The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine
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The book that is providing a storm of controversy, from ‘Israel’s bravest historian’ (John Pilger)
Renowned Israeli historian, Ilan Pappe’s groundbreaking work on the formation of the State of Israel.
‘Along with the late Edward Said, Ilan Pappe is the most eloquent writer of Palestinian history.’ NEW STATESMAN
Between 1947 and 1949, over 400 Palestinian villages were deliberately destroyed, civilians were massacred and around a million men, women, and children were expelled from their homes at gunpoint.
Denied for almost six decades, had it happened today it could only have been called ‘ethnic cleansing’. Decisively debunking the myth that the Palestinian population left of their own accord in the course of this war, Ilan Pappe offers impressive archival evidence to demonstrate that, from its very inception, a central plank in Israel’s founding ideology was the forcible removal of the indigenous population. Indispensable for anyone interested in the current crisis in the Middle East.
***
‘Ilan Pappe is Israel’s bravest, most principled, most incisive historian.’ JOHN PILGER
‘Pappe has opened up an important new line of inquiry into the vast and fateful subject of the Palestinian refugees. His book is rewarding in other ways. It has at times an elegiac, even sentimental, character, recalling the lost, obliterated life of the Palestinian Arabs and imagining or regretting what Pappe believes could have been a better land of Palestine.’TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT
‘A major intervention in an argument that will, and must, continue. There’s no hope of lasting Middle East peace while the ghosts of 1948 still walk.’ INDEPENDENT
ASIN : 1851685553
Publisher : Oneworld Publications; Second edition (September 1, 2007)
Language : English
Paperback : 336 pages
ISBN-10 : 9781851685554
ISBN-13 : 978-1851685554
Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
Dimensions : 5.1 x 1.2 x 7.8 inches
Customers say
Customers find the book compelling and informative. They praise the thorough research and incisive historical account of Israel’s early history. Readers describe the book as honest, truthful, and genuine. The author is described as courageous and brave. The style is considered elegant, thoughtful, and heart-rending.
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10 reviews for The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine
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Original price was: $19.99.$16.32Current price is: $16.32.
P. Torres –
Brilliant. Eye opening
This author knows what he is talking about. As the leading living authority in Israeli history, Mr Pape delivers a compelling revelation of the barbaric nature of modern day zionism, from inception to current times. I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in the truth about the founding of Israel in the 20th century and the deception of communist Zionism. Especially those taught and trained in the evangelical âdispensationalâ camp need this book to refute the lies they are being taught.
R. F. Biniszkiewicz –
Revelatory.
Stunning evidence and convincing argument supporting the Palestinian narrative of oppression and dispossession at the hands of Israel. it makes today’s landscape comprehensible, including catastrophic contemporary 2024 events. Today’s ‘war’ (not very 2 sided) only exacerbates the fundamental injustice of the Israel/Palestinan divide. This book illuminates in revelatory granular detail, sourced from blue chip documents.The author is a Jewish scholar who cites declassified personal diaries of Israel’s founders (all such personal matter is declassified after 50 years in Israel). The evidence of intentional ethnic cleansing by ruthlessly violent means leading up to Israel’s creation is stunning and damning to Zionists who staked out desired territory for the imminent creation of the State of Israel. The violence employed succeeded in its aim, displacing Palestinian village after village after village, ultimately displacing 700,000 Arabs from the territory of the soon to be announced State of Israel.Those Arabs who fled the violence (the purpose of the violence in the first place was to get them to flee, after all) were never allowed to return. They were called the Palestinian Refugees. The PLO was their “Liberation” focused political governing body. Their descendants now number over 5 million. Israel never can accept the “right of return” to displaced Palestinians to their native villages within Israel because allowing them to become citizens would instantly tip the balance of Israel to minority Jewish. It was the case back in ’48. And it’s the case still.
T. L. Cooper –
We Can’t Learn from History Unless We Know the Truth
The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine by Ilan Pappe came highly recommended by several sources. After I watched a few interviews with Pappe, I finally found the book available and immediately ordered it. It is a fascinating, must-read book for anyone who wants to better understand how Israel came into existence on land inhabited by Palestinians and known as Palestine. Pappe is an Israeli historian who used Israel’s historical documents to expose the history that has been obfuscated and manipulated to manufacture a narrative more palatable to much of the world than the truth. The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine explores the atrocities of the Nakba and the years leading up to the Nakba as well as the invention of Zionism. Pappe explores and explains attitudes, behaviors, and decisions made by those in charge using their own diaries and official records in a way that brings the people of the time and the moments they experienced to life. The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine is well-researched, well-written and accessible to anyone wanting to better understand what brought us to the world as it currently stands because it demonstrates how the ethnic cleansing of Palestine has always reached far beyond Palestine.
farah –
History class now in session
Great history book by an Israeli historian who speaks of the truths of the injustices that the Palestinians face for decades and how the racism and ethnic cleansing was allowed, and ignored by the west and Europeans. Heartbreaking massacres with dates and evidence to prove it. Itâs amazing how much you will learn when you open your eyes, ears and heart. Makes you question the indoctrination we have been taught. What else are they not telling us that they are doing?!?! Hats off to the man who has the courage to write this.
LenZen –
What was Plan Dalet? What Happened at Deir Yassin?
What really happened during Israel’s War of Independence? Ilan Pappé attempts to answer this question in “The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine,” which is, without a doubt, the most controversial book I have read in my life. In it, Pappé presents the controversial thesis that Palestine has been subject to a systematic ethnic cleansing policy pre-dating Israel’s Independence Day on May 14, 1948. This policy, Pappé argues, continues up to the present day.For this review, it is important to note, and Pappé clarifies right off the bat, that he is not using the phrase ethnic cleansing in the colloquial sense in which it is a synonym for genocide. Instead, Pappé refers to formal definitions in which ethnic cleansing’s goal is to rid a geographical area of people of a specific, often ethnic, group. This contrasts with genocide, in which the goal is to wipe them out of existence. Pappé notes that although the goal of ethnic cleansing is different, it is also generally accompanied by massacres to scare the population into fleeing. Pappé argues this is precisely what happened in Israel/Palestine during the 1947-8 War. Indeed, in the epigraphs preceding most chapters, there is a running comparison to Serbian ethnic cleansing in the 1990s. A Cleansing Plan Pre-Dating the 1947 UN Partition Resolution?Before the late 1980s, there was a notion in much of the West that the answer to the question of where all the Palestinian refugees came from was that they were told to flee their homes around the time Israel’s Arab neighbors invaded on the very day of Israel’s independence. Pappé is one of Israel’s “new historians” who was granted some access to the IDF’s archives from the 1947-8 War and began to challenge the notion that those fleeing generally did so voluntarily at the request of Arab leaders. Some more moderate historians, like Benny Morris, found evidence of massacres of Palestinians by Jewish force but did not feel there was a systematic plan behind them and the forced expulsions. Pappé, by contrast, disagrees. Pappé concluded that there was a systematic plan centering around Plan Dalet by considering other sources such as the diaries of key Israeli leaders, interviews, and other oral history.According to Pappé’s research, Zionist leaders, especially Ben-Gurion, had decided well before 1947 that they should try to capture much more of Mandatory Palestine than was likely to be offered. Pappé describes how the planning included detailed Jewish intelligence on every village following the 1936 uprising in preparation for this effort.  The Zionists’ main fear, Pappé writes, was having too small a majority in Israel to protect Jewish interests. This was because, at the time of the 1947 resolution, the Jewish state had about 60% Jews, while nearly all the rest were Arabs. Pappé quotes Ben-Gurion saying that 80% Jews was needed for stability. Pappé further argues that while Ben-Gurion publically accepted the UN partition plan, he only did so knowing Arabs would reject it. This, he realized, would allow Israeli leaders to not recognize Palestinian land as other than “disputed.”Pappé further recounts how Ben-Gurion felt it was a problem that Arabs did not react violently enough to the 1947 partition plan. Indeed, they just resigned themselves to living under another “foreign” ruler as they had adapted to others for centuries before. According to Pappé, Ben-Gurion and a cabal called “The Consultancy” worked to increase provocations against Arabs, hoping for reactions that could be used as pretexts for attacks, expulsions, and inevitable massacres. Pappé portrays this as not having the success hoped for initially, thus leading Israeli forces to become increasingly aggressive in their strategies and tactics, often deliberately crossing the line into war crimes. My Evaluation Evaluating this book is, unfortunately, rather difficult. The two main reasons are:1. There is disagreement between Pappé and fellow new historian Benny Morris as to the proper historical methodology. Pappé criticizes Morris for confining his conclusions to IDF archives and treating them as gospel (or, perhaps, rather, Tanakh?) Morris, in turn, criticizes Pappé for over-reliance on oral history. Since Pappé, unfortunately, does not dive deeply into the methodological questions, it is hard for a non-professional to weigh the merits and detriments of the different approaches. 2. Much of Pappé’s source material is not readily available, at least to non-professionals. This is either because it is IDF archival material, books that no longer appear to be in print or interviews. Fortunately, there is much that Pappé and Morris, who draws more conservative conclusions, agree on. The main points are:1. Many Palestinians only left their homes involuntarily in 1947-8; Israeli forces were definitely pushing many of them out2. Jewish forces did commit war crimesOne thing Pappé and Morris disagree on significantly is the number of Palestinians massacred. Morris puts the figure around 800, whereas Pappé has it around a few thousand. Even more significant, however, is whether it was all part of a systematic plan or not. Pappé’s quotes, especially from Ben-Gurion’s diary, do seem compelling, however. With regard to the massacres, Pappé admits there is no smoking gun in official documents regarding a central directive. Instead, he argues that it was implicitly understood that they would be tolerated and necessary in the case of stubborn resistance. Pappé points out how those involved were generally careful not to leave a paper trail behind. Is a Systematic Plan Believable?I do believe that Pappé makes a compelling case that there was a systematic plan. Pappé’s discussion of how Palestinians were treated after the war adds to the believability of his argument. Much of this post-war treatment is more open to verification. Remaining Palestinians were moved from their homes; the property of those who had fled was confiscated through some extraordinary legal machinations; those of Arab descent did not receive equal treatment under Israeli law; Palestinian history was systematically erased.However, even if things were not part of a Zionist grand strategy to permanently claim 80% of Mandatory Palestine, it is remarkable that they worked out, in practice, as if that were the plan all along. Sympathizers of Israel will argue that Israel simply wanted to live in peace, but their Arab neighbors kept attacking them unprovoked for no good reason. After reading this book, however, especially the parts most open to verification, and considering Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians and denial of their right to return (or, if no longer practical, monetary compensation in lieu of it), the credibility of Israeli claims regarding history fell into even greater doubt for me.The Book’s Style and WeaknessesA little over two-thirds of the book is highly engaging reading. Nevertheless, the book took me about twice as long to read as expected. Part of the reason this is a difficult book to read is that it is a very somber subject. Nor is it so far removed from the present as to provide the usual degree of detachment that studying more distant history allows. That contribution to making the book difficult is inevitable, given the subject.However, some of Pappé’s choices made the book difficult and were not inevitable. For instance:- The Jews seemed very concerned about Arab aggression, given what happened in 1936. Pappé does not detail 1936 enough to understand why they were worried. – Too many massacres are detailed even once one gets the gist of what happened overall. Likely, Pappé is trying to ensure that the victims are not forgotten. Still, unfortunately, it leads to an emotional numbing and time spent here that could have been better spent on issues such as what happened in 1936 and discussing the debate over methodology.Finally, Pappé is clearly biased. For instance, he correctly states that Palestinians objected to Israel being given the majority of the land in the 1947 resolution, even though they were only one-third of the population. What Pappé omits is the Jewish position that they needed more land because of the large number of immigrants into Israel expected. Pappé also, although he does not omit it altogether, spends scant time discussing massacres by Arabs, for example, as retaliation for Deir Yassin.Conclusion Given the current war in Gaza, this book is vital reading to understand how we got to this point and what may lie ahead. Readers will be better able to evaluate whether the accusations of ethnic cleansing, genocide, and apartheid leveled against Israel are fair. At the same time, however, it is essential to check what sources Pappé uses, compare with others, and look up contrary interpretations of history, such as Benny Morris’s.
Mustafa –
The author clearly shows how ethnic cleansing of Palestinians occurred, how itâs still occurring and how that policy is motivated ideologically by the majority of Israeli society. A must read.
Livio Ribeiro –
Ilan Pappé escreve em muitos detalhes os eventos antes, durante, e após a execução do plano de Ben Gurion para limpeza étnica da Palestina. à descrito não apenas a expulsão do povo palestino de suas terras, mas também o minucioso planejamento que antecedeu o evento e os grandes esforços para tentar esconder os crimes cometidos e apagar a memória dos palestinos.
Cliente de Amazon –
One of the best texts to understand the suffering of Palestinian people, and why Israeli Zionism makes an agreement between Palestine and Israel impossible.
Roger Nolan –
Highly recommend this book, everyone interested in what’s going on at moment should read it.
Yassin –
Sehr informativ und eine ideale Lektüre, um sich in die Thematik einzulesen. Es hat mir die Augen geöffnet und die systematische Vertreibung der Palästinenser anhand historischer Schlüsselereignisse aufgezeigt.Für jeden, der sich abseits der Medien näher damit auseinander setzen möchte eine Pflichtlektüre