The BBC recognises the Nakba – better but not good enough

Their independence is our catastrophe

JVL Introduction

Like Jonathan Cook, I watched both episodes of The Holy Land and Us – Our Untold Stories and found it both moving and frustrating.  The documentary starts with the Balfour declaration thus highlighting the role of the British in the region. In his review Jonathan makes the important point, not addressed in either episode, when he calls the western governments that refused shelter to the Jews of Europe the real villains of the piece.

Whether or not we agree that the zionist’s stories are untold, the Palestinian stories of that time are, especially in the mainstream media; that showing some aspects of the impact of the Nakhba is considered brave shows how rare this is.  It is also right that the reality of the Holocaust, its impact and further displacement for Jewish people are also shown.  But, of course, there is an imbalance between the two sides that is ignored with the all too familiar “both sides” narrative. The reality is that the Nakba has not ended while, thankfully, the Nazi Holocaust has.

The Jewish Chronicle found this “a stressful watch” and is concerned that ” with wounds reopened rather than healed, positions seem more intractable than ever.”  But the wounds have never closed up for the Palestinians and perhaps the stress for the Chronicle was in having to take the Palestinian experience seriously.  At the end, Rob Rinder, tracing his Jewish relative’s role, expressed hope but this felt unrealistic or even desperate, particularly given the even more extreme government now in power there.

LL

 

This article was originally published by Middle East Eye on Wed 22 Mar 2023. Read the original here.

BBC broke the Nakba taboo – but still cheated Palestinians

The Holy Land and Us hides the real villains: Western governments that left Jews with only one credible escape from European antisemitism, by dispossessing Palestinians

The BBC’s The Holy Land and Us, a two-part exploration of Israel’s founding that concluded this week, has been what pundits like to call “brave television”. The first episode featured testimony of a notorious massacre by a Zionist militia of more than 100 Palestinians, many of them women and children, in early 1948, weeks before Israeli statehood was declared

In a five-star review, the Guardian newspaper termed the programme “taboo-busting”. And certainly from a Palestinian perspective, it broke new ground on mainstream television.

Unlike dozens of later massacres committed by Zionist forces that were hushed up, some of which were even worse, the atrocity at the village of Deir Yassin, just outside Jerusalem, was widely publicised at the time. In fact, the numbers of those slaughtered there were inflated, including famously by the New York Times, to more than 200 Palestinians.

In an age of newly available mass communications, both sides were happy for the already dreadful truth to be exaggerated. The Palestinians in the hope of attracting international attention and intervention; Israel’s founders in order to terrorise more Palestinians out of their homeland so that a Jewish state could be established more easily on its ruins.

And yet today, paradoxically, hardly anyone knows about Deir Yassin – or the many hundreds of other communities from which Palestinians were driven by Israeli forces during a year-long act of national erasure. These are events Palestinians know as their Nakba, or Catastrophe.

This is presumably why the BBC’s The Holy Land and Us seems so “taboo-busting”. Simply identifying the Nakba as a historical event is now seen as an act of courage, so completely has it been wiped from western consciousness – just like those hundreds of Palestinian villages.

For 75 years, western politicians and media have barely acknowledged the essential context for understanding the so-called Israel-Palestine “conflict” – a context that, once stripped away, turns the story on its head. Palestinian resistance is falsely reduced to “terrorism”, while continuing Israeli violence becomes simply “retaliation” and “security”, as though the Palestinians started their own dispossession.

In this regard, The Holy Land and Us is a welcome exception. It does recall some of the missing historical context for today’s supposedly intractable “conflict”.

But at the same time, even as the BBC breaks its own self-imposed taboo, the programme-makers still manage to obfuscate and mislead.

Muddying the waters

The programme splits its story into two parallel narratives, separately featuring British Palestinians and British Jews pursuing their families’ connections to the events surrounding Israel’s creation in 1948.

Although this satisfies the BBC’s remit for balance, it serves only to continue muddying the waters – and predictably in ways that benefit western establishments, and Israel, rather than truth and reconciliation, the programme’s ostensible aim.

The Holy Land and Us presents the Palestinian and Zionist narratives as two sides of the same story. It is a tale of two peoples’ conflicting claims of suffering: the survivors of the Holocaust, and the victims of the Nakba.

And by turning these two historic traumas into a lachrymose competition for the western TV viewer’s sympathy, the Palestinians are set up to fail – just as they did in 1948 against the superior might of the fledgling Israeli army.

The BBC’s presentation of the 1948 story as a “Holocaust v Nakba” prize-fight creates a false equivalence.

European Jews arrived in the Palestinians’ homeland, under British patronage, to terrorise, displace, and sometimes kill, Palestinians. The Palestinians, on the other hand, stayed where they were. They had nothing to do with a strictly European Holocaust.

Israel’s creation, however, required that the Palestinians no longer stay put. They had to be ethnically cleansed, and they were, in military campaigns with names such as “Operation Broom”. There would be no Israel today without such operations, which is why Israel’s founding fathers set out their expulsion principles in a notorious document, Plan Dalet.

And yet the term “ethnic cleansing” is notable by its absence from the programme. And for good reason.

Ethnic cleansing

What The Holy Land and Us serves to do instead – in time-honoured tradition – is prop up a self-serving western myth: of an irreconcilable conflict between two nationalisms, Israeli and Palestinian. And once again, our primary sympathies are steered towards the set of victims whose story we know rather than the victims whose story we don’t.

How The Holy Land and Us manages this is illustrated in the first episode by framing the heart-rending massacre of Palestinians in Deir Yassin with a story of the descendants of a British Jew, Leonard Gantz. As the Holocaust unfolds in the heart of Europe, Gantz chooses to leave London to head to then British-ruled Palestine to help build a Jewish state.

What this entails in practice is largely airbrushed by the programme, until tensions between Palestinians and recent Jewish immigrants like Gantz explode into civil war in 1948. Many Jewish immigrants, including those who had fled the Holocaust, took part in ethnic cleansing operations against the native Palestinian population.

Aided by western powers, they managed to drive out 750,000 Palestinians from the areas that would ultimately be carved out as a Jewish state – about 80 per cent of the Palestinian population living in those areas were expelled. One of the hundreds of communities destroyed in these operations was Deir Yassin.

Gantz does not take part in that massacre. His own role in the Nakba is mainly obscured. However, an old photograph shows him wielding a machine gun nearby, in an ethnically cleansed village called Jimzu. Its 1,750 Palestinian inhabitants were driven out of the embryonic Jewish state during the Nakba.

Gantz’s son, Daniel, and grandson, David, are taken by the programme-makers to the site of Jimzu. There is something deeply distasteful about the way this scene is handled by the BBC.

Tears of pride

It follows immediately after a British-Palestinian woman, Shereen, has heard gut-wrenching testimony of how members of her family were butchered in Deir Yassin by a Jewish militia, the Irgun. Two of its leaders, Menachem Begin and Yitzhak Shamir, would go on to become prime ministers of Israel.

In the early stages of the Nakba, the Irgun wanted a big, well-publicised massacre – prominently of women and children – to terrorise other Palestinians and put them to flight. That was one of the reasons for selecting Deir Yassin, in addition to its strategic location close to a road between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.

Shereen breaks down as she is told that a total of 22 members of her family were slaughtered by the Irgun.

But almost immediately the narrative switches back to Daniel and David, who learn of the exploits of Gantz in Jimzu, where Palestinian civilians were attacked, killed and expelled in Operation Dani.

Gantz’s involvement in Dani, however, is presented by an Israeli historian who joins them simply as heroic. Anat Stern smiles as she announces that the empty site on which they are standing used to be “an Arab village”.

Stern concludes by telling the father and son they should “be proud” of Gantz for choosing to come to the region to fight, to a place he did not know, and that he “contributed to the creation of the state of Israel”. Daniel and David hug as they break down, too, though in their case in tears of pride.

The Guardian’s reviewer calls this the “key moment” of The Holy Land and Us, writing: “Daniel’s pride and gratitude are profound, shared by millions and afforded the greatest respect by the programme.”

And yet what is being prioritised and celebrated by the programme – and, if the Guardian is any barometer, by at least some among western audiences – is nothing less than the ethnic cleansing and slaughter of Palestinians. Of innocents, who had nothing to do with Europe’s Holocaust.

The Jewish participants still seem to be cocooned from this ugly history, even while taking part.

In the second episode, Rob Rinder believes his great uncle was engaging in the Judaic principle of tikkun olam, or “repairing the world”, by becoming an armed member of a kibbutz, built to dispossess Palestinian tenant farmers close to Lake Tiberias. That same kibbutz, Sha’ar HaGolan, still bars all Palestinians from living in it, even those who today have a deeply degraded Israeli citizenship.

The Guardian review observes: “The Holy Land and Us follows British Jews whose family histories pivot around Israel and the impulse to defend it.”

But who were British Jews like Gantz “defending” Israel from? The only possible answer is the region’s native Palestinian population. “Defence” here refers to acts of ethnic cleansing.

Ongoing Nakba

It is hard to imagine quite how offensive this presentation of the events of 1948 must look to a Palestinian like Shereen – and how shameful it should be for the BBC, the Guardian and for us as viewers to celebrate it – had not westerners been conditioned to be so ignorant and insensitive.

None of this is by accident. The BBC, like the rest of the establishment media, continues to direct our attention away from where true responsibility lies for the slaughter at Deir Yassin. It is not chiefly with Zionist Jews like Gantz or those who fled the Holocaust.

In fact, though the programme again obscures this point, the fact is the last place most of the Jews fleeing the European Holocaust wanted to end up was Palestine. Their destination of choice was the United States.

But just as with European leaders of that time, a mood of antisemitism among US leaders kept the doors locked to most of these Jewish refugees.

They came to Palestine because the region was viewed by the western powers as a dumping ground for an unwanted ethnic group. The “Jewish problem” could be solved by making the Palestinians pay the price instead, as Britain’s Balfour Declaration had proposed back in 1917.

And into the bargain, the West got a proxy, dependent, militarised Jewish state projecting western power into an Arab, oil-rich Middle East.

What the programme should have done was to highlight the real villains. It was racist western regimes that left European Jews with only one credible route of escape from western antisemitism: by dispossessing Palestinians.

Instead, The Holy Land and Us continues hero-worshipping Zionist Jews as ethnic cleansers.

When presented with these criticisms, a spokesperson for the BBC stated: “The series aims to consider both viewpoints and experiences of these events equally, as seen through the personal perspectives of the individuals taking part.”

The same political trajectory continues to this day, even if Israeli Jews are ethnically cleansing Palestinians a little more incrementally than they did in 1948 and again in 1967, when they seized the rest of historic Palestine. Israel is still there serving as an outpost of the West, projecting western power into Arab lands.

Palestinians call their experience as a people the “ongoing Nakba” for a reason. Their suffering and dispossession never ended.

Truth and reconciliation

The Guardian review asks an inadvertently revealing question: will this documentary about Israel and Palestine “make viewers on each side sympathise with the other?”

But while Palestinians can offer their sympathy to Jews over the crimes committed by Europeans in the Holocaust, sympathy is not what is required from Israeli Jews or from those, like Gantz’s descendants, who take pride in the Nakba.

They need to face up to the historic crimes committed to create Israel on the ruins of the Palestinians’ homeland, and the crimes that continue to this day to further dispossess and oppress Palestinians. That demands truth and reconciliation, not sympathy.

Will Palestinians have to wait another 75 years to hear the BBC concede that they live under Israeli apartheid rule, just as they have had to wait 75 years for the BBC to admit that the Nakba lies at the root of the Israel-Palestine “conflict”?

For the sake of Palestinians and Israelis, let us fervently hope not.

Comments (8)

  • Margaret West says:

    There was a previous series of programs – also broadcast by the BBC, of antisemitism in the 1930s existing in both Europe and the US.

    Maybe someone has a link to them?

    The US did NOT accept all European Jewish people escaping the Holocaust and there were quotas in place. There were heart-breaking accounts of US citizens desperately trying to get their relatives to America only to be defeated by this restriction where their relatives were later murdered. I think I have mentioned these programs previously on this site and others have too?

    PS As I recall – the “Holy Land” programs commences with the “Balfour Declaration” but the Introduction is very brief. On the one hand the Zionists were promised land which was already occupied by Palestinians and on the other Palestinians were promised Independence if they fought against the Ottoman Empire. Indeed Balfour includes a promise to the Palestinians living there that they would not be disturbed! At the beginning of April 2021 The Times re-published a speech made in April 1921 of Winston Churchill to the Palestinians re-assuring them of this. So far as I remember the “Holy Land” program did not go into the promises made to the Palestinians in the Balfour Declaration and by politicians like Churchill.

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  • Naomi Wayne says:

    I watched the first episode live, and haven’t yet seen the second. I had an immediate reaction – to wonder if people who were not ‘invested’ in the establishment of the state of Israel, but simply watched because they thought the programme looked interesting, would have shared the Jewish participants’ enthusiasm for the Jewish victory and the ways in which it was achieved.

    I felt distaste, not only for the triumphalism of the telling of the Gantz story, and the Jewish victory at Jimzu, but also for the way various key issues were left hanging – issues which evoked no curiosity from today’s Gantz-related family. The reason Jimzu mattered was because of its strategic importance in enabling the Jewish military forces to hold onto Lydda and Ramle (which the UN had actually allocated to a future Palestinian state) and to prevent the Jordanian army from seizing back these overwhelmingly Palestinian populated towns. With the Jewish forces’ victory, nearly all Lydda and Ramle Palestinians, were driven out. Gantz’ relatives were told this, but neither asked what happened to the people of the two towns, nor was any information offered. It was their overwhelming lack of concern which got to me – didn’t they want to know how many Palestinian citizens (nearly all ‘civilians’) were kicked out, nor the circumstances of their expulsion (particularly brutal), nor what happened to them after that (also brutal)? Nor why the new state of Israel should have been permitted to hold onto territory which had been explicitly allocated to the Palestinians.

    I know that casual viewers wouldn’t have known the details of the partition of Palestine, but they would have heard the outline of Lydda’s and Ramle’s destiny. Would they have been so uninterested in the morality of this victory, and of Gantz’ role in this? I just don’t know and am too close to judge. I just wouldnt assume that the programme necessarily achieved its aims.

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  • Patricia Wheeler says:

    I was very pleased to read this article, because I was shocked by the way the programme whitewashed the mass human rights violations against Palestinian Arabs, all to keep on the right side of today’s Israel.

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  • Quite an honest and fair review in the JC.

    I felt these were 2 programmes (and it is important to watch both) which I could recommend to very pro-Israel Jewish friends and relatives, Palestinian sympathisers and ‘absolute beginners’. And I have done so.

    What each person takes from them will depend on their starting point: their existing knowledge, sympathies and moral framework.

    There were small points I could quibble with, or things I wished had been mentioned, but within the time constraints, overall they were strong and careful productions which would be great for starting in-person discussions which could go further.

    The detailed sections on the Naqba, a story rarely covered at all on main stream media in the UK compared to the very well-covered Holocaust, is certainly to be welcomed, and the timing of the broadcasts is fortuitously at a time when many in the Jewish community are more open to discussion than for many years.

    I admired Sarah Agha for astutely challenging the Palestinian historian on the translated document he showed her, which purportedly documented the reason why her ancestors left their village. As Sarah said, this was a Haganah Intelligence Service (sh’ai) document, known as the ‘Migration Report’, and perhaps unreliable. I don’t know that I can include a link here, so do search for ‘The Erasure Of the Nakba in Israel’s archives’ by Seth Anziska in the Journal of Palestine Studies, Autumn 2019. It’s an interesting read.

    You can also search for “Migration of Eretz Yisrael Arabs between December 1, 1947 and June1, 1948” to find and read the full report including annexes.

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  • To those whose main focus is on the programmes’ failings, I would ask whether it is better to score those points or to see it as an opportunity to raise the subject with the wider public and within the Jewish community.

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  • Jack T says:

    This is a great piece by Jonathan Cook.

    What Gantz’s relatives failed to grasp when they were hugging each other was that Gantz was not some sort of hero or freedom fighter, he was a terrorist who had quite possibly murdered innocent people. This was not even alluded to by the programme makers.

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  • john higginson says:

    I genuinely expected all participants to meet, discuss, share their experiences.
    Alas. No third programme. How like life! No common ground because there really is no common ground. And Rob Rinder’s call for hope ….. Hope for what exactly? Of course Gaza wasn’t even on the map!

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  • Margaret West says:

    This is the first of the programs mentioned in my
    post of 27th March at 17.33:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/p0dm3cwv/the-us-and-the-holocaust-series-1-1-the-golden-door-beginnings1938

    There are 3 programs altogether.

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