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University of Exeter – Ilan Pappe's (Dept. of Political Science)
book gets reviewed as “worthless”
Ilan Pappe is an Israeli academic who has made his name by hating
Israel and everything it stands for. In his view, expressed with
obsession and a degree of paranoia, Jewish nationalism, that is to
say Zionism, has been from its outset a deliberate tool for
dispossessing the Palestinians; and therefore it is to be condemned
root and branch. He reserves the Palestinian term of Nakba, meaning
catastrophe, for describing what to Israelis is their war of
independence of 1948. To him, Israeli politicians and soldiers, one
and all, are so many murderers. Forests have been planted only to
cover up the past. Houses are ‘monstrous villas and palaces for rich
American Jews’. Everything Israeli is ugly, everything Palestinian
is beautiful. One day, he supposes, the Israelis may well consummate
their original crime with something even worse. The only possible
alternative lies in the immediate return of every Palestinian to his
original home, and that will mean the end of the state whose
existence so offends Pappe. This, of course, is exactly the
inflexible position taken by Hamas and the PLO. … As history, the
book is worthless. In interviews Pappe regularly explains: ‘We do
[historiography] because of ideological reasons, not because we are
truth seekers.’ For him, as a Marxist and anti-nationalist, ‘there
is no such thing as truth, only a collection of narratives’. To
substantiate his particular ideological narrative, Pappe puts the
worst possible interpretation on any Jewish deed or word, while
validating anything said or done by Palestinians.
http://www.literaryreview.co.uk/pryce-jones_11_06.html
David Pryce-Jones
Nov 2006
RAUS MIT UNS
The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine
By Ilan Pappe (Oneworld Publications 313pp £16.99)
Ilan Pappe is an Israeli academic who has made his name by hating
Israel and everything it stands for. In his view, expressed with
obsession and a degree of paranoia, Jewish nationalism, that is to
say Zionism, has been from its outset a deliberate tool for
dispossessing the Palestinians; and therefore it is to be condemned
root and branch. He reserves the Palestinian term of Nakba, meaning
catastrophe, for describing what to Israelis is their war of
independence of 1948. To him, Israeli politicians and soldiers, one
and all, are so many murderers. Forests have been planted only to
cover up the past. Houses are ‘monstrous villas and palaces for rich
American Jews’. Everything Israeli is ugly, everything Palestinian
is beautiful. One day, he supposes, the Israelis may well consummate
their original crime with something even worse. The only possible
alternative lies in the immediate return of every Palestinian to his
original home, and that will mean the end of the state whose
existence so offends Pappe. This, of course, is exactly the
inflexible position taken by Hamas and the PLO.
The reader’s initial reaction must be one of pity. Poor man! What
a strain it must be to belong to a nation whose members are so
overwhelmingly unbearable that he longs for them to be overpowered
by others. Yet there is more to it than that. Sad and creepy though
it is, Pappe’s anger is open to rational analysis.
The doctrinal element pushing Pappe into anti-Zionism is his
prominent involvement in the Israeli Communist Party, known as
Hadash. An outcrop of pure Stalinism and always a marginal movement,
Communism in Israel rejected Zionism in favour of internationalism,
according to which Jews and Arabs were to form a state together.
Events, indeed the whole thrust of history, have proven this to be a
complete illusion, but Pappe remains one of a minute handful still
in its grip.
The further emotional element pushing Pappe towards his hatred of
Zionism is best elucidated by J L Talmon in his profound book, The
Myth of the Nation and the Vision of Revolution. Among the ‘horribly
charged and tormenting questions’ Talmon asks is why so many Jews
have adopted identities that seemingly allow them to deny their
Jewishness. Uncountable numbers of Jews have followed the example of
the Karl Marxes, Trotskys and Rosa Luxemburgs who sought identities
as Communists and revolutionaries in the hope that this would allow
them to merge with those who otherwise would be their persecutors.
Some Communists - like Lazar Kaganovich, and many in the KGB as well
as leaders in the Soviet satellites - set about the deliberate
destruction of the Jewish religion and culture. Talmon speaks openly
of the neurosis and ‘morbid masochism’ motivating such unhappy
people.
In Nazi Germany a few Jews tried to camouflage themselves in a
similar manner. Felix Jacoby opened his Kiel University lectures in
1933 by comparing Hitler to the Emperor Augustus. Dr Hans-Joachim
Schoeps and Max Naumann even formed a movement of Jews for Hitler.
With gallows humour, other Jews replied that this movement’s slogan
was Raus mit Uns, or Out with Us. In Israel today, Neturei Karta, a
sect of ultra-Orthodox Jews, believes that the Messiah alone should
bring about a Jewish state, and that Israel is therefore an impiety
fit for destruction. In New York they have a branch called Jews
Against Zionism, and recently they welcomed President Ahmedinejad in
person there, supporting his call for genocide in Israel. Pappe is
the secular and political version of these sectarians. As often
happens, extremists have come from opposing poles only to reach the
same conclusion.
Zionism, in Pappe’s conventional Marxist view, had nothing to do
with the need for Jews to survive persecution by Europeans or Arabs,
but was only a settler and colonialist movement cynically directed
by British imperialists and their greedy Jewish collaborators. He
characterises David Ben-Gurion, the driving personality in the
latter stages of the foundation of the state of Israel, as someone
who always intended to expel Palestinians from the land. To bring
this about, he assembled a body which Pappe refers to as the
Consultancy, but the details of who these people were, and what they
really did, he fails to give us, instead preferring to conjure an
aura of sinister conspiracy. The Israelis were always the stronger
party and knew that they would win out at the end of the British
Mandate in 1948, Pappe says. In contrast, the Palestinians were
defenceless and hardly violent at all, designated victims whose
villages were mercilessly overrun and many of the inhabitants
butchered.
A huge literature exists in British, Arab and Israeli archives to
reveal the multiple reasons for the flight of the Palestinians at
the time, ranging from a belief that invading Arab armies were about
to rescue them, and they should move out of harm’s way, to a
cultural reflex that they could not accept Jews in positions of
authority, an escapism on the part of some leaders and delusions of
power on the part of others, and of course fear. Savage things were
certainly perpetrated by both sides - à la guerre comme à la
guerre - but Pappe will have none of that, completely ignoring the
context in all its complexity and local variation. His technique is
to list towns and villages as though their capture involved always
and only simple brutality and expulsion. No mention of the Jewish
need to survive in an existential struggle in the aftermath of the
Holocaust; no mention of the 6,000 Jews killed, which was 1 per cent
of the population; no mention of Azzam Pasha of the Arab League
promising a massacre of Jews on the scale of the Mongols; no mention
of Arab radio propaganda and disinformation; no proper account of
Arab military successes, brushing over Arab atrocities and the
destruction of Jewish settlements; no mention of the countervailing
expulsion and expropriation of a million Jews in Arab countries.
As history, the book is worthless. In interviews Pappe regularly
explains: ‘We do [historiography] because of ideological reasons,
not because we are truth seekers.’ For him, as a Marxist and
anti-nationalist, ‘there is no such thing as truth, only a
collection of narratives’. To substantiate his particular
ideological narrative, Pappe puts the worst possible interpretation
on any Jewish deed or word, while validating anything said or done
by Palestinians. For evidence of Israeli monstrosity, he relies on
quotations from his own previous works or from Palestinian
polemicists, and above all on the oral testimonies of Palestinian
refugees. Over half a century of military and ideological conflict
has passed since their exodus, but Pappe declares his faith that
whatever they now say is true. This might all seem too pathological
to matter much, but Arab and Muslim extremists are making huge
efforts to contest the legitimacy of Israel, and many of their
allies on the international Left will lean on Pappe for purposes of
‘pilgering’ and ‘fisking’.
The final element contributing to Pappe’s mindset lies in the
sphere of psychology and fashion. Contemporary intellectuals have
long been accustomed to glorying in an adversarial stance towards
their own society, preening themselves as men of nobler spirits than
the dull indifferent masses around them, and isolated not because
they are foolish but because they are brave. It is a form of
snobbery - moral snobbery - which is why intellectuals of this kind
are so widely resented.
There is a fatal contradiction at the heart of Pappe’s advocacy
of the immediate return of all Palestinian refugees as the necessary
condition of peace. If Israelis are really as vicious as Pappe
presents them, then Palestinians could not possibly want to live
among them. Are Palestinians to return only to wipe out Israelis or
to be wiped out themselves? Poor Palestinians, poor Israelis, to be
mobilised for such fates. And should Hamas, the PLO or President
Ahmadinejad make good on threats to eliminate Israel, there will not
be time to rescue Pappe from the consequences of his moral snobbery
and his Marxism, or to discover whether he really applauds his own
Raus mit Uns demise.
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