al-Nakba: the Palestinian "Catastrophe"

Ironic, how quickly innocent victims can become ruthless victimizers

Home

Why focus on Israel?

Do Jews need a state?

Index of topics

Who are we?

Our directors

Our methods

Community actions

Sponsored events

Community television

Using the internet

News & Views

Our ongoing commentaries

Palestine: Just Justice!

Balfour Declaration

UN partition resolution

UN Charter

Universal Human Rights

VFP resolutions

The Zionist project

Origins: 1948

UN terrorism chronology

UN resolution 194

Israel founding document

US recognition

Admission to UN

"A land without a people"

Pix of Arab life before

Pix of Arab life after

Jewish refugees

1967 war

Admission of deceit

USS Liberty

UN Resolution 242

1973 Yom Kippur War

The Samson Option

Arab oil embargo

Invasions of Lebanon

1982

2006

al-Nakba continuing

Memoricide

Cultural strangulation

Land theft & destruction

Jewish National Fund

Israeli massacres

Extrajudicial actions

Killing the children

4th Geneva Convention

UN resolutions

US enabling

The Lobby

The soft lobby

duplicitous media

Resistance

Palestinian terrorism

1st intifada

2nd intifada

Jenin

Spirit of resistance

Attacks on internationals

an Apartheid state

Israeli racism

Israeli laws

Occupied Palestine

Israeli self-destruction

Solutions

Counter-Zionism

2-state model

The "peace process"

Peace process products

1-state model

a 2-stage model

a 12-step model

Right of Return

Arab Peace Initiative

Beyond Zionism

non-violent force fields

The MLK method

local activism

Sources & resources

web sites

books and videos

Immediately upon ethnic cleansing and destruction or repopulation of 531 Arab villages and 11 urban areas by Jewish terrorist militias before May 15, 1948 and the IDF following that date, Israel set about to cover up the evidence.  This was usually done by bulldozing the structures and covering the rubble with conifers and cactus (see www.cactus48.com) or by replacing the Arab names of roads, streets and villages with Hebrew names.  Israeli historian Ilan Pappe calls this "memoricide," intended to deny the prior existence and obliterate the cultural remains of the people they violently displaced.

This process has continued to the present.  Most Israeli land was placed under the control of the Jewish National Fund or the Israeli Land Authority and given to Jews or turned into public lands such as parks.  Non-Jews are prohibited from owning or leasing this land.  Many historical markers have been installed by the JNF commemorating biblical references and sites of Jewish significance, while the many centuries of Arab history in Palestine have been wholly excluded from recognition. 

An outstanding Israeli NGO, "Zochrot" which in Hebrew means "remembering" (in feminine, emotional voice) currently conducts awareness-raising tours to the sites of destroyed villages and renamed communities, leading combined groups of Israeli Jews and Palestinian Arabs.  At these sites they place signs and markers with the original Arab names, often against significant local resistance, and are pressuring the JNF to also do so, sometimes successfully.  (see
www.zochrot.org). Zochrot has also done an extensive analysis of the feasibility of implementing the full right of return for Palestinian refugees, with hopeful conclusions.

Another outstanding American NGO, "Birthright Unplugged," conducts similar tours for American Jews to learn the truth about Israel's beginnings.  They conduct similar tours for Palestinian children to visit and learn about the birthplaces of their elders, calling this program "birthright re-plugged." (see
www.birthrightunplugged.org)

Demand Freedom, Justice and Equality in the Holy Land