The file in the state archives contains clear evidence that the
researchers at the time did not paint the full picture of Israel's role in
creating the Palestinian refugee problem.
The Israeli censor’s observant eye had missed file number GL-18/17028 in the State Archives. Most files relating to the 1948 Palestinian exodus remain sealed in the Israeli archives, despite the fact that their period as classified files − according to Israeli law − expired long ago. Even files that were previously declassified are no longer available to researchers. In the past two decades, following the powerful reverberations triggered by the publication of books written by those dubbed the “New Historians,” the Israeli archives revoked access to much of the explosive material. Archived Israeli documents that reported the expulsion of Palestinians, massacres or rapes perpetrated by Israeli soldiers, along with other events considered embarrassing by the establishment, were reclassified as “top secret.” Researchers who sought to track down the files cited in books by Benny Morris, Avi Shlaim or Tom Segev often hit a dead end. Hence the surprise that file GL-18/17028, titled “The Flight in 1948” is still available today
The documents in the file,
which date from 1960 to 1964, describe the evolution of the Israeli version of
the Palestinian Nakba (“The Catastrophe”) of 1948. Under the leadership of Prime
Minister David Ben-Gurion, top Middle East scholars in the Civil Service were
assigned the task of providing evidence supporting Israel’s position − which
was that, rather than being expelled in 1948, the Palestinians had fled of
their own volition.
Ben-Gurion probably never
heard the word “Nakba,” but early on, at the end of the 1950s, Israel’s first
prime minister grasped the importance of the historical narrative. Just as
Zionism had forged a new narrative for the Jewish people within a few decades,
he understood that the other nation that had resided in the country before the
advent of Zionism would also strive to formulate a narrative of its own. For
the Palestinians, the national narrative grew to revolve around the Nakba, the
calamity that befell them following Israel’s establishment in 1948, when about
700,000 Palestinians became refugees.
By the end of the 1950s,
Ben-Gurion had reached the conclusion that the events of 1948 would be at the
forefront of Israel’s diplomatic struggle, in particular the struggle against
the Palestinian national movement. If the Palestinians had been expelled from
their land, as they had maintained already in 1948, the international community
would view their claim to return to their homeland as justified. However,
Ben-Gurion believed, if it turned out that they had left “by choice,” having
been persuaded by their leaders that it was best to depart temporarily and
return after the Arab victory, the world community would be less supportive of
their claim.
Most historians today −
Zionists, post-Zionists and non-Zionists − agree that in at least 120 of 530
villages, the Palestinian inhabitants were expelled by Jewish military forces,
and that in half the villages the inhabitants fled because of the battles and
were not allowed to return. Only in a handful of cases did villagers leave at
the instructions of their leaders or mukhtars (headmen).
Ben-Gurion appeared to have
known the facts well. Even though much material about the Palestinian refugees
in Israeli archives is still classified, what has been uncovered provides
enough information to establish that in many cases senior commanders of the
Israel Defense Forces ordered Palestinians to be expelled and their homes blown
up. The Israeli military not only updated Ben-Gurion about these events but
also apparently received his prior authorization, in written or oral form,
notably in Lod and Ramle, and in several villages in the north. Documents
available for perusal on the Israeli side do not provide an unequivocal answer
to the question of whether an orderly plan to expel Palestinians existed. In
fact, fierce debate on the issue continues to this day. For example, in an
interview with Haaretz the historian Benny Morris argued that Ben-Gurion
delineated a plan to transfer the Palestinians forcibly out of Israel, though
there is no documentation that proves this incontrovertibly.
Even before the war of 1948
ended, Israeli public diplomacy sought to hide the cases in which Palestinians
were expelled from their villages. In his study of the early historiography of
the 1948 war, “Memory in a Book”(Hebrew), Mordechai Bar-On quotes Aharon Zisling,
who would become an MK on behalf of Ahdut Ha’avoda and was the agriculture
minister in Ben-Gurion’s provisional government in 1948. At the height of the
expulsion of the Arabs from Lod and Ramle, Zisling wrote in the left-wing
newspaper Al Hamishmar, “We did not expel Arabs from the Land of Israel ...
After they remained in our area of control, not one Arab was expelled by us.”
In Davar, the newspaper of the ruling Mapai party, the journalist A. Ophir went
one step further, explaining, “In vain did we cry out to the Arabs who were
streaming across the borders: Stay here with us!”
Contemporaries who had ties to
the government or the armed forces obviously knew that hundreds of thousands of
Palestinians had been expelled and their return was blocked already during the
war. They understood that this must be kept a closely guarded secret. In 1961,
after John F. Kennedy assumed office as president of the United States, calls
for the return of some of the Palestinian refugees increased. Under the
guidance of the new president, the U.S. State Department tried to force Israel
to allow several hundred thousand refugees to return. In 1949, Israel had
agreed to consider allowing about 100,000 refugees to return, in exchange for a
comprehensive peace agreement with the Arab states, but by the early 1960s that
was no longer on the agenda as far as Israel was concerned. Israel was willing
to discuss the return of some 20,000-30,000 refugees at most.
Under increasing pressure from
Kennedy and amid preparations at the United Nations General Assembly to address
the Palestinian refugee issue, Ben-Gurion convened a special meeting on the
subject. Held in his office in the Kirya, the defense establishment compound in
Tel Aviv, the meeting was attended by the top ranks of Mapai, including Foreign
Minister Golda Meir, Agriculture Minister Moshe Dayan and Jewish Agency
Chairman Moshe Sharett. Ben-Gurion was convinced that the refugee problem was
primarily one of public image (hasbara). Israel, he believed, would be able to
persuade the international community that the refugees had not been expelled,
but had fled. “First of all, we need to tell facts, how they escaped,” he said
in the meeting. “As far as I know, most of them fled before the state’s
establishment, of their own free will, and contrary to what the Haganah [the
pre-independence army of Palestine’s Jews] told them when it defeated them,
that they could stay. After the state’s establishment [on May 15, 1948], as far
as I know, only the Arabs of Ramle and Lod left their places, or were pressured
to leave.”
Ben-Gurion thereby set the
frame of reference for the discussion, even though some of the participants
knew that his presentation was inaccurate, to say the least. Dayan, who as GOC
Southern Command after 1949 ordered the expulsion of the Negev Bedouin, was not
in a position to take issue with the prime minister’s statement that the Arabs
had left “of their own free will,” despite being well aware of the facts.
Ben-Gurion went on to explain what Israel must tell the world: “All of these
facts are not known. There is also material which the Foreign Ministry prepared
from the documents of the Arab institutions, of the Mufti, Jamal al-Husseini
[He probably meant Haj Amin al-Husseini; Jamal al-Husseini was the
Palestinians’ unofficial representative at the United Nations − S.H.],
concerning the flight, [showing] that this was of their own free will, because
they were told the country would soon be conquered and you will return to be its
lord and masters and not just return to your homes.”
In 1961, against the backdrop
of what Ben-Gurion described as the need for “a serious operation, both in
written form and in oral hasbara,” the Shiloah Institute was asked to collect
material for the government about “the flight of the Arabs from the Land of
Israel in 1948.”
Nakba between
the lines
The Shiloah Institute was an
odd bird in Israel of the 1950s and 1960s. The idea of establishing a research
institute akin to an Israeli version of Britain’s Chatham House was conceived
by Reuven Shiloah, a Foreign Ministry official and former Mossad man. Shiloah
died shortly after he finished planning the new institute. At the ceremony
marking the 30th day after his death, the director general of the Prime
Minister’s Office, Teddy Kollek, announced that the institute would bear
Shiloah’s name and explained, “The institute’s purpose will be to study current
problems at a scientific level ... The institute will also make known to the
world at large Israel’s views concerning the region.” The institute was
established in conjunction with the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Ministry of Defense and the Israel Oriental
Society(the
umbrella organization of the Middle East scholars). It was managed by Yitzhak Oron, a major
in the Intelligence Corps. A study by Prof. Gil Eyal of Columbia University,
proved that the institute worked closely with the IDF’s Intelligence Corps,
which regularly provided it with intelligence documents. As a result, most of
the papers written in the Shiloah Institute’s first years were classified and not
accessible to the general public. Researchers who worked in the institute in
the 1950s described their activities as largely secret and considered
themselves civil servants in every respect. The institute’s studies had a
reputation for thoroughness and quasi-academic quality. In 1965, the institute
came under the auspices of Tel Aviv University, though its clandestine ties
with the intelligence community continued for many years thereafter, ending in
recent decades. In 1983, the institute changed its name to the Moshe Dayan
Center for Middle Eastern and African Studies.
For Ben-Gurion, the Shiloah
Institute was the perfect place to conduct the type of study he wished to arm
himself with. Still, his request to the institute to collect material about
“the flight of the Arabs” seemed a bit unusual. Since the end of the 1948 War,
Israel had dealt with the issue of the Palestinian refugees almost exclusively
as part of the diplomatic struggle in the international arena; hardly any
attempt had been made to investigate this aspect of the war. But there was at
least one person in the Shiloah Institute who knew something about the
Palestinian exodus of 1948.
Rony Gabbay immigrated to
Israel from Iraq in 1950. After four years in a transit camp he obtained a B.A.
and subsequently earned a doctoral degree in political science in Switzerland,
completing his dissertation on the Arab refugee issue in 1959. However, on his
return to Israel he found himself involved in a fierce controversy with the
Ashkenazi academic establishment after he accused a well-known political
science professor of racism.
“At that time, many like me,
of Mizrahi origin, who were ambitious, saw that the door was almost closed to
us, so many left for Canada and America,” he says in an interview from his home
in Perth, Australia, where he has lived for more than 40 years. “I ended up
here and I do not regret it in the least.” Before leaving Israel, Gabbay spent
a few years at the Shiloah Institute as deputy director. He was there at the
time Ben-Gurion’s request had arrived.
It is quite unlikely that
Ben-Gurion knew the topic of Gabbay’s doctoral dissertation, since it had not
gained much publicity in Israel. Had he known, he might have looked for an
alternative candidate to write this study, which was to serve as the linchpin
of Israeli public diplomacy. A perusal of the book Gabbay published based on
his dissertation shows that, three decades before Benny Morris published his
groundbreaking book, “The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem, 1947-1949,”
Gabbay’s study confirmed what Palestinian refugees had been claiming since
1948. “In many cases,” Gabbay wrote, “such as during the battle to open the
road to Jerusalem, Jewish forces took Arab villages, expelled the inhabitants
and blew up places which they did not want to occupy themselves, so that they
could not be reoccupied by their enemies and used as strongholds against them.”
Writing in the late 1950s,
Gabbay drew on British statistics, UN documents, the Arab press and a number of
Israeli documents he was able to obtain. He had no access to official IDF
documents or to the minutes of cabinet meetings, of which Morris availed
himself in the 1980s. Gabbay became convinced that there had not been a policy
of systematic expulsion of Palestinians coming from the top, but rather that
Palestinians were evacuated at the direction of local commanders (such as Yigal Allon and Yitzhak Rabin), although this occurred in “many cases.”
Fifty-four years later, Gabbay
is astonished to find that he was able to depict the events accurately with so
few Israeli documents. “To this day I am still amazed that a researcher who was
very methodical and very objective was able to read between the lines of open
sources,” he says.
Ben-Gurion’s unusual request
to the Shiloah Institute was accompanied by rare authorization to examine
Israeli archives that were closed to the public. The institute’s researchers
were allowed to peruse captured documents that had been collected by the
Intelligence Corps and, more important material compiled on the subject by the
Shin Bet security service, some of which had been transferred from the Haganah
after 1948. Gabbay: “We were told, ‘We don’t know what to do with all this
material, with this crate.’ So I went to Shin Bet headquarters for three or
four days and went through all the material. After that they burned it, of
course they didn’t give it to us.”
But there was one stack of
documents that not even the Shiloah Institute team was allowed to read through.
It consisted of the transcripts of the cabinet sessions during the war, in
which the ministers discussed the Palestinians’ flight and, in some cases,
their expulsion by IDF units.
‘Pure
research’
The file in the State Archives
contains a letter Gabbay had written on his research project after he completed
the work, dated August 26, 1961, and addressed to the director general of the
Foreign Ministry. Gabbay writes: “With the exception of isolated cases, the
flight of the Arabs was due to the cumulative effect of a number of elements in
the political, military, economic, social and psychological realms ... Chapters
1-6 present documents, quotations and other material which prove the
‘contribution’ of this or that cause among the causes of the flight and
underscore the blame of the Arabs. Thus, for example, there is a clear proof
that the Arab states encouraged [Palestine’s] Arabs to flee, that the leaders
fled [first], that atrocity stories were made up, and that Arab military
leaders pressured to have villages evacuated from their inhabitants etc. The
seventh and last chapter cites the documents which prove the efforts of the
Jews to stop the flight.” Gabbay concludes the letter by expressing “my hope
that this booklet will faithfully serve Israeli foreign policy.”
More than half a century
later, Gabbay recalls the conclusions differently. As part of his research,
Gabbay read Intelligence Corps transcripts of local radio broadcasts of
propaganda aimed at the local population by the Arab armies that operated in
Palestine. The broadcasts, Gabbay says, did not support the Israeli claim about
the part played by the Arab and Palestinian leaders in the flight. “There was
no mention of the local Arab leaders urging the Arabs to flee, that they
‘pushed them,’ as we claimed in our hasbara. I saw nothing like that.” It is
noteworthy that Benny Morris, who researched the subject 20 years later, also
found no directives by Palestinian leaders or Arab rulers calling on the
villagers to leave.
In the conversation from
Australia, Gabbay finds it difficult to explain the disparity between his
letter of 1961 stating that the Arabs were to blame, and his account today.
Only in Haifa, he says, did the local leadership urge the Palestinians to
leave, even though the Jewish leaders there urged them to stay. That, though, was
a singular case and even there, the calls to stay were undercut by the
Haganah’s shelling of the Arab market, in which civilians were killed. Gabbay
denies that his work at the Shiloah Institute prompted him to change the
opinion he arrived at when he wrote his doctoral dissertation.
He insists that he and the others on the research team (Yitzhak Oron and Aryeh Shmuelevich) were asked only to collect and summarize material.
He insists that he and the others on the research team (Yitzhak Oron and Aryeh Shmuelevich) were asked only to collect and summarize material.
“What we did at the Shiloah
Institute was pure research. In other words, what we submitted, what we got our
hands on and examined was what we wrote. There was no fear. We didn’t know, we
didn’t think about public opinion, we didn’t consider anything like that.”
Prof. Gil Eyal, who has
studied the connection between Israeli Middle East experts and the intelligence
community, explained in a phone interview from New York that the research study
on the refugees could in no way be viewed as an academic text. “Without going
into the motives of those who were involved, it is clear to me that this study
falls into the general category of public diplomacy (hasbara). Public diplomacy, even when academics
engage in it and make use of documents according to the research methods of
historians, is still very different from academic research or from other forms
of objective research. That is because in public diplomacy, what to look for in
the files and what to prove is set forth in advance. Naturally, then, if there
are other things in the file [that do not concur with the goals], they are
simply not inserted into the study, because that is not what the authors wanted
to find.”
Second try
Ben-Gurion, though, was not
pleased with Gabbay’s report. Immediately after its completion he ordered his
Arab affairs adviser, Uri Lubrani, to write a new study. Lubrani assigned the
project to Moshe Ma’oz, now a professor of history specializing in Syria, then
a student at the Hebrew University and an employee of the adviser’s unit. “I
went into Middle East studies with the mind-set of ‘Know the enemy.’ It wasn’t
until I did a Ph.D. at Oxford that things changed for me and I started to
discover the Arab side, too,” Ma’oz says by telephone.
Ma’oz was assigned a number of
researchers to assist him with the study, and received a budget. He started to
collect dozens of documents, in Israel and from around the world. He
interviewed Israeli and British officers as well as Palestinians who remained
in Israel. The 150 documents and interview transcripts were cataloged
meticulously and prepared as a file of evidence. Ma’oz notes that his findings
were very similar to those of Benny Morris and pointed clearly to cases of
expulsion, particularly in Lod and Ramle. “I don’t think I was biased or
influenced by the boss,” he says, “but it is possible that I over-emphasized
the issue of the flight. The dosage was different, because I was still under
the influence of the nationalist conception in which we were educated at school
and in the army.”
In fact, the documents in the
file of the State Archives demonstrate the exact opposite. According to Ma’oz’s
own telling of the documents, they ostensibly prove, without exception, that
the Arabs fled of their own volition at their leaders’ orders. In December
1961, before embarking on the project, Ma’oz wrote to David Kimche, a senior
Mossad official (and years later director general of the
Foreign Ministry), to
ask for help in compiling the documents. “Our intention is to prove that the
flight was caused at the encouragement of the local Arab leaders and the Arab
governments and was abetted by the British and by the pressure of the Arab
armies (the Iraqi army and the Arab Liberation
Army) on
the local Arab population.”
In a letter of summation dated
September 1962, which Ma’oz wrote to Lubrani after he had completed the task of
collecting the documents, he noted that he had fulfilled the assignment, and
proved what he had been asked to prove: “You assigned me to gather material on
the flight of Palestine’s Arabs in 1948 which attests to and proves that: “A.
Arab leaders and institutions in Palestine and elsewhere encouraged Palestine’s
Arabs to flee, and the local notables, by being the first to flee, prompted the
people to flee.
“B. The foreign Arab armies
and the ‘volunteers’ abetted the flight both by evacuating villages and by
their harsh attitude toward the local population.
“C. In a number of places, the
British Army assisted the Arabs to flee.
“D. Jewish institutions and
organizations made an effort to prevent the flight.”
Immediately after submitting
the summary report, Ma’oz left the office of the Arab affairs adviser and went
to Oxford to begin his Ph.D. studies. He was replaced by another M.A. student,
Ori Stendel, who continued to write the study of the Palestinian exodus.
Shortly after taking over from Ma’oz, Stendel met with Ben-Gurion, who
described the project as a “White Paper,” referring to the reports by British commissions
of inquiry in Palestine and elsewhere in the empire. “I remember Ben-Gurion
saying something like, ‘We need this White Paper, because people are saying
that the Arabs were expelled and did not flee,” Stendel recalls. “As far as I
remember, Ben-Gurion said, ‘They did flee, but the truth has to be told. Write
the truth.’ That’s what he said.”
Stendel continued to collect
material for a short time. He is convinced that the study he and Ma’oz wrote is
a scientific work that proves Arab leaders called on the Palestinians to leave,
though it does not avoid uncovering the cases in which expulsion occurred.
After all the material had been collected, Stendel was again summoned to a
meeting with Ben-Gurion, who wanted a summary of the findings. “I told him that
it is impossible to speak in terms of uniformity. There was no [organized]
expulsion activity, on the one hand, but on the other hand it is impossible to
say that we tried to prevent the Arabs from fleeing in all parts of the
country. I told him that I had no doubt, for example, that there was an
expulsion in Lod and Ramle, pure and simple. He asked me, and I remember being
surprised by this, ‘Are you sure?’ I replied, ‘I wasn’t there, I can’t tell
you, but according to everything we read and collected, an expulsion took place
there.”
As we saw, the documents in
the archive make no mention of Stendel’s assertion that the research project
included documents attesting to expulsion. Stendel does not rule out the
possibility that an attempt was made to play down such documents, but rejects
the possibility that they were deliberately hidden. “There was no guideline to
the effect that this would be a propaganda study, that things would be filtered
in order to help with hasbara. In practice, that might be what happened ...
Obviously, we worked in the Prime Minister’s Office and we wanted to help
Israel in its struggle, so it was natural that we would look for the truth to
prove that we did not expel people. It’s definitely possible that that was the
motive, but I don’t remember that Ben-Gurion or Lubrani said, ‘You should do
this and that.’”
Stendel remains convinced that
Ben-Gurion really did not know how the refugee problem of 1948 was caused,
because he was busy with strategic affairs and did not take the time to deal
with the refugees. The proof of this, he says, is that he asked a number of
organizations to research the subject, so he would get a full picture. “If
Ben-Gurion had decided on a policy, then there would have been a policy, and
then also, let’s put it like this: I think the Arab minority in Israel today
would be a lot smaller. That is why I think that Ben-Gurion did not exactly
know. It’s possible that he authorized an expulsion in one case or another,
when he was told it was important for security reasons; but my conclusion is
that Ben-Gurion did not authorize a policy of expulsion, and so he wanted to
know exactly what had happened.”
Most historians who have
researched the subject paint a radically different picture. They present
evidence that Ben-Gurion knew in real time about the expulsion of Palestinians
and apparently authorized expulsions in a number of cases. In the absence of
reliable information from the period, it is difficult to determine with
certainty whether Ben-Gurion had actually persuaded himself that the majority
of Palestine’s Arabs had left of their own volition, or did not even believe
this himself but wanted history to believe it.
In the meeting about the
refugees at the end of 1961, Moshe Sharett, then the chairman of the Jewish
Agency, suggested a modern spin: to leak the material that would be collected
to foreign correspondents so that they would publish it as “objective”
investigative reports without revealing their sources. “We need to see to it
that articles appear in the major newspapers,” Sharett said. “That means we
need to draw up a plan for each [foreign] capital, decide on a ‘victim,’ who
the man will be, provide him with all the required information and all the
arguments, and ensure that extensive articles appear ahead of the General
Assembly session, because this issue is again becoming one of the more urgent
ones.”
Ben-Gurion apparently adopted
this idea. In the office of the Arab affairs adviser, Stendel did as he was
asked and approached Aviad Yafeh, who headed the Foreign Ministry’s information (hasbara) unit. According to a letter from May
1964, the two agreed to make available the material that had been collected to
a correspondent of one of the major foreign magazines, so he could write a
series of articles about the “flight.” According to Stendel, the plan was never
implemented.
Rose-tinted
history
Even though the Ma’oz-Stendel
report on “the flight of the Arabs” appears to be lost for all time, the file
in the State Archives contains clear evidence that the researchers at the time
did not paint a full picture of Israel’s role in creating the refugee problem.
The story of how the study came to be written, juxtaposed to the way the
authors see it today, reflects the evolution of Israeli society’s relationship with
the Palestinian narrative of the Nakba. In the 1960s, no one dared to admit
publicly that Israel had expelled Palestinians, whereas today, in the post-Oslo
period and following the research by the “new historians,” the subject of
Israel’s culpability is no longer taboo.
After rereading the file in
the State Archives, containing summaries he himself wrote in the 1960s, Moshe
Ma’oz sent me the following email: “At that juncture I basically shared the
views of most Israeli Jews, and that of the establishment, that most Arabs fled
because their leaders escaped first and that other Arab leaders instructed them
to do so. On the other hand, I did mention that Jewish organizations requested
Arabs to stay and not to leave, but I did not mention that many Arabs fled for
[reasons of] panic, war, massacres, etc. and that in certain places they were
deported by the army. Perhaps these facts did not appear in the materials or
were not known or appreciated.”
Ma’oz, then, underwent a
conceptual shift at Oxford. After returning to Israel he worked for the
military government in the occupied territories, but says he identified more
closely with the Palestinians than with the Israeli government. Finally, he was
booted out of the military government by the chief of staff, Rafael Eitan,
after stating in a television interview in the early 1980s that Israel should
hold talks with West Bank leaders affiliated with the Palestine Liberation
Organization.
Most historians in Israel and
abroad no longer dispute the fact that IDF soldiers expelled large numbers of
Palestinians from their homes during the 1948 war, and banned their return
after the war. However, the debate over whether this was a preconceived plan
authorized by Ben-Gurion continues. File GL-18/17028 shows that throughout Israel’s
65 years of existence, the answer to the question of “What really happened?”
varied according to who was responding. Still, it is unlikely that Gabbay,
Ma’oz, Stendel and Lubrani lied knowingly. More likely, they wanted to deceive
themselves and create a slightly rosier picture of 1948, a formative year that
changed the history of both the Jewish people and of the Arab Middle East for
all time.
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