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Jerusalem 1913: The Origins of the Arab-Israeli Conflict

par Amy Dockser Marcus

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Searching for the origins of the Arab-Israeli conflict, historians for years focused on the British Mandate period (1920-1948). Amy Dockser Marcus, however, demonstrates that the bloody struggle for power actually started much earlier, when Jerusalem was still part of the Ottoman Empire and the rise of Zionism and Arab nationalism laid the groundwork for the battles that would continue to rage nearly a century later. Nineteen thirteen was the crucial year for these conflicts--the year that the Palestinians held the First Arab Congress and the first time that secret peace talks were held between Zionists and Palestinians. World War I, however, interrupted these peace efforts. Dockser Marcus traces these dramatic times through the lives of a handful of the city's leading citizens as they struggle to survive. A current events must read in our ongoing efforts to understand the Arab-Israeli conflict.… (plus d'informations)
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I think the book was a good idea, filling in some gaps in general appreciation of the origins of the on-going conflict in the middle east, although it fell short of its potential. ( )
  rsutto22 | Jul 15, 2021 |
This is an especially beguiling liberal Zionist fairy tale. Yet despite all its nuance and sophistication, it has all the hallmarks of the usual propaganda:
- beginning heavily with foregrounding of anecdotes and stories that suggest the author speaks from a place of universal values of human rights, but without naming those values specifically or explicitly and - therefore - not being able to be held accountable to them later on (such as emphases on coexistence, without really saying what that means)
- highlighting stories at every opportunity that demonstrate Jewish vulnerability, not strength
- framing the entire story in terms of Jewish agency and consequences for Jewish people, as if this is the only reason it would be of any interest
- acknowledging the facts of Jewish racist exclusion in Palestine, Jewish violence, and Jewish authorship of the story- while simultaneously downplaying them, and continuing to write all-the-same as if one is an objective disinterested voice
- foregrounding Arab violence and Jewish "response"
- never using the words "colonial" to describe Jewish activity or "native" to describe the Palestinians
- a methodological individualism that overstresses the power of individual leaders to shape events and understresses systems and structures of power
- a naming of “good” characters, and not directly naming those intolerant 'other’ forces who are supposedly truly responsible for things we dislike
- taking a long time to let the liberal credentials stew and lull the audience with jovial colourful good-natured stories, until suddenly amping up the volume at the very end that takes as a given the colonial claim of the land and prescribing *more* segregation and partition of the territory as some kind of reasonable antidote to the century's failure of segregation and partition.

The author's apologetics of colonialism is exemplified by this lovely summary of the 1937 British proposal to divide the country: "The Jews rejected the proposed British boundaries, although they accepted the concept of a partition in Palestine; The Arabs, for their part, refused to consider partition.... When the fighting broke out again a few months after the commission's visit, the British put it down with brutal force, and deported many of the Arab leaders. The Hagannah, the underground militia that had grown out of the force the Jews set up prior to the war to protect the settlements, was not allowed to organise officially. They were deployed not only to guard Jewish settlements against Arab attacks but also to launch their own reprisal missions."
- there is no related mention of the 1939 British proposal to reject partition and allow the Jews to move to Palestine only as immigrants, not colonists, and to a country that was whole and belonged to its native inhabitants
- "the Jews" are instead framed as agreeing with 'peace' plans in the face of violent, rejectionist Arabs
- British complicity with Zionist colonialism is not mentioned: that the Palestinians were totally disarmed the prior year, while the Zionist militias were trained by the British and quietly allowed to accumulate arms; that any indigenous Palestinian leadership was totally decapitated - leaving the Palestinians totally defenceless against Zionist ethnic cleansing that would soon begin under British watch and be facilitated by them
- This destruction of the native capacity for self-defence is presented by Dockser-Marcus as somehow equivalent to the Zionist militias not being allowed to organise 'officially'
- Jewish initiated violence is not conceived as possible - but only imagined as defensive (guarding of settlements) and in 'reprisals' that reacted to barbaric Arabs
- The Palestinians are not even named as such, and are instead called "Arabs," in complete contradiction to the historical record showing a strong sense of national consciousness - within a broader Arab identity - at that time.

One is accustomed to the liberal Zionist tale that Zionism was pure and good and Israel was all cupcakes and cotton candy until the 1967 theft of the West Bank changed everything. The innovation of this author is to update that mythology by resetting the date for the wrong turn, to 1913. She does so, of course, without any engagement whatsoever on the moral validity of the colonial and racist premises of Zionism itself. She still instrumentalises nostalgia to avoid engaging with critiques of Zionism, but updates that nostalgia so far back to Zionism's beginnings that it gives the appearance of engaging with critiques of Zionism. This is sophisticated stuff.

All the same, this 2007 liberal Zionist story was already out of date at its publication, given the rise of the neo-Zionist right in Israel since 1996. Now, the mask is falling off, and - in the words of Ilan Pappe - we no longer need Foucault and other complex theories to disentangle liberal Zionist propaganda and show it for what it really is. Now, not even Pulitzer prize-winning Jewish-American journalists can hide Zionism's true self from our eyes. ( )
  GeorgeHunter | Sep 13, 2020 |
The copy of this book bears the authors autograph; purchased at Goodwill. The author recounts the historical origins of the Arab-Israeli conflict from the earliest moments of the quest by Jews to re-establish a presence. Both Arabs and Israelis accommodated each other -- to some degree -- under the watchful political "eye" of the Ottomans and Turks -- prior to their defeat in WWI -- and the British after WWI and the Balfour Declaration. But an uneasy peace existed. Resentment to the Jewish influx grew. And the bedrock of the conflict was cemented. ( )
  MikeBiever | Aug 10, 2017 |
Jerusalem is one of those few places on Earth that seems never to be able to be at peace. Of course, it's not true - there have been plenty of times when there wasn't. But the times of conflict fill the histories of continents and at least three religions. Over the last hundred years, the modern Arab-Israeli conflict has become the latest of these. Amy Dockser Marcus, profoundly affected by her experiences in Jerusalem, examines how we got to the current state of affairs in Palestine by showing vignettes of the city in 1898 through the beginning of World War I.

Jerusalem 1913 isn't so much an depth study of the origins of the Arab-Israeli conflict as it is a series of studies of the people and decisions made during the period of interest. Of special note is Dockser Marcus' ability to present how opportunities for peace were missed and how that decision-making both mirrored and led to today's situation.

Highly recommended. ( )
2 voter drneutron | May 29, 2011 |
When did the antagonism between Israelis and Palestinians truly begin? these book won the pulitzer prize.
  HanoarHatzioni | Jun 9, 2009 |
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Searching for the origins of the Arab-Israeli conflict, historians for years focused on the British Mandate period (1920-1948). Amy Dockser Marcus, however, demonstrates that the bloody struggle for power actually started much earlier, when Jerusalem was still part of the Ottoman Empire and the rise of Zionism and Arab nationalism laid the groundwork for the battles that would continue to rage nearly a century later. Nineteen thirteen was the crucial year for these conflicts--the year that the Palestinians held the First Arab Congress and the first time that secret peace talks were held between Zionists and Palestinians. World War I, however, interrupted these peace efforts. Dockser Marcus traces these dramatic times through the lives of a handful of the city's leading citizens as they struggle to survive. A current events must read in our ongoing efforts to understand the Arab-Israeli conflict.

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