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Nakba denial is a form ofhistorical denialism pertaining to the1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight andits accompanying effects, whichPalestinians refer to collectively as the "Nakba" (lit. 'catastrophe').[1][2] Underlying assumptions of Nakba denial cited by scholars can include the denial of historically documented violence against Palestinians, the denial of adistinct Palestinian identity, the idea thatPalestine wasbarren land, and the notion that Palestinian dispossession was part ofmutual transfers between Arabs and Jews justified by war.[3][4][5]
Some historians say that denial of the Nakba has become a core component ofZionist narratives,[6][a] and was largely facilitated by early Israeli historiography.[7] Beginning in the 1980s, theNew Historians, working from declassified archives, advanced historical accounts that challenged Nakba denial,[8] and significant volumes ofIsraeli Jewish literature have also emerged shedding more light on the period.[9] In 1998, Steve Niva, editor of theMiddle East Report, used the term "Nakba denial" to describe how the rise of the early Internet led to competing online narratives of the events of 1948.[10]Zochrot, an Israeli nonprofit organization, has aimed to commemorate the Nakba through direct action.[11]
Nakba denial has been described as still prevalent in both Israeli and US discourse and linked to various tropes associated withanti-Arab racism.[4] In 2011, Israel enacted a law colloquially called theNakba Law that authorizes withholding state funds from organizations that commemorate Israel's Independence Day as a day of mourning.[11][12] In May 2023, following the 75th anniversary of the Nakba,Palestinian Authority PresidentMahmoud Abbas made denial of the Nakba or 1948 expulsion a crime punishable by two years in jail.[2]
Palestinians accuse Israel of using "Nakba denial" to absolve itself of responsibility while perpetuating conflict, a characterization Israel vehemently denies. Zionist historians justify the 1948 expulsion and flight by arguing that the invading Arab armies threatened the new Jewish state with annihilation. But some of Israel's New Historians contend that Israel's founding prime ministerDavid Ben-Gurion overstated the Arab threat with the goal of expelling Palestinian civilians and taking hold of as much of former Palestine as possible.[13] The term "Nakba denial" was used in 1998 by Steve Niva, editor of theMiddle East Report, to describe how the rise of the early Internet led to competing online narratives of the events of 1948.[10]
Palestinian writer and historianNur Masalha has said that Israeli teachers and educators hide the Nakba's horrors from schoolchildren, constructing and upholding a national narrative that excludes Palestiniancollective memory. Masalha says that Israel's "schoolteachers, academics, educators, historians and novelists" advance "Zionist knowledge" and Zionist collective memory by using "a campaign of Nakba denial and concealment." And this exclusion, according toIlan Pappé, "is the main constitutive element in the construction of collective Jewish identity in the state of Israel."[14]
According to scholarNur Masalha, inIsrael there is a politics of denial of the Nakba, embodied by statements by the likes ofGolda Meir, such as the famous line "There was no such thing as Palestinians".[15] Masalha has written, "denial is central to the Zionist narrative about what happened in 1948",[6] adding that the politics of Nakba denial is itself one of the manifestations of "ongoing Nakba".[16]
Scholar Mariko Mori's analysis of mainstream Israeli historiography of the establishment of nationhood found inadequate mentions of "the birth of thePalestinian refugee problem and the destruction of over 400 Palestinian villages in 1948, thus deliberately denying Palestinian memories of the Nakba."[8] She finds that narratives justifying the1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight rest on a number of assumptions, including that Palestine was an "uncultivated", "barren, uninhabited land"; that Palestinian Arabs were not a nation but part of a "greater Arab nation", disputing Palestinian Arab nationalism; thatPalestinian Arabs were "rioters andpogromists"; that Jews were returning home (thenegation of the Diaspora); and that population transfers were a "justifiable, universal solution to minority questions".[5]
Historian Maha Nassar's analysis ofLeon Uris's 1958 novelExodus identifies the denial of Zionists' responsibility for the 1948 expulsion and flight of Palestinians and the claim that Arabs themselves were to blame (utilizing theanti-Arab racist tropes present in the novel) as a form ofhistorical negationism she calls "Nakba denialism".[4] The anti-Arab racist tropes include the notion that Palestinians lack religious attachment to Palestine, that they lack "modern feelings of national identity", and that they are easily induced to violence by their leaders.[4] Within the paradigm ofZionism as settler colonialism, she says that such narratives blame the victims of settler colonial violence for their expulsion.[4]
Historian Michael R. Fischbach defines Nakba denial as a "Nakba counternarrative" with particular roles in Israeli public life and state policy—especially as an instrument of resisting calls forreparations—consisting of the following themes:[3]
Ilan Gur-Ze'ev and Ilan Pappé in 2003 wrote that both Israelis and Palestinians view themselves "as a sole victim while totally negating the victimization" of the other group. On the Palestinian side, the trend was moving away from "total denial" toward downplaying the Holocaust's "moral significance", while on the Israeli side, "Zionism insists on denying the Nakbah and refuses to admit Israel's role in the Palestinian suffering as victimizer" and concluding "nothing justifies ... the Israeli denial of major responsibility".[17]
In 2017,Nadim N. Rouhana andAreej Sabbagh-Khoury wrote that the Nakba "was, until the mid-1990s, silenced in the 'official political sphere' of the Palestinians in Israel ... by the Israeli state and its institutional agents" and that it is "hard to overestimate the centrality of Nakba denial in Israel". They added, "Israel's concern about its own legitimacy was a major factor" in the emphasis of Nakba denial, leading to "the official Israeli state memory [where] Palestine was eliminated from the geography and history of the land" in favour of Jewish/Zionist terms and narratives. They cited the 2011Nakba Law as "the most illuminating example" of the Israeli state interpreting the growing "consciousness" of Palestinians of the Nakba as a "threat" and taking steps to combat it.[18] Bashir Bashir and Amos Goldberg agree that the 2011 Nakba Law is a form of Nakba denial.[19]
In 2020, Marouf Hasian, Jr. wrote that one form of Nakba denial originating from theGlobal North is that it is "ridiculous" to consider "the birth of Israel" a catastrophe (Nakba). Hasian highlights one incident in 2009, reported byIan Black, when Israeli minister of educationGideon Sa'ar defended the removal of the word "Nakba" from school textbooks. Sa'ar had said, "In no country in the world does an educational curriculum refer to the creation of the country as a 'catastrophe'" and the "objective of the education system is not to deny the legitimacy of our state, nor promote extremism among Arab-Israelis." Hasian says that some "Israelis worry that al-Nakba consciousness-raising threatens state legitimacy".[20][21]
According to historianSaleh Abd al-Jawad, Nakba denial has been facilitated by Israeli historiography, as it has "adopted a denial of the Nakba, a negation of the breadth of the ethnic cleansing perpetrated in Palestine".[7]
The 1980s saw renewed interest among Israeli academics in Nakba historiography, partially resulting from the declassification of Israeli archives on the 1948 war.[b] In the late 1980s, Nakba denial began to be criticized and Israel's history was rewritten by theNew Historians, who changed established beliefs about the 1948 Arab-Israeli War and Palestinian exodus.[8] Since the 1980s, a considerable body of literature aimed at "demystifying the past" has emerged from withinIsraeli Jewish society, alongside works such asIlan Pappé's that have been "unsettling the picture the founding fathers worked so energetically to paint and to institutionalize the hegemonic account of 1948".[9]
Toward the end of the 20th century, the topic of Nakba denial almost went to trial in the context of the discussion of theTantura massacre andTheodore Katz's 1998 thesis on it.[22][23] Katz, a postgraduate researcher, was sued by theAlexandroni Brigade, and in the ensuing legal tussle half of his legal defense urged him to defend his work and bring forward Palestinian witnesses to speak about the massacre.[22] This defense would have turned the trial "into a case about the denial of the Nakba", according to researcher Samera Esmeir,[22] but the case was instead closed out of court.[22]
Social scientistAhmad H. Sa'di has described "three modes of denial of moral responsibility for the Nakba"; sociologistRonit Lentin has cited his work on three strategies of Nakba denial.[24][25] Per Sa'di, these are "denying or hiding the historically documented violence", trying to "remove the Palestinians from the history" of Israel before/during 1948, and perpetuating the "myth of 'a land without people for a people without land'"; Sa'di highlightsJoan Peters's 1984 bookFrom Time Immemorial andAlan Dershowitz's 2003 bookThe Case for Israel as examples of the latter. Peters claimed that the refugees were immigrant Arab workers and Dershowitz made similar arguments.[24][25]
The second mode of Nakba denial, in Lentin's summary of Sa'di's views, is acknowledging the Nakba but "denying it carries any moral or practical implications" along with an "exaggerated connection between Palestinians and Nazis"; Sa'di cites the 2003 work of Ilan Gur-Ze'ev, who writes of "Arab involvement in the Nazi army"; Sa'di interprets this as removing the "victim-perpetrator" dynamic between Palestinians and Israelis by placing them on the same "moral ground".[24][25]
The third mode of Nakba denial, per Lentin, is "addressing the moral weight of the Palestinian Nakba unapologetically". Lentin writes that this is best exemplified by historianBenny Morris's 2004 wish that the 1948 Nakba had been more complete; Morris wrote, "ethnic cleansing can be justified ... when the alternative is between [committing] ethnic cleansing and [suffering] genocide, the genocide of your own nation, I prefer ethnic cleansing". Sa'di cites another passage by Morris on this strategy: "final good justifies harsh and cruel acts that are committed in the course of history."[24][25]
Nassar cites Nakba denial as a feature of American discourse on Palestine.[4] Sa'di argues that it is part of the discourse of Jewish supporters of Israel.[26]
With time, the narratives about 1948 have become harder to sustain, and "the first strategy for Zionists", according to Sa'di, was to return to the "old myth" of "a land without a people for a people without a land". Dershowitz'sThe Case for Israel exemplifies this,[27] drawing on Peters'sFrom Time Immemorial, a pseudo-historical work that suggests that most Palestinian refugees were not native to Palestine, and that with the1948 Palestine war they returned to their countries.[27] Through this straightforward "denial of the other's existence, this formulation did away with the colonization-uprooting dialectic", Sa'di writes.[27]
Within Israeli civic society, there are grassroots movements against Nakba denial. The NGOZochrot aims to raise awareness of the Nakba by directly challenging its denial through direct memorial action,[11] such as by giving tours of depopulated Palestinian villages, sign-posting sites destroyed in the Nakba, and hosting an annual Nakba film festival.[11] In 2007, when Israel marked its independence day, Zochrot organized a parade in Tel Aviv "to mark the recognition of theright of return", stopping off along the way at neighborhoods built on the sites of former Palestinian villages.[11]
In 2011, Motti Golani and Adel Manna discussed theJewish-Israeli narrative and thePalestinian-Arab narrative of the 1948 war, saying each "completely ignores" the other; the Palestinians view the Nakba "as a formative trauma" when they "to a large degree lost their country" while "the narrative espoused by most Jewish Israelis" is that the "birth of Israel ... must be pure and untainted, because if a person, a state is born in sin, its entire essence is tainted."[28]
Ronit Lentin wrote that the "memory of the Nakba" faced "years of denial and silencing by Israel", but after archives were made available and theNew Historians continued their work, by 2010 "many, though definitely not all, Israeli Jews" accepted that the Nakba occurred, though "the majority" of Israeli Jews view it as a "necessary evil", which Lentin in the same writing calls another form of Nakba denial, "addressing the moral weight of the Palestinian Nakba unapologetically".[25] In 2019,Yehouda Shenhav wrote that despite the "partial democratization of Israeli historiography in recent decades, the majority of Israelis still deny the Nakba".[29]
Yifat Gutman and Noam Tirosh, writing inLaw and Social Inquiry, conclude that during the 2010s, supporters of Israel and right-wing journalists have popularized the term "Jewish Nakba"—which Gutman and Tirosh say presents afalse equivalence between the Nakba and theJewish exodus from the Muslim world.[30] Academics Yasmeen Abu-Laban and Abigail B. Bakan, writing inThe Political Quarterly, say that equating the Nakba with the migration of Mizrahi Jews to Israel constitutes a form of Nakba denial.[31]
In 2018, Bashir Bashir and Amos Goldberg wrote that both "Zionist and Palestinian mainstream national narratives" have been "denying or downplaying the suffering of the other side in order to validate its own claim", resulting in the "simultaneous and forceful negation" of the Nakba and the Holocaust. Bashir and Goldberg wrote: "Many, perhaps most Jews in Israel, claim that the Nakba is not an event at all", and give the example of the 2011 publicationNakba-Nonsense by organisationIm Tirtzu, which Bashir and Goldberg describe as claiming that Palestinians do not exist as a people and that only Palestinians and Arab countries are responsible for the consequences Palestinians bore before, during, and after 1948.[32]
In 2009, the Israeli government banned uses of the term "Nakba" in school textbooks and required the removal of existing textbooks that mentioned it.[33][21] In 2011, Israel passed a law known colloquially as the "Nakba Law" that authorized the withholding of state funds to entities that commemorated "Israel's Independence Day or the day on which the state was established as a day of mourning", or that denied the existence of Israel as a "Jewish and democratic state".[33] While the original bill proposed to make this a crime for individuals, the proposed legislation was amended to financially penalize organizations instead.[34] According to transitional justice researcher Yoav Kapshuk and Political scientist Lisa Strömbom, this law was an attempt to "hamper freedom of expression" surrounding the Nakba, but in doing so it inadvertently "increased public knowledge about the meaning of Nakba".[11] In its wake, columnist Odeh Bisharat wrote that some good came out of the legislation, in that "at least, there's no denial of the Nakba. Nobody claims the whole thing is fairy-tale. The Palestinian narrative has won. The narrative that in '48 a people was exiled, by force, from its land, has seared into Israeli and global consciousness."[11]Yehouda Shenhav wrote in 2019 that the Nakba Law had the opposite of its intended effect, because since the law was adopted, "almost every household in Israel has become acquainted with the Arabic word: al-Nakba."[35]
In May 2023, Palestinian Authority PresidentMahmoud Abbas issued a decree defining the Nakba as a "crime against humanity",[2] and making its denial a criminal offense punishable by up to two years in jail.[2] The legislation echoed developments in Israel, where lawmakers in the hardline 37th government had proposed outlawing the waving of Palestinian flags.[2]
During the2000 Camp David Summit, U.S. negotiators backed Israel's refusal to acknowledge aPalestinian right of return to their homeland and its denial of its role in perpetrating the Nakba.[4] In December 2020, 22Republican representatives led byDoug Lamborn sent PresidentDonald Trump a letter urging him to erase Palestinian refugees and their rights as a matter of U.S. policy, calling for an end to "the fiction of the 'right of return'" caused by the Nakba as "unrealistic". "We do not believe it [5.3 million refugees] accurately reflects the number of actual Palestinian refugees", they wrote.[36][37]
TheNeukölln district council of Berlin passed a motion advocating for the use of brochures in high schools that dismissed the historical realities of theNakba as "myth".[38][39]
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The 1960 American filmExodus was based onLeon Uris' 1958 novel.[4]