The second epigraph in Norman Rose’s eloquent, comprehensive and even-handed book, A Senseless, Squalid War, says it all, from Palestine in the late 19th century to Gaza right now. In 1891, the Zionist philosopher and poet Asher Zvi Ginsberg, wrote:
From abroad we are accustomed to believing that the Arabs are all desert savages, like donkeys. But this is a big mistake. The Arabs, and especially those in the cities, understand our deeds and our desires in Eretz-Israel. If the time comes when the life of our people in Eretz-Israel develops to the point of encroaching upon the native population, they will not yield easily their place.
When Ginsberg wrote that, the Jewish population of Palestine was at most 34,000; there were upwards of 600,000 Arabs. On the eve of the first world war, writes Rose, a professor at the Hebrew University, Arabs were complaining that Zionists were aiming for a state within a state, including a flag and an anthem; they accused the Jews of dispossessing them from Arab lands, expanding Jewish settlements, and creating a bank and and a separate educational system. By 1922, two years after the establishment of the British mandate, there were 660,641 Arabs and 83,790 Jews in Palestine, and only six years later there were 151,656 Jews. The Yishuv, the Jewish community, despite the lack of interest amongst Jews worldwide, who preferred America as a destination, had created Jewish ministries, trades unions, what Rose terms ‘progessive educational and health systems,’ and the Philharmonic Orchestra. Britain saw nothing out of the way in these developments, which saved money for the British taxpayer.



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graeme a
March 17th, 2009 12:08amInteresting - the same Major Farran wrote a fascinating book on his WWII experiences which made references to Jews and Palestine on occasion, and his anti semitism is undisguised and unashamed.
This review goes to great pains to draw parallels between the use of (relatively low key, eg. the King David Hotel was tipped off by the bombers some 30 mins before the attack, but ignored by the British) terrorism by the Jewish lunatic fringe of 1940's Palestine and the mainstream Hamas of today.
The two are incomparable and any effort to do so is yet another, sadly common effort to delegitimise Israel and her history.
Equaly trendy is the portrayal of the Jewish return to the Israel of today as the real source of the problem (with the "solution" insinuated).
Up until 1964 Palestinian self determination remained unarticulated, and was at most comprised of a blind hatred of Jews, and no more. Indeed, the Palestinian battle cry - whether in 1922 or 2009 is still "Itbach al Yahud!" or, "Slaughter the Jew!". There is nothing in that message that relates to Zionism or Israel.
Sadly this writer, in the guise of a balanced report has composed another piece of delegitimization of Jewish national self determination that is so fashionable in the UK these days.
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