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		<title>Israeli historian Ilan Pappé: Despite ceasefire, Palestinians still face ‘elimination, genocide’</title>
		<link>https://eveningreport.nz/2025/10/14/israeli-historian-ilan-pappe-despite-ceasefire-palestinians-still-face-elimination-genocide/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Asia Pacific Report]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 14 Oct 2025 02:19:41 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Democracy Now! AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now! The War and Peace Report. I’m Amy Goodman. As we’ve reported, the Gaza ceasefire deal is in effect. Phase one of the US.-backed 20-point plan is underway. Hamas has released all 20 living captives. Israel has released almost 2000 Palestinians in Ramallah and now in Khan Younis ]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="https://www.democracynow.org/" rel="nofollow"><em>Democracy Now!</em></a></p>
<p><em>AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now! The War and Peace Report. I’m Amy Goodman.</em></p>
<p><em>As we’ve reported, the Gaza ceasefire deal is in effect. Phase one of the US.-backed 20-point plan is underway. Hamas has released all 20 living captives. Israel has released almost 2000 Palestinians in Ramallah and now in Khan Younis in Gaza.</em></p>
<p><em>Yesterday, President Trump addressed the Israeli Knesset and then co-chaired a so-called peace summit in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, with President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was not among the 20 or more world leaders who attend. He was invited but said he was not going.</em></p>
<p><em>For more, we’re joined by the Israeli historian, author and professor Ilan Pappé, professor of history and director of the European Centre for Palestine Studies at the University of Exeter and the chair of the Nakba Memorial Foundation. Among his books,</em> The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine<em>, almost 20 years ago, and</em> Gaza in Crisis<em>, which he co-wrote with Noam Chomsky. His new book, <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Israel-Brink-Revolutions-Decolonization-Coexistence/dp/0807018791" rel="nofollow">Israel on the Brink: And the Eight Revolutions That Could Lead to Decolonization and Coexistence</a>.</em></p>
<p><em>We thank you so much for being with us. Professor Pappé, if you could start off by responding to what has happened? We’re watching, in Khan Younis, prisoners being released, Palestinian prisoners, up to 2000, and in the occupied West Bank, though there families were told if they dare celebrate the release of their loved ones, they might be arrested.</em></p>
<p><em>And we saw the release of the 20 Israeli hostages as they returned to Israel. Hamas says they’re returning the dead hostages, the remains, over the next few days. Israel has not said they will return the dead prisoners, of which it’s believed there are nearly 200 in Israeli prisons.</em></p>
<p><em>Your response overall, and now to the summit in Egypt?</em></p>
<p><em>ILAN PAPPÉ:</em> Yes. First of all, there is some joy in knowing that the bombing of the people in Gaza has stopped for a while. And there is joy knowing that Palestinian political prisoners have been reunited with their families, and, similarly, that Israeli hostages were reunited with their families.</p>
<p>But except from that, I don’t think we are in such an historical moment as President Trump claimed in his speech in the Knesset and beforehand. We are not at the end of the terrible chapter that we have been in for the last two years.</p>
<p>And that chapter is an Israeli attempt by a particularly fanatic, extremely rightwing Israeli government to try and use ethnic cleansing in the West Bank and genocide in Gaza to downsize the number of Palestinians in Palestine and impose Israel’s will in a way that they hope would be at least endorsed by some Arab governments and the world.</p>
<p>So far, they have an alliance of Trump and some extreme rightwing parties in Europe.</p>
<p>And now I hope that the world will not be misled that Israel is now ready to open a different kind of page in its relationship with the Palestinians. And what you told us about the way that the celebrations were dealt with in the West Bank and the incineration of the sanitation center shows you that nothing has changed in the dehumanisation and the attitude of this particular Israeli government and its belief that it has the power to wipe out Palestine as a nation, as a people and as a country.</p>
<p>I hope the world will not stand by, because up to now it did stand by when the genocide occurred in Palestine.</p>
<p><iframe loading="lazy" title="YouTube video player" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/0VBDIaaryG8?si=S-Pgzxk543sncNEg" width="560" height="315" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen="allowfullscreen">[embedded content]</iframe></p>
<p><em>AMY GOODMAN: We have just heard President Trump’s address to the Israeli Knesset. He followed the Israeli Prime Minister, Netanyahu. I’m not sure, but in listening to Netanyahu, I don’t think he used the word “Palestinian.” President Trump has just called on the Israeli president to pardon Netanyahu.</em></p>
<p><em>Your thoughts on this, and also the possibility of why Netanyahu has not joined this summit that President Trump is co-chairing? Many are speculating for different reasons — didn’t want to anger the right, that’s further right than him. Others are saying the possibility of his arrest, not on corruption charges, but on crimes against humanity, the whole case before the International Criminal Court.</em></p>
<p><em>ILAN PAPPÉ:</em> It could be a mixture of all of it, but I think at the center of it is the nature of the Israeli government that was elected in November 2022, this alliance between a very opportunistic politician, who’s only interested in surviving and keeping his position as a prime minister, alongside messianic, neo-Zionist politicians who really believe that God has given them the opportunity to create the Greater Israel, maybe even beyond the borders of Palestine, and, in the process, eliminate Palestinians.</p>
<p>I think that his consideration should all — are always about his chances of survival. So, whatever went in his mind, he came to the conclusion that going to Cairo is not going to help his chances of being reelected.</p>
<p>My great worry is not that he didn’t go to Cairo. My greatest worry is that he does believe that his only chance of being reelected is still to have a war going on, either in Gaza or in the West Bank or against Iran or in the north with Lebanon.</p>
<p>We are dealing here with a reckless, irresponsible politician, who is even willing to drown his own state in the process of saving his skin and his neck. And the victims will always be, from this adventurous policy, the Palestinians.</p>
<p>I hope the world understands that, really, the urgent need of — and I’m talking about world leaders rather than societies. You already discussed what is the level of solidarity among civil societies. But I do hope that political elites will understand — especially in the West — their role now is not to mediate between Israelis and Palestinians.</p>
<p>Their role now is to protect the Palestinians from destruction, elimination, genocide and ethnic cleansing. And nothing of that duty, especially of Europe, that is complicit with what happened, and the United States, that are complicit with what happened in the last two years — nothing that we heard in the speeches so far in the — in preparation for the summit in Egypt, and I have a feeling that we won’t hear anything about it also later on.</p>
<p>There is a different way in which our civil societies refer to Palestine as a place that has to be saved and protected, and still this irrelevant conversation among our political elites about a peace deal, a two-state solution, all of that, that has nothing to do with what we are experiencing in the way that the Israeli government thinks it has an historical moment to totally de-Arabise Palestine and eliminate and expunge the Palestinians from history and the area.</p>
<p><em>AMY GOODMAN:</em> Ilan Pappé, I want to thank you for being with us, Israeli historian, professor of history, director of the European Centre for Palestine Studies at the University of Exeter, chair of the Nakba Memorial Foundation. His new book, <em>Israel on the Brink: And the Eight Revolutions That Could Lead to Decolonization and Coexistence</em>.</p>
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		<title>On ‘moral panic’ and the courage to speak – the West’s silence on Gaza</title>
		<link>https://eveningreport.nz/2025/04/30/on-moral-panic-and-the-courage-to-speak-the-wests-silence-on-gaza/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Asia Pacific Report]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Apr 2025 01:19:57 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Palestinians do not have the luxury to allow Western moral panic to have its say or impact. Not caving in to this panic is one small, but important, step in building a global Palestine network that is urgently needed, writes Dr Ilan Pappé ANALYSIS: By Ilan Pappé Responses in the Western world to the genocide ]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Palestinians do not have the luxury to allow Western moral panic to have its say or impact. Not caving in to this panic is one small, but important, step in building a global Palestine network that is urgently needed, writes <strong>Dr Ilan Pappé</strong></em></p>
<p><strong>ANALYSIS:</strong> <em>By Ilan Pappé</em></p>
<p>Responses in the Western world to the genocide in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank raise a troubling question: why is the official West, and official Western Europe in particular, so indifferent to Palestinian suffering?</p>
<p>Why is the Democratic Party in the US complicit, directly and indirectly, in sustaining the daily inhumanity in Palestine — a complicity so visible that it probably was one reason they lost the election, as the Arab American and progressive vote in key states could, and justifiably so, not forgive the Biden administration for its part in the genocide in the Gaza Strip?</p>
<p>This is a pertinent question, given that we are dealing with a televised genocide that has now been renewed on the ground. It is different from previous periods in which Western indifference and complicity were displayed, either during the Nakba or the long years of occupation since 1967.</p>
<p>During the Nakba and up to 1967, it was not easy to get hold of information, and the oppression after 1967 was mostly incremental, and, as such, was ignored by the Western media and politics, which refused to acknowledge its cumulative effect on the Palestinians.</p>
<p>But these last 18 months are very different. Ignoring the genocide in the Gaza Strip and the ethnic cleansing in the West Bank can only be described as intentional and not due to ignorance.</p>
<p>Both the Israelis’ actions and the discourse that accompanies them are too visible to be ignored, unless politicians, academics, and journalists choose to do so.</p>
<p>This kind of ignorance is, first and foremost, the result of successful Israeli lobbying that thrived on the fertile ground of an European guilt complex, racism and Islamophobia. In the case of the US, it is also the outcome of many years of an effective and ruthless lobbying machine that very few in academia, media, and, in particular, politics, dare to disobey.</p>
<p><strong>The moral panic phenomenon</strong><br />This phenomenon is known in recent scholarship as moral panic, very characteristic of the more conscientious sections of Western societies: intellectuals, journalists, and artists.</p>
<p>Moral panic is a situation in which a person is afraid of adhering to his or her own moral convictions because this would demand some courage that might have consequences. We are not always tested in situations that require courage, or at least integrity. When it does happen, it is in situations where morality is not an abstract idea, but a call for action.</p>
<p>This is why so many Germans were silent when Jews were sent to extermination camps, and this is why white Americans stood by when African Americans were lynched or, earlier on, enslaved and abused.</p>
<p>What is the price that leading Western journalists, veteran politicians, tenured professors, or chief executives of well-known companies would have to pay if they were to blame Israel for committing a genocide in the Gaza Strip?</p>
<p>It seems they are worried about two possible outcomes. The first is being condemned as antisemites or Holocaust deniers. Secondly, they fear an honest response would trigger a discussion that would include the complicity of their country, or Europe, or the West in general, in enabling the genocide and all the criminal policies against the Palestinians that preceded it.</p>
<p>This moral panic leads to some astonishing phenomena. In general, it transforms educated, highly articulate and knowledgeable people into total imbeciles when they talk about Palestine.</p>
<p>It disallows the more perceptive and thoughtful members of the security services from examining Israeli demands to include all Palestinian resistance on a terrorist list, and it dehumanises Palestinian victims in the mainstream media.</p>
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" readability="12.522427440633">
<p lang="en" dir="ltr" xml:lang="en">On ‘Moral Panic’ and the Courage to Speak – Professor Ilan Pappé examines how fear of professional consequences silences Western voices in the face of genocide in Gaza — and what this reveals about power, complicity, and moral responsibility.</p>
<p>Don’t miss this exclusive article.… <a href="https://t.co/bnYHYVNckM" rel="nofollow">pic.twitter.com/bnYHYVNckM</a></p>
<p>— The Palestine Chronicle (@PalestineChron) <a href="https://twitter.com/PalestineChron/status/1913353583971401843?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw" rel="nofollow">April 18, 2025</a></p>
</blockquote>
<p><strong>Lack of compassion</strong><br />The lack of compassion and basic solidarity with the victims of genocide was exposed by the double standards shown by mainstream media in the West, and, in particular, by the more established newspapers in the US, such as <em>The New York Times</em> and <em>The Washington Post</em>.</p>
<p>When the editor of <em>The Palestine Chronicle</em>, Dr Ramzy Baroud, lost 56 members of his family — killed by the Israeli genocidal campaign in the Gaza Strip — not one of his colleagues in American journalism bothered to talk to him or show any interest in hearing about this atrocity.</p>
<p>On the other hand, a fabricated Israeli allegation of a connection between the <em>Chronicle</em> and a family, in whose block of flats hostages were held, triggered huge interest by these outlets.</p>
<p>This imbalance in humanity and solidarity is just one example of the distortions that accompanies moral panic. I have little doubt that the actions against Palestinian or pro-Palestinian students in the US, or against known activists in Britain and France, as well as the arrest of the editor of the <em>Electronic Intifada</em>, Ali Abunimah, in Switzerland, are all manifestations of this distorted moral behaviour.</p>
<p>A similar case unfolded just recently in Australia. Mary Kostakidis, a famous Australian journalist and former prime-time weeknight <em>SBS World News Australia</em> presenter, has been taken to the federal court over her — one should say quite tame — reporting on the situation in the Gaza Strip.</p>
<p>The very fact that the court has not dismissed this allegation upon its arrival shows you how deeply rooted moral panic is in the Global North.</p>
<p>But there is another side to it. Thankfully, there is a much larger group of people who are not afraid of taking the risks involved in clearly stating their support for the Palestinians, and who do show this solidarity while knowing it may lead to suspension, deportation, or even jail time. They are not easily found among the mainstream academia, media, or politics, but they are the authentic voice of their societies in many parts of the Western world.</p>
<p>The Palestinians do not have the luxury of allowing Western moral panic to have its say or impact. Not caving in to this panic is one small but important step in building a global Palestine network that is urgently needed — firstly, to stop the destruction of Palestine and its people, and second, to create the conditions for a decolonised and liberated Palestine in the future.</p>
<p><em><a href="https://www.theguardian.com/profile/ilan-papp-" rel="nofollow"><span lang="EN-AU" xml:lang="EN-AU">Dr Ilan Pappé</span></a> <span lang="EN-AU" xml:lang="EN-AU">is an Israeli historian, political scientist, and former politician. He is a professor with the College of Social Sciences and International Studies at the University of Exeter in the United Kingdom, director of the university’s European Centre for Palestine Studies, and co-director of the Exeter Centre for Ethno-Political Studies.</span></em> <em>This article is republished from <a href="https://www.palestinechronicle.com/on-moral-panic-and-the-courage-to-speak-the-wests-silence-on-gaza/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" rel="nofollow">The Palestine Chronicle</a>, 19 April 2025.</em></p>
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		<title>Ilan Pappé: To end Gaza genocide, uproot the source of all violence – Zionism</title>
		<link>https://eveningreport.nz/2024/08/05/ilan-pappe-to-end-gaza-genocide-uproot-the-source-of-all-violence-zionism/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[David Robie]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 05 Aug 2024 00:19:19 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Report by Dr David Robie &#8211; Café Pacific. &#8211; Since the arrival of Zionism in Palestine, the impulse of the Palestinians has not been about violence or revenge. The impulse remains the return to normal and natural life, writes Ilan Pappé. ANALYSIS: By Ilan Pappé “When we revolt, it’s not for a particular culture. We ]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Report by Dr David Robie &#8211; Café Pacific.</strong> &#8211; <img decoding="async" class="wpe_imgrss" src="https://davidrobie.nz/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/Pappe-article-TNA-680wide.png"></p>
<p><em>Since the arrival of Zionism in Palestine, the impulse of the Palestinians has not been about violence or revenge. The impulse remains the return to normal and natural life, writes <strong>Ilan Pappé</strong>.</em></p>
<p><strong>ANALYSIS:</strong> <em>By Ilan Pappé</em></p>
<blockquote readability="9">
<p><em>“When we revolt, it’s not for a particular culture. We revolt simply because, for many reasons, we can no longer breathe.”</em></p>
</blockquote>
<p><em>— Franz Fanon</em></p>
<p>Since the 1948 <a href="https://www.newarab.com/features/explainer-what-nakba" rel="nofollow">Nakba</a> and arguably before, Palestine has not seen levels of violence as high as those experienced since October 7, 2023. But we need to address how this violence is being situated, treated, and judged.</p>
<p>Indeed, mainstream media often portrays Palestinian violence as terrorism while depicting Israeli violence as self-defence. Rarely is Israeli violence labelled excessive.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, <a href="https://www.newarab.com/analysis/why-icj-ruling-israels-occupation-will-be-hard-ignore" rel="nofollow">international legal institutions</a> hold both sides equally responsible for this violence, which they classify as war crimes.</p>
<p>Both perspectives are flawed. The first perspective wrongly differentiates between the “immoral” and “unjustified” violence of Palestinians and Israel’s “right to defend itself.”</p>
<p>The second perspective, which assigns blame to both sides, provides a misguided and ultimately harmful framework for understanding the current situation — likely the most violent chapter in Palestine’s modern history.</p>
<p>And all of these perspectives overlook the crucial context necessary to understand the violence that erupted on October 7.</p>
<p>This is not merely a conflict between two violent parties, nor is it simply a clash between a terrorist organisation and a state defending itself.</p>
<p>Rather, it represents a chapter in the ongoing decolonisation of historic Palestine, which began in <a href="https://www.palestine-studies.org/en/node/1651525" rel="nofollow">1929</a> and continues today. Only in the future will we know whether October 7 marked an early stage in this decolonisation process or one of its final phases.</p>
<p>Throughout history, <a href="https://www.newarab.com/opinion/israels-idea-co-existence-colonisation" rel="nofollow">decolonisation</a> has been a violent process, and the violence of decolonisation has not been confined to one side only. Apart from a few exceptions where very small, colonised islands were evicted “voluntarily” by colonial empires, decolonisation has not been a pleasant consensual affair by which colonisers end decades, if not centuries, of oppression.</p>
<p>But for this to be our entry point to discuss Hamas, Israel, and the various positions held towards them in the world, one has to acknowledge the colonialist nature of Zionism and therefore recognise the Palestinian resistance as an anti-colonialist struggle — a framework negated totally by American administrations and other Western countries since the birth of Zionism, and so therefore also by other Western countries.</p>
<p>Framing the conflict as a struggle between the colonisers and the colonised helps detect the origin of the violence and shows that there is no effective way of stopping it without addressing its origins.</p>
<p>The root of the violence in Palestine is the evolvement of Zionism in the late 19th century into a <a href="https://www.newarab.com/opinion/israeli-protests-upholding-settler-colonial-status-quo" rel="nofollow">settler colonial project</a>.</p>
<p>Like previous settler colonial projects, the main violent impulse of the movement — and later the state that was established — was and is to eliminate the indigenous population. When elimination is not achieved by violence, the solution is always to use more extraordinary violence.</p>
<p>Therefore, the only scenario in which a settler colonial project can end its violent treatment of the indigenous people is when it ends or collapses. Its inability to achieve the absolute elimination of the native population will not deter it from constantly attempting to do so through an incremental policy of elimination or genocide.</p>
<p>The anti-colonial impulse, or propensity, to employ violence is existential — unless we believe that human beings prefer to live as occupied or colonised people.</p>
<p>The colonisers have an option not to colonise or eliminate but rarely cease from doing so without being forced to by the violence of the colonised or by outside pressure from external powers.</p>
<p>Indeed, as is in the case of Israel and Palestine, the best way to avoid violence and counter-violence is to force the settler colonial project to cease through pressure from the outside.</p>
<p>The historical record is worth recollecting to give credence to our claim that the violence of Israel must be judged differently — in moral and political terms — from that of the Palestinians.</p>
<p>This, however, does not mean that condemnation for violation of international law can only be directed towards the coloniser; of course not.</p>
<p>It is an analysis of the history of violence in historical Palestine that contextualises the events of October 7 and the genocide in Gaza and indicates a way to end it.</p>
<p><strong>The history of violence in Modern Palestine: 1882-2000<br /></strong> The arrival of the first group of <a href="https://www.palestine-studies.org/en/node/39775" rel="nofollow">Zionist settlers in Palestine in 1882</a> was not, by itself, the first act of violence. The violence of the settlers was epistemic, meaning that the violent removal of the Palestinians by the settlers had already been written about, imagined, and coveted upon their arrival in Palestine — debunking the infamous “land without people” myth.</p>
<p>To translate the imagined removal into reality, the Zionist movement had to wait for the occupation of Palestine by Britain in 1918.</p>
<p>A few years later in the mid-1920s, with assistance from the British mandatory government, 11 villages were ethnically cleansed following the <a href="https://www.soas.ac.uk/about/event/colonizing-palestine-zionist-left-and-making-palestinian-nakba" rel="nofollow">purchase</a> of the regions Marj Ibn Amer and Wadi Hawareth by the Zionist movement from absentee landlords in Beirut and a landowner in Jaffa.</p>
<p>This had never happened before in Palestine. Landowners, whoever they were, did not evict villages that had been there for centuries since Ottoman law enabled land transactions.</p>
<p>This was the origin and the first act of systemic violence in the attempt to dispossess the Palestinians.</p>
<p>Another form of violence was the strategy of <a href="https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2013/3/19/israel-and-the-politics-of-boycott" rel="nofollow">“Hebrew Labour”</a> meant to drive out Palestinians from the labour market. This strategy, and the ethnic cleansing, pauperised the Palestinian countryside, leading to forced emigration to towns that could not provide work or proper housing.</p>
<p>It was only in 1929, when these violent actions were coupled with a discourse on constructing a third temple in place of Haram al-Sharif, that the Palestinians responded with violence for the first time.</p>
<p>This was not a coordinated response, but a spontaneous and desperate one against the bitter fruits of the Zionist colonisation of Palestine.</p>
<p>Seven years later, when Britain permitted more settlers to arrive and supported the formation of a nascent Zionist state with its own army, the Palestinians launched a more organised campaign.</p>
<p>This was the first uprising, lasting three years (1936-1939), known as the <a href="https://justvision.org/glossary/1936-1939-arab-revolt" rel="nofollow">Arab Revolt</a>. During this period, the Palestinian elite finally recognised Zionism as an existential threat to Palestine and its people.</p>
<p>The main Zionist paramilitary group collaborating with the British army in quelling the revolt was known as the <a href="https://www.newarab.com/analysis/scrutinising-israels-narrative-about-nakba" rel="nofollow">Haganah</a>, meaning “The Defence,” and hence the Israeli narrative to depict any act of aggression against Palestinians as self-defence — a concept reflected in the name of the Israeli army, the Israel Defence Forces.</p>
<p>From the <a href="https://www.newarab.com/opinion/britains-colonial-legacy-still-felt-palestine-today" rel="nofollow">British Mandate</a> period to today, this military power was used to take over land and markets. It was deployed as a “defence” force against the attacks of the anti-colonialist movement and as such was not different from any other coloniser in the 19th and 20th centuries.</p>
<p>The difference is that in most instances of modern history where colonialism has come to an end, the actions of the colonisers are now viewed retrospectively as acts of aggression rather than self-defence.</p>
<p>The great Zionist success has been to commodify their aggression as self-defence and the Palestinian armed struggle as terrorism. The British government, at least until 1948, regarded both acts of violence as terrorism but allowed the worst violence to take place against the Palestinians in 1948 when it watched the first stage of the ethnic cleansing of the Palestinians.</p>
<p>Between December 1947 and May 1948, when Britain was still responsible for law and order, the Zionist forces urbicided, that is obliterated, the main towns of Palestine and the villages around it. This was more than terror; this was a crime against humanity.</p>
<p>After completing the second stage of the ethnic cleansing between May and December 1948, through the most violent means that Palestine has witnessed for centuries, half of Palestine’s population was forcefully expelled, half of its villages destroyed, as well as most of its towns.</p>
<p>Israeli historians would later claim that “the Arabs” wanted to throw the Jews into the sea. The only people who were literally thrown into the sea — and drowned — were those expelled by the Zionist forces in Jaffa and Haifa.</p>
<p>Israeli violence continued after 1948 but was answered sporadically by Palestinians in an attempt to build a liberation movement.</p>
<p>It began with refugees trying to retrieve what was left of their husbandry and crops in the fields, later accompanied by Fedayeen attacking military installations and civilian places. It only gelled into a significant enterprise in 1968, when the Fatah Movement took over the Arab League’s PLO.</p>
<p>The pattern before 1967 is familiar — the dispossessed used violence in their struggle, but on a limited scale, while the Israeli army retaliated with overwhelming, indiscriminate violence, such as the massacre of the village of <a href="https://www.palestine-studies.org/en/node/40285" rel="nofollow">Qibya in October 1953</a> where Ariel Sharon’s unit 101 murdered 69 Palestinian villagers, many of them blown up within their own homes.</p>
<p>No group of Palestinians have been spared from Israeli violence. Those who became Israeli citizens were subjected, until 1966, to the most violent form of oppression: military rule. This system routinely employed violence against its subjects, including abuse, house demolitions, arbitrary arrests, banishment, and killings. Among these atrocities was the <a href="https://www.palestine-studies.org/en/node/1651786" rel="nofollow">Kafr Qassem massacre</a> in October 1956, where Israeli border police killed 49 Palestinian villagers.</p>
<p>This same violent system was transited to the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip after the June 1967 War. For 19 years, the violence of the occupation was tolerated by the occupied until the mostly non-violent <a href="https://www.newarab.com/opinion/taking-stock-first-intifada-34-years" rel="nofollow">First Intifada</a> in December 1987. Israel responded with brutality and violence that left 1,200 Palestinians dead, 300 of them children — 120,000 were injured and 1,800 homes were demolished. 180 Israelis were killed.</p>
<p>The pattern here continued — an occupied people, disillusioned with their own leadership and the indifference of the region and the world, rose in a non-violent revolt, only to be met with the full, brutal force of the coloniser and occupier.</p>
<p>Another pattern also emerges. The Intifada triggered a renewed interest in Palestine — as has the Hamas attack on October 7 — and produced a “peace process”, the <a href="https://www.newarab.com/opinion/30-years-oslo-accords-betrayal-still-haunts-palestinians" rel="nofollow">Oslo Accords</a> that raised the hopes of ending the occupation but instead, it provided immunity to the occupier to continue its occupation.</p>
<p>The frustration led, inevitably, to a more violent uprising in October 2000. It also shifted popular support from those leaders who still put their faith in the diplomatic way of ending occupation to those who were willing to continue the armed struggle against it — the political Islamic groups.</p>
<p><strong>Violence in 21st century Palestine<br /></strong> Hamas and Islamic Jihad enjoy great support because of their choice of continuing to fight the occupation, not because of their theocratic vision of a future Caliphate or their particular wish to make the public space more religious.</p>
<p>The horrific pendulum continued. The <a href="https://www.newarab.com/opinion/second-intifada-marked-new-era-israels-occupation" rel="nofollow">Second Intifada</a> was met by a more brutal Israeli response.</p>
<p>For the first time, Israel used F-16 bombers and Apache helicopters against the civilian population, alongside battalions of tanks and artillery that led to the <a href="https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/7/3/a-real-massacre-israels-attack-on-palestinians-in-jenin" rel="nofollow">2002 Jenin massacre</a>.</p>
<p>The brutality was directed from above to compensate for the humiliating withdrawal from southern Lebanon forced upon the Israeli army by Hezbollah in the summer of 2000 — the Second Intifada broke out in October 2000.</p>
<p>The direct violence against the occupied people from 2000 took also the form of intensive colonisation and Judaisation of the West Bank and Greater Jerusalem area.</p>
<p>This campaign was translated into the expropriation of Palestinian lands, encircling the Palestinian areas with apartheid walls, and giving a free license to the settlers to perpetrate attacks on Palestinians in the occupied territories and East Jerusalem.</p>
<p>In 2005, Palestinian civil society tried to offer the world a different kind of struggle through the <a href="https://www.newarab.com/opinion/anti-bds-bill-attack-dissent" rel="nofollow">Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement</a> – a non-violent struggle based on a call to the international community to put a stop to the Israeli colonialist violence, which has not been heeded, so far, by governments.</p>
<p>Instead, Israeli brutality on the ground increased and the Gaza resistance in particular fought back resiliently to the point that forced Israel to evict its settlers and soldiers from there in <a href="https://www.newarab.com/analysis/how-smotrichs-west-bank-plan-actualises-second-nakba" rel="nofollow">2005</a>.</p>
<p>However, the withdrawal did not liberate the Gaza Strip, it transformed from being a colonised space into becoming a killing field in which a new form of violence was introduced by Israel.</p>
<p>The colonising power moved from ethnic cleansing to genocide in its attempt to deal with the Palestinian refusal, in particular in the Gaza Strip, to live as a colonised people in the 21st century.</p>
<p>Since 2006, Hamas and Islamic Jihad have used violence in response to what they view as ongoing genocide by Israel against the people of the Gaza Strip. This violence has also been directed at the civilian population in Israel.</p>
<p>Western politicians and journalists often overlooked the indirect and long-term catastrophic effects of these policies on the Gaza population, including the destruction of health infrastructure and the trauma experienced by the 2.2 million people living in the Gaza ghetto.</p>
<p>As it did in 1948, Israel alleges that all its actions are defensive and retaliatory in response to Palestinian violence. In essence, however, Israeli actions since 2006 have not been retaliatory.</p>
<p>Israel initiated violent operations driven by the wish to continue the incomplete 1948 ethnic cleansing that left half of Palestinians inside historic Palestine and millions of others on Palestine’s borders. The eliminatory policies, as brutal as they were, were not successful in this respect; the desperate bouts of Palestinian resistance have instead been used as a pretext to complete the elimination project.</p>
<p>And the cycle continues. When Israel elected an <a href="https://www.newarab.com/analysis/how-israels-far-right-became-new-mainstream" rel="nofollow">extreme right-wing government</a> in November 2022, Israeli violence was not restricted to Gaza. It appeared everywhere in historical Palestine. In the West Bank, the escalating violence from soldiers and settlers led to incremental ethnic cleansing, particularly in the southern Hebron mountains and the Jordan Valley. This resulted in an increase in killings, including those of teenagers, as well as a rise in arrests without trial.</p>
<p>Since November 2022, a different form of violence has plagued the Palestinian minority living in Israel. This community faces daily terror from criminal gangs that clash with each other, resulting in the murder of one or two community members each day. The police often ignore these issues. Some of these gangs include former collaborators with the occupation who were relocated to Palestinian areas following the Oslo agreement and maintain connections with the Israeli secret service.</p>
<p>Additionally, the new government has exacerbated tensions around the Al-Aqsa Mosque Compound, permitting more frequent and aggressive incursions into the Haram al-Sharif by politicians, police, and settlers.</p>
<p>It is too difficult to know yet whether there was a clear strategy behind the Hamas attack on October 7, or whether it went according to plan or not, whatever that plan may be. However, 17 years under Israeli blockade and the particularly violent Israeli government of November 2022 added to their determination to try a more drastic and daring form of anti-colonialist struggle for liberation.</p>
<p>Whatever we think about <a href="https://www.newarab.com/opinion/breaking-out-gaza-why-7-october-not-israels-911" rel="nofollow">October 7</a>, and we do not have yet a full picture, it was part of a liberation struggle. We may raise both moral questions about Hamas’ actions as well as questions of efficacy; liberation struggles throughout history have had their moments when one could raise such questions and even criticism.</p>
<p>But we cannot forget the source of violence that forced the pastoral people of Palestine after 120 years of colonisation to adopt armed struggle alongside non-violent methods.</p>
<p>On <a href="https://www.newarab.com/news/gaza-under-attack-icj-says-israeli-occupation-illegal" rel="nofollow">July 19, 2024</a>, the International Court of Justice issued a significant ruling regarding the status of the West Bank, which went largely unnoticed. The court affirmed that the Gaza Strip is organically connected to the West Bank, and therefore, under international law, Israel remains the occupying power in Gaza. This means that actions against Israel by the people of Gaza are considered part of their right to resist occupation.</p>
<p>Once again, under the guise of retaliation and revenge, Israeli violence following October 7 bears the marks of its previous exploitation of cycles of violence.</p>
<p>This includes using genocide as a means to address Israel’s “demographic” issue — essentially, how to control the land of historical Palestine without its Palestinian inhabitants. By 1967, Israel had taken all of historical Palestine, but the demographic reality thwarted the goal of complete dispossession.</p>
<p>Ironically, Israel established the Gaza Strip in 1948 as a receptor for hundreds of thousands of refugees, “willing” to concede 2% of historical Palestine to remove a significant number of Palestinians expelled by its army during the Nakba.</p>
<p>This particular refugee camp has proven more challenging to Israel’s plans to de-Arabize Palestine than any other area, due to the resilience and resistance of its people.</p>
<p>Any attempt to stop Israel’s genocide in Gaza must be made in two ways. First, immediate action is needed to stop the violence through a ceasefire and, ideally, international sanctions on Israel. Second, it is crucial to prevent the next phase of the genocide, which could target the West Bank. This requires the continuation and intensification of the global solidarity movement’s campaign to pressure governments and policymakers into compelling Israel to end its genocidal policies.</p>
<p>Since the late 19th century and the arrival of Zionism in Palestine, the impulse of the Palestinians has not been about violence or revenge. The impulse remains the return to normal and natural life, a right that has been denied to the Palestinians for more than a century, not only by Zionism and Israel but by the powerful alliance that allowed and immunised the project of the dispossession of Palestine.</p>
<p>This is not a wish to romanticise or idealise Palestinian society. It was, and would continue to be, a typical society in a region where tradition and modernity often coexist in a complex relationship, and where collective identities can sometimes lead to divisions, especially when external forces seek to exploit these differences.</p>
<p>However, pre-Zionist Palestine was a place where Muslims, Christians, and Jews coexisted peacefully, and where most people experienced violence only rarely — likely less frequently than in many parts of the Global North.</p>
<p>Violence as a permanent and massive aspect of life can only be removed when its source is removed. In the case of Palestine, it is the ideology and praxis of the Israeli settler state, not the existential struggle of the colonised Palestinian people.</p>
<p><em><a href="https://arabislamicstudies.exeter.ac.uk/people/profile/index.php" rel="nofollow">Ilan Pappé</a> is an Israeli historian and socialist activist. He is a professor of history at the College of Social Sciences and International Studies at the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Exeter" rel="nofollow">University of Exeter</a> in the United Kingdom, director of the university’s European Centre for Palestine Studies, and co-director of the Exeter Centre for Ethno-Political Studies.</em> <em>He is also the author of the bestselling The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine (Oneworld) and many other books. Republished with permission by the author from <a href="https://www.newarab.com/" rel="nofollow">The New Arab</a>.</em></p>
<p>This article was first published on <a href="https://davidrobie.nz" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Café Pacific</a>.</p>
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