Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004. 333 pp. $60 ($28, paper).
Middle East Quarterly
Winter 2006
http://www.meforum.org/article/897
Pure Pappe
Pappe is the odd man out among the so-called New Historians. Unlike
his colleagues, who pretend to base their anti-Israel writings on recently
declassified documents from the British Mandate period and the first years
of Israeli independence, Pappe is an unabashed "relativist" for whom historical
research is a backward-looking projection of political attitudes and agendas
regardless of actual facts. Aside from his doctoral dissertation, subsequently
published as Britain and the Arab-Israeli Conflict, 1948-51,[
1]
Pappe's books are not based on archival documentation, preferring secondary
(and deeply prejudiced) sources that aim at vindicating the Palestinian
"narrative" of the conflict. He himself explains this in the introduction
to A History of Modern Palestine:
My bias is apparent despite the desire of my peers that I stick to
facts and the "truth" when reconstructing past realities. I view any such
construction as vain and presumptuous. This book is written by one who
admits compassion for the colonized not the colonizer; who sympathizes
with the occupied not the occupiers.
This unabashed acknowledgment of personal bias and open political partisanship
comes from a diehard ideologue who views Zionist and Israeli history as
"more than a century of colonization, occupation, and dispossession of
Palestinians." The equation of Zionism with colonialism, the cornerstone
of Pappe's historical narrative, has been a staple of Arab propaganda since
the early 1920s. Almost as predictable is the portrayal of Arabs and Palestinians
as the hapless victims of this alleged foreign invasion.
Publication of A History of Modern Palestine by a prestigious academic
press is a sad testament to the pervasive politicization of Middle Eastern
studies where the dividing line between academic scholarship and unadulterated
propaganda has been blurred, if not erased.
Even by the skewed standards of this field of studies, Pappe's latest
book ranks in a class of its own. Not only does it add no new facts or
ideas to the anti-Israel literature, but the sloppiness of its research
astounds. It contains countless factual errors and inaccuracies. Yasir
Arafat's birthplace is Cairo and not Jerusalem. The U.N. Special Commission
on Palestine (UNSCOP) presented its report on August 31, 1947, not on November
29. Deir Yasin is a village near Jerusalem, and not in Haifa. Lawrence
of Arabia had nothing to do with the Anglo-Hashemite correspondence that
led to the "Great Arab Revolt" of World War I. Further, this correspondence
was initiated by the Hashemites not by the British. Pappe even misspells
the official English transliteration of President Weizmann's first name
(Chaim, not Haim).
More serious is the book's consistent resort to factual misrepresentation,
distortion, and outright falsehood. Readers are told of events that never
happened, such as the nonexistent May 1948 Tantura "massacre" or the expulsion
of Arabs within twelve days of the partition resolution. They learn of
political decisions that were never made, such as the Anglo-French 1912
plan for the occupation of Palestine or the contriving of "a master plan
to rid the future Jewish state of as many Palestinians as possible." And
they are misinformed about military and political developments, such as
the rationale for the Balfour declaration:
Without Russia, there was very little hope of successfully surrounding
Germany with a ring of enemy states, a strategy it was hoped would cause
Germany to surrender. The British government expected that Russian Jews
would become the agents of pro-British propaganda that would persuade the
tsarist government to come out clearly in support of the Allies' effort
to subjugate Germany.
But Russia was a member of the Triple Entente coalition with Britain
and France from the time of the outbreak of hostilities in 1914 and so
needed no encouragement to join the war three years later, least of all
by its despised and persecuted Jewish minority. In fact, it was hoped that
the Zionist movement, by virtue of its perceived connections to the Bolshevik
movement, would help keep communist Russia in the war.
Pappe claims that Theodor Herzl "attempted to enlist British help in
installing a temporary Jewish state (i.e., one that would eventually be
moved to Palestine) in British Uganda, an offer which was seriously considered
by some in Whitehall," only to have his plan foiled by Weizmann. In fact,
it was British Colonial Secretary Joseph Chamberlain, not Herzl, who conceived
of the East Africa idea. Nor was the "Uganda plan" foiled by Herzl's opponents,
least of all Weizmann. Herzl narrowly got the plan passed by his last Zionist
Congress in 1903, overriding the opposition of such Zionist leaders as
Menahem Ussishkin and Yehiel Chlenov; it was only after Herzl's death in
July 1904 that the idea was unceremoniously buried.
A final example of Pappe's distortion concerns the tidal wave of Arab
violence that immediately followed the U.N. partition vote in November
1947. On the day after the vote, a spate of Arab attacks left seven Jews
dead and scores more wounded. Shooting, stoning, and rioting continued
apace in the following days. The consulates of Poland and Sweden, both
of whose governments had voted for partition, were attacked. Bombs were
thrown into cafes, Molotov cocktails were hurled at shops, a synagogue
was set on fire. On December 3, at the instigation of the Palestinian leadership,
a large mob ransacked the new Jewish commercial center in Jerusalem, looting
and burning shops and stabbing and stoning whomever they happened upon.
The next day, some 120-150 armed Arabs attacked Kibbutz Efal, on the outskirts
of Tel Aviv, in the first large-scale attempt to storm a Jewish village.
Ignoring this heavily documented historical record, Pappe whitewashes
this violence as intra-communal clashes "activated by hotheaded youth on
both sides." He even makes the mind-boggling claim that this violence had
been triggered by the Haganah. Like so much else in A History of Modern
Palestine, this is a falsehood.
Does Pappe count on the ignorance of the general reader to accept it?
Does he expect his peers to give him a pass? That Cambridge University
Press purveys this disgraceful work suggests that they just might. It also
symbolizes the crisis in Middle East studies.
Efraim Karsh is director of the Mediterranean Studies Programme at
King's College, University of London, and editor of the quarterly journal
Israel Affairs. He is the author of Arafat's War: the Man and His Battle
for Israeli Conquest (Grove Press, 2003).
[
1] New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 1988.
Russian version