HOME COMING 149 CH^ conditions aboard the refugees ships, the ”coffin-ships,” which old and dilapidated, were crowded to the gunwales.” The aim was to discourage immigration.” All efforts by the East European countries to prevent the
exodus of the Jews failed miserably. The ships carrying these
unfortunates were deliberately sunk, sending mamy to their
watery graves. But they reckoned without Haganajah and the
Irgun and the resources of the Jewish Agency. The B ritish people
most hypocritically claimed to be helping the victims of ”Gas
Chambers” by making pious statements. However, they also
warned that many ”German spies” in the garb of Jewish settlers
were also migrating to Palestine. This was the excus^ to prevent
mass exodus of the Jews from Europe. Then there was the case
of ’Struma’ the ship which arrived off the coast of Eretz Israel
and was returned by the blocade authorities to its point of
departure in Romania. The ship sunk and all on board were
drowned. The cause was never discovered. Ther^ were also
”The Milos”, ”The Pacific” and the ”The Patria.” They too were
returned to their points of sail while ”The Patria” never sailed
again. Begin again: ”Dark night, the darkest of all nights, descended on the
Jewish people in Europe. One million five hundred thousand
Jewish children were transported in the death trains to the
gas-chambers. Millions of men and women w^re shot, or
drowned, or burned, or gassed or buried alive. When man
becomes a beast, the Jew ceases to be regarded as a human
being. There is no room here for self-delusion, it was not
only the Nazis and their friends who regarded the Jews as
germs to be destroyed. The whole world which calls itself
”enlightened” began to get used to the idea that perhaps the
Jew is not as other human beings. Just as ”the world” does
not pity the thousands of cattle led to the slaughter-pens in
the Chicago abattoirs, equally it did not pity- or else it got
used to the tens of thousands of human beings taken like
sheep to the slaughter in Treblinki. The world does not pity
the slaughtered. It only respects those who fight. For better
or for worse, that is the truth. 150 INDIA AND ISRAEL CHAPTER 11 ^^^^^^^^^^*w All the peoples of the world knew this grim truth except the
Jews. That is why our enemies were able to trap us and
shed our blood at will. Britain enforced an economic blockade against the territories occupied by the Germans: that was her war against Nazism But she also enforced a political blockade against the jews in German occupied territories, which was an aid to Nazism” The jews too, mainly the Irgun and the Stern group, used terrorist method to frighten the Arabs and the British to the state where they could not effectively resist their entry into Erelz Israel. While all this was happening on the high seas and the shores of Palestine, the Arab attacks continued. The chronicle goes. ”The historical facts of the Arab attacks are known: the
pogrom in the Old City of Jerusalem in 1920, the murderois
attack in Jaffa in 1921, the blood-bath of 1929, the incessant
campaign of violence from 1936 to 1939. The psychologies
consequences of these one-sided attacks were as disastrois
as their political aftermath.” As a result of Jewish aggressiveness, the Arabs ^egan to take
the Jews seriously as a walad-al-maut -a child of death- and b
look forward to the great festival of ”bathel yahud”. or genenl
slaughter. Slowly and steadily the initiative passed from the hancs
of the Mandate authorities and the Arabs to the Jewisi
immigrants. The Irgun mounted triple attacks on the Police
Headquarters in Jerusalem, Haifa and Jaffa which had t>
reaching consequences. Thus terror was met with terror. Talkirg
of high intentions without action to follow, breeds contempt h
the minds of the adversaries. As Begin says: ”But great as may have been the influence of our literature,
it is certain that deeds had a greater effect. The fact that the
mighty British Government not only failed to put an end b
our struggle but, on the contrary, continued to be subjecteJ
to blows of ever-increasing severity, exercised a very health,’
influence on the Arabs.Their imagination did the rest.” rHAPTER 11 THE STRUGGLE AND THE HOME COMING 151 The Jewish underground’ borrowed’ and looted T.N.T., other
explosives and weapons in an even-handed manner both from
,-he Arabs and the British. This legend of the Jewish strength
created by the underground operations of the Hebrew revolt
had a far-reaching effect both on the British before they left,
and the Arabs before and after the birth of the new state.
Undoubtedly, Hagannah played its historical role against the
Arab invaders along with the regular Israel army. The memory
of Hagannah dating back to the ”havlagah”, could hardly
encourage the Arabs for their new fight. To quote Begin again
on the open hostilities of the British: ”Reliance, or undue reliance, on the moral restraints of an
enemy, is no part of strategy. So, we did not depend on the
Government’s ’humanity.’ We had witnessed the wanton
behavior of the airborne troops in our towns and villages
and kibbutzim. We had read the internal literature distributed
among the British soldiers. Characteristic of the attitude of
some of the troops was the threat scribbled on a copy of
our underground newspaper Herat: ”Oh Gee, oh Gee, Hitler
killed 6,000,000 Jews. The Sixth Airborne will kill 60,000,000
if you don’t bloody well behave yourselves.” Since the firing incident at Amritsar in Jallianwala Bagh on an
unarmed crowd the British became more careful about the
effect of their actions on international opinion. Reprisal killings
of the British by the Jews was one thing the British dreaded
most. They did not want to be killed. This was confirmed by
Colonel Patterson, Commander of the Jewish legion formed by
Vladimir Jabotinsky in the First World War, a British officer of
Irish extraction who went into exile and denounced the British
Government’s betrayal of the Jewish people. The British now
realised that Tel Aviv was not Amritsar nor Eretz Israel, Punjab.
The world could ignore happenings in distant British colony but
Eretz Israel was the center of world interest and the cockpit of
the Middle East. The Arab opposition to Zionism, despite its intensity, was
fragmented due to their inter-tribal rivalries. However, there was
a consistency in the Muslim opposition to the Jews in the 152 INDIA AMD ISRAEL CHAPTER 1 ] formation of Jerusalem Municipal Council, where alternatively
Jews and Arabs boycotted the Council meetings on the plea of
growing numerical strength of the rival parties. The flash point
of riots in Jerusalem after 1920 was the Jewish practice of making
seating arrangements by bringing chairs and benches for their
prayers at the Western wall of the Temple Mount. To the Arabs
these were ”offending objects” and an indirect way of claiming
squatter’s rights on the place where Mohammed’s famous horse,
al-Burq, took him on his heavenly journey. The Supreme Muslim
Council under Mufti Haj Amin al- Husseine prevented the lews
from bringing the ”offending objects” to the site of their prayers
in 1922, 1923 and 1925, starting a world-wide propaganda
that the Jews were keen to rebuild their third Temple at the
same location. Thereafter, broke Arab-Jewish riots with casualties
on both sides till in April 1936, a royal Commission (the Pee^
Commission) arrived to investigate the situation and suggest
corrective measures. The Peel Commission recommended the
partition of the country into two separate Arab and Jewish states,
setting aside the area of Jerusalem, Bethlehem and Nazareth tc
be kept under mandate administration. Understandably, the Peel Commission report created a mixed
reaction. While some Jews, headed by Dr. Chaim Weizmann
favoured the proposal of the Royal Commission for a Jewish
state, with the power to control its immigration policies in spite
of the fact that Peel Commission recommended restrictions on
Jewish immigration during the period of the mandate. The
majority of the Jews, headed by the Jewish Agency, were of the
view that the Jewish Palestine without Jerusalem would be a
body without a soul. This connection between Jerusalem and
the Jewish people was to be emphasized with a consequence of
internationalisation of the Holy City. The dispute still continues.
The report was also resented by the Arab states of the Middle
East. It later took the form of Palestine Liberation Organisation
(PLO). Events overtook the Peel Commission as the World War II
broke out, distracting their attention. However, by May 1939,
a White Paper was issued imposing restrictions both on the
Jewish immigration and land purchased by them; in fact •”•”””””en 11 IHE STRUGGLE AND THE HOME COMING 153 C-HA’ mitting only 75,000 Jewish immigrants in a five-year period
u6fore its final termination. As mentioned earlier, the jews
nosed the White Paper, treating it as a betrayal of the Baifour
Declaration, the sore point being restrictions on immigration.
Hounded out from a Hitler dominated Europe, the Jews had
nowhere to go. Despite the Jewish support to the British against
Hitler during the war-30,000 Palestinian Jews had enlisted in
the British Army up to 1942-the Jews decided to oppose the
White Paper and as brought out earlier, David Ben-Curion, the
Head of the Jewish Agency, solved the dilemma by announcing
that ”we shall fight Hitler as though there were no white paper
and fight the white paper as if there is no war”. After a period of calm, during the World War II, the Jews
carried out their guerrilla operations to assist Jewish immigration
and fight the Mandate authorities. The rival claims over Palestine
by the Jews and Arabs have been analysed in fairly great detail
by Mark Tessler in his book Arab Israel Conflicts. The author has
given the following sound arguments for Jewish claim: ”The burden of much, if not most, of the grievance of the
Arab states which I’ve read or listened to against the State
of Israel, or Zionism, or, at its most forthright, against the
settlement of any Jews at all in this region, seems to rest on
the conviction that the Jews have been absent so many
hundreds of years that they have become foreigners in what
was once their land. The Arabs who were in the majority
from the seventh until the twentieth century except for the
brief Crusader Kingdom are seen as having established
themselves over a period so long that any other people, any
other government, is the vilest injustice. ”I suppose it is unfair to attempt to introduce logic or the
historical facts of life into what is essentially a violent exercise
in propaganda, but aside from the fact that the Jews founded
their State with the blessings of the United Nations, when
this was contested by force, they established themselves by
right of conquest, as had been done before them by the
Turks, the Crusaders, the Arabs, the Romans, the Greeks,
the Egyptians, the Hebrews, the Canaanites, the Syrians, the 154 INDIA AND ISRAEL CHART ER11 Babylonians and the others going back to the dawn of history
and probably before.” ”With all of the migrations, the conquests and the colonies
which have accompanied them, there are as many pockets
of people, different races, religions and varieties of origin
very much alive in Israel today as one could possibly imagine
Even with the departure of the Bosnians there are some
twenty-six hundred Circassians, a handsome people from
the Caucasus once famous in the Middle eastern slave
markets, who remain in Israel and ten thousand of whose
fellows live across the valley in Jordan, serving as the traditional
bodyguard for King Hussein as they did for his grandfather
King Abdullah. ”Jews have lived uninterruptedly in Israel since they returned
from Egypt to the Promised Land more than two thousand
years ago, in spite of the wars and dispersion, sometimes
many, sometimes few, sometimes banned from Jerusalem,
sometimes masters there, but always living in this land. There
are Catholic and Protestant sects without reckoning, and
there are some schismatic Moslem sects, too, like the six’
hundred Ahmadia in Galilee. There are two hundred
members of the Bahai faith, a universalist religion which was
founded in Persia and with many members living in the
United States and England, but whose center is in Haifa.
There are Turcoman villages, settled by Uzbek and Kazakh
Moslems from what is now Soviet Central Asia, and in the
south of Israel there are Negro Bedouin, descendants of the
Africans, brought from Nubia and East Africa by Arab slave
traders.” ”There are many differences in the difficulties faced by the
two minorities, but just as the frustration and resentment of
the American Negro has become real bitterness and anger
no longer masked, and with an increasing readiness to lash
out against the barriers which confine him, or even at that
which he sees as symbolic of his second-class state, so the
Israeli Arab may feel many of these same inequities of
schooling and housing and the chance to earn a decent •*• ER fi THE STRUGGLE AND THE HOME COMING