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From: Alamaine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: CTRL <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Fri, 29 Feb 2008 1:18 pm
Subject: [ctrl] An invention called 'the Jewish people'










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http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/959229.html

Last update - 17:30 28/02/2008
An invention called 'the Jewish people'
By Tom Segev

Israel's Declaration of Independence states that the Jewish people arose  
in the Land of Israel and was exiled from its homeland. Every Israeli  
schoolchild is taught that this happened during the period of Roman rule,  
in 70 CE. The nation remained loyal to its land, to which it began to  
return after two millennia of exile. Wrong, says the historian Shlomo  
Zand, in one of the most fascinating and challenging books published here  
in a long time. There never was a Jewish people, only a Jewish religion,  
and the exile also never happened - hence there was no return. Zand  
rejects most of the stories of national-identity formation in the Bible,  
including the exodus from Egypt and, most satisfactorily, the horrors of  
the conquest under Joshua. It's all fiction and myth that served as an  
excuse for the establishment of the State of Israel, he asserts.

According to Zand, the Romans did not generally exile whole nations, and  
most of the Jews were permitted to remain in the country. The number of  
those exiled was at most tens of thousands. When the country was conquered  
by the Arabs, many of the Jews converted to Islam and were assimilated  
among the conquerors. It follows that the progenitors of the Palestinian  
Arabs were Jews. Zand did not invent this thesis; 30 years before the  
Declaration of Independence, it was espoused by David Ben-Gurion, Yitzhak  
Ben-Zvi and others.

If the majority of the Jews were not exiled, how is it that so many of  
them reached almost every country on earth? Zand says they emigrated of  
their own volition or, if they were among those exiled to Babylon,  
remained there because they chose to. Contrary to conventional belief, the  
Jewish religion tried to induce members of other faiths to become Jews,  
which explains how there came to be millions of Jews in the world. As the  
Book of Esther, for example, notes, "And many of the people of the land  
became Jews; for the fear of the Jews fell upon them."

Zand quotes from many existing studies, some of which were written in  
Israel but shunted out of the central discourse. He also describes at  
length the Jewish kingdom of Himyar in the southern Arabian Peninsula and  
the Jewish Berbers in North Africa. The community of Jews in Spain sprang  
 from Arabs who became Jews and arrived with the forces that captured Spain  
 from the Christians, and from European-born individuals who had also  
become Jews.

The first Jews of Ashkenaz (Germany) did not come from the Land of Israel  
and did not reach Eastern Europe from Germany, but became Jews in the  
Khazar Kingdom in the Caucasus. Zand explains the origins of Yiddish  
culture: it was not a Jewish import from Germany, but the result of the  
connection between the offspring of the Kuzari and Germans who traveled to  
the East, some of them as merchants.

We find, then, that the members of a variety of peoples and races, blond  
and black, brown and yellow, became Jews in large numbers. According to  
Zand, the Zionist need to devise for them a shared ethnicity and  
historical continuity produced a long series of inventions and fictions,  
along with an invocation of racist theses. Some were concocted in the  
minds of those who conceived the Zionist movement, while others were  
offered as the findings of genetic studies conducted in Israel.

Prof. Zand teaches at Tel Aviv University. His book, "When and How Was the  
Jewish People Invented?" (published by Resling in Hebrew), is intended to  
promote the idea that Israel should be a "state of all its citizens" -  
Jews, Arabs and others - in contrast to its declared identity as a "Jewish  
and democratic" state. Personal stories, a prolonged theoretical  
discussion and abundant sarcastic quips do not help the book, but its  
historical chapters are well-written and cite numerous facts and insights  
that many Israelis will be astonished to read for the first time.

The mosquito from Kiryat Yam

On March 27, 1948, a meeting was held in Hiafa concerning the fate of the  
Bedouin of Arab al-Ghawarina in the Haifa area. "They must be removed from  
there, so that they, too, will not add to our troubles," Yosef Weitz, of  
the Keren Kayemeth (Jewish National Fund), wrote in his personal diary.  
Two months later, Weitz reported to the organization's director, "Our  
Haifa Bay has been evacuated completely and there is hardly a remnant of  
those who encroached our border." They were probably expelled to Jordan;  
some were allowed to remain in the village of Jisr al-Zarqa. The fate of  
the Arab al-Ghawarina Bedouin has recently made the headlines thanks to  
Shmuel Sisso, mayor of the Haifa suburb of Kiryat Yam. He has filed a  
complaint with the police against Google. The reason is the addition that  
one of the site's surfers, a resident of Nablus, attached to the center of  
Kiryat Yam in the world satellite photo, stating that the city is built on  
the ruins of a village that was destroyed in 1948, Arab al-Ghawarina.  
Sisso's complaint says that this is slanderous.

The facts are as follows: The lands of the Zevulun Valley were purchased  
in the 1920s by the JNF and by various construction companies, among them  
one called Gav Yam. The Zionist Archives have the plan for the  
establishment of Kiryat Yam, dated 1938, and a letter from 1945 states  
that there were already 100 homes there. Government maps from the British  
Mandate period identify the territory on which Kiryat Yam was built by two  
names: Zevulun Valley and Ghawarina. Thus it appears that this was not a  
settlement but an area in which Bedouin resided.

The Web site of the Israeli organization Zochrot (Remembering) states that  
there were 720 people at the site in 1948 and that the area was divided  
among three kibbutzim: Ein Hamifratz, Kfar Masaryk and Ein Hayam, today  
Ein Carmel.

This story has been making the rounds on the Internet and drawing  
responses, which can be summed up as follows: "If Sisso is suing Google  
because they stated that he is living on a destroyed Arab village, the  
implication is that he thinks this is something bad." Sisso, a lawyer of  
57 who is identified with Likud and was formerly Israeli consul general in  
New York, says, "I don't think there is anything bad about it, but other  
people might think it is bad, especially people abroad, and that is liable  
to hurt Kiryat Yam, because people will not want to invest here. Since we  
are not sitting on a Palestinian village, why should we have to suffer for  
no reason?"

Moroccan-born, Sisso arrived in Israel in 1955. "I wandered around the  
whole region and I saw no trace of anyone's having been here before us and  
supposedly expelled." He asked an American law professor how, if at all,  
Google could be sued for slander or for damages. This, he says, is the  
contribution of Kiryat Yam to the struggle against the right of return (of  
the Palestinian refugees).

It could turn out to be the most riveting trial since Ariel Sharon sued  
Time magazine, but mayor Sisso has no illusions: "Me against Google is  
like a mosquito against an elephant," he said this week.

Who America belongs to

Two professors, Gabi Shefer and Avi Ben-Zvi, were guests this week on  
Yitzhak Noy's "International Hour" current events program on Israel Radio.  
The anchor, sounding slightly concerned, asked whether the achievements of  
Barack Obama show that the United States no longer belongs to the white  
man. Prof. Shefer confirmed this: Obama is an immigrant, he said. Prof.  
Ben-Zvi asked to add a remark: Gabi Shefer is right, he said. They are  
both wrong. If Obama were an immigrant, he would not be eligible to be  
elected president. He was born in Honolulu, some two years after Hawaii  
became the 50th state of the union.

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-- 
Alamaine, IVe
Grand Forks, ND, US of A
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
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philosopher." - Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)

"Being ignorant is not such a shame as being unwilling to learn." -
Poor Richard's Almanack, 1758 (Benjamin Franklin)
~~~~~~~
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