealed" West Bank
Settlements by Paul Findley (Washington Report
11/1994). Many are fooled to think that there is a real
difference between Likud and Labor, as far as the
Palestinians are concerned. Although Likud might have a
slightly larger resume of anti-Palestinian oppression, both
have similar stand on all the main issues, such as
settlements, refugees, Jerusalem, Abou Ghoneim (Har Homa),
and house demolition. While Likud (Netanyahu, Shamir, Begin)
does things in-your-face style, Labor (Rabin, Peres, Barak)
is more soothing and diplomatic in its rhetoric, says one
thing but does the complete opposite, maneuvers more
skillfully around the media to avoid raising many flags, and
speaks with a more mellow tone, giving the false impression
that it is more for peace than Likud.
Labor
Worse than Likud
by Israel Shahak (Middle East Realities
01/02/1997)
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Lord Yehudi Menuhin (famed
Jewish violinist) as quoted in "Le Figaro" in
Jan 1998, Paris.
"It is extraordinary how nothing ever dies completely.
Even the evil which prevailed yesterday in Nazi Germany and
which is gaining ground in that country
[Israel] today."
See AP
article.
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Ehud Barak
Ha'aretz June 3rd,
1998 issue reported a revealing slip by Ehud Barak, Rabin's
Labor Party successor, sharing the frustration of the
Palestinians:
"If I were Palestinian, I'd also join terror group."
Later Barak apologized for this slip.
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"Let us not ignore the
truth among ourselves ... politically we are the aggressors
and they defend themselves... The country is theirs, because
they inhabit it, whereas we want to come here and settle
down, and in their view we want to take away from them their
country. ... Behind the terrorism [by the
Arabs] is a movement, which though primitive is not
devoid of idealism and self sacrifice."
-- David Ben Gurion.
Quoted on pp 91-2 of Chomsky's Fateful Triangle,
which appears in Simha Flapan's "Zionism and the
Palestinians pp 141-2 citing a 1938 speech.
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