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Nakba denial

Nakba denial is a form of historical denialism[1] pertaining to the 1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight and its accompanying effects, which Palestinians refer to collectively as the "Nakba" (lit.'catastrophe').[2] Underlying assumptions of Nakba denial cited by scholars can include the denial of historically documented violence against Palestinians, the denial of a distinct Palestinian identity, the theory that Palestine was barren land, and the theory that Palestinian dispossession were part of mutual transfers between Arabs and Jews justified by war.[3][4][5]

Some historians say that the denial of the Nakba has become a core component of Zionist narratives,[6][a] and was largely facilitated by early Israeli historiography.[7] Beginning in the 1980s, the New Historians, working from declassified archives, advanced historical accounts which challenged Nakba denial[8] and significant volumes of Israeli Jewish literature have also emerged shedding more light on the period.[9] In 1998, Steve Niva, editor of the Middle East Report, used the term "Nakba denial" in describing 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 with anti-Arab racism.[4] In 2011, Israel enacted a law colloquially referred to as the Nakba Law that authorized the withholding of 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 President Mahmoud Abbas made the denial of the Nakba or 1948 expulsion a crime punishable by two years in jail.[2]

Background

Palestinians accuse Israel of using "Nakba denial" to absolve itself of responsibility while perpetuating conflict, a characterization which Israel forcibly denies. Zionist historians justify the 1948 expulsion and flight by stating that the invading Arab armies threatened the existence of the new Jewish state with annihilation. However, some of Israel's New Historians contend that Israel's founding prime minister David 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 the Middle East Report, in describing how the rise of the early Internet led to competing online narratives of the events of 1948.[10]

Palestinian writer and historian Nur Masalha states that Israeli teachers and educators hide the Nakba's horrors from schoolchildren, constructing and upholding a national narrative that excludes Palestinian collective memory. Masalha states 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 to Ilan Pappé, "is the main constitutive element in the construction of collective Jewish identity in the state of Israel."[14]

Historical negationism

In Zionist and Israeli statehood narratives

According to scholar Nur Masalha, in Israel there is a politics of denial around the Nakba, embodied by statements by the likes of Golda Meir, such as the famous line "There was no such thing as Palestinians".[15] Masalha states that "denial is central to the Zionist narrative about what happened in 1948",[6] further stating that the politics of denial around the Nakba 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 the Palestinian 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 the 1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight rest on a number of assumptions, including that Palestine was an "uncultivated", "barren, uninhabited land"; that Palestinian Arabs were part of a "greater Arab nation" and were not a nation, disputing Palestinian Arab nationalism; that Palestinian Arabs were "rioters and pogromists"; that Jews were returning home (the negation of the Diaspora); and that population transfers were a "justifiable, universal solution to minority questions".[5]

In historian Maha Nassar's analysis of Leon Uris' 1958 novel Exodus, Nassar identified the denial of Zionists' responsibility for the 1948 expulsion and flight of Palestinians and the claim that Arabs themselves were to blame (utilizing the anti-Arab racist tropes present in the novel) as constituting a form of historical negationism, that she names "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 are easily induced to violence by their leaders.[4] Within the paradigm of Zionism as settler colonialism, she states 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 for reparations—consisting of the following themes:[3]

  • the "war is war" theme in which the expulsion and flight was an unfortunate but inevitable side effect of Israel defending itself from the invading Arab forces, and that the Provisional government of Israel was not culpable insofar it did not have a "master plan" of expulsion, while not incorporating subsequent decisions and policies which have ever since prevented refugees' return in weighing the responsibility of the state.
  • the "population exchange" theme in which Jews and Arabs, seen as the wider Arab world, made an irrevocable mutual population and property transfer (e.g. Jews leaving Iraq also left their property behind), and that resettling of Jews in Israel also came at a great cost.
  • the claim that Israel has generally been willing to provide compensation, but that this awaits an international mechanism of some sort, which will apportion the funds, while not incorporating the possibility of individual redress, such as through restitution, in light of Israel passing Absentees' Property Laws and Palestinian negotiators not opposing the international fund idea during the 2000 Camp David Summit (which ended without an agreement); in the case of such "en masse settlement" being implemented, Israel would pay out a sum, and be absolved from any further obligations constituting an "end of claims" clause, closing all legal avenues to individual Palestinians with remaining claims or who do not wish to be a part of the scheme.
  • the belief that the only thing that Israel owes the refugees is property compensation, and not any kind of moral reparations beyond a statement of regret.

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 Palestinians' end, the trend was moving away from "total denial" towards downplaying the "moral significance" of the Holocaust, while on the Israelis' end, "Zionism insists on denying the Nakbah and refuses to admit Israel's role in the Palestinian suffering as victimizer", and that "nothing justifies ... the Israeli denial of major responsibility", opined Gur-Ze'ev and Pappé.[17]

Nadim N. Rouhana and Areej Sabbagh-Khoury in 2017 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". They opined that it is "hard to overestimate the centrality of Nakba denial in Israel", of which "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 2011 Nakba Law as "the most illuminating example" of the Israeli state interpreting the growing "consciousness" of Palestinians of the Nakba as a "threat" and thus taking steps to combat it.[18] Bashir Bashir and Amos Goldberg agree that the 2011 Nakba Law is a form of Nakba denial.[19]

Marouf Hasian, Jr. in 2020 stated that one form of Nakba denial originating from the Global North was that it was "ridiculous" to consider "the birth of Israel" as a catastrophe (Nakba). Hasian highlights one incident in 2009, reported on by Ian Black, where Israeli minister of education Gideon 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 that the "objective of the education system is not to deny the legitimacy of our state, nor promote extremism among Arab-Israelis." Hasian describes that some "Israelis worry that al-Nakba consciousness-raising threatens state legitimacy".[20][21]

In Israeli historiography

According to historian Saleh 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 a renewed interest among Israeli academics of 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 the New Historians, who changed established beliefs regarding 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 within Israeli Jewish society, alongside works, such as historian Ilan 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]

Towards the end of the 20th century, the topic of Nakba denial almost went to trial in the context of the discussion of the Tantura massacre and the 1998 thesis by Theodore Katz on it.[22][23] Katz, a postgraduate researcher, was sued by the Alexandroni 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]

Ahmad H. Sa'di, social scientist, has described "three modes of denial of moral responsibility for the Nakba"; his work has been cited by sociologist Ronit Lentin regarding three strategies of Nakba denial by Israelis and Zionists.[24][25] These modes, per Sa'di, 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 highlights From Time Immemorial, the 1984 work of Joan Peters, and The Case for Israel, the 2003 work of Alan Dershowitz for the latter, when Peters claimed that the refugees were immigrant Arab workers, and Dershowitz advancing similar arguments.[24][25]

The second mode of Nakba denial, with Lentin summarizing 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 where Gur-Ze'ev writes of the "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, with Lentin summarizing Sa'di's views, is "addressing the moral weight of the Palestinian Nakba unapologetically"; Lentin writes that this is best exemplified by historian Benny Morris' 2004 wish that the 1948 Nakba should have been more complete, with Morris stating: "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 provides another 2004 quote from Morris on this strategy: "final good justifies harsh and cruel acts that are committed in the course of history."[24][25]

In contemporary public discourse

Maha Nassar cites Nakba denial as a feature of American discourse on Palestine.[4] Ahmad H. Sa'di advances the viewpoint that it is the discourse of Jewish supporters of Israel.[26]

With time, the narratives surrounding 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". Lawyer Alan Dershowitz's 2003 book The Case for Israel exemplifies this,[27] drawing on the 1984 book From Time Immemorial, a pseudo-historical work by journalist Joan Peters that suggested the majority of Palestinian refugees were not native to Palestine, and that with the 1948 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".[27]

Within Israeli civic society, there are grassroots movements against Nakba denial. The NGO Zochrot aims to raise awareness of the Nakba by directly challenging its denial through direct memorial action,[11] such as by providing tours to 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 the right of return", stopping off along the way at neighborhoods built on the sites of former Palestinian villages.[11]

Motti Golani and Adel Manna in 2011 discussed the Jewish-Israeli narrative and the Palestinian-Arab narrative of the 1948 war; each narrative "completely ignores" the other narrative; the Palestinans viewed the Nakba "as a formative trauma" when they "to a large degree lost their country", while "the narrative espoused by most Jewish Israelis" was 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 the New Historians continued their work, by 2010 "many, though definitely not all, Israeli Jews" accept that the Nakba occurred, though "the majority" of Israeli Jews view it as a "necessary evil", which Lentin had in the same writing described as another form of Nakba denial, "addressing the moral weight of the Palestinian Nakba unapologetically".[25]Yehouda Shenhav wrote in 2019 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 in Law 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 a false equivalence between the Nakba and the Jewish exodus from the Muslim world.[30] Academics Yasmeen Abu-Laban and Abigail B. Bakan, writing in The Political Quarterly, say that equivalizing the Nakba with the migration of Mizrahi Jews to Israel constitutes a form of Nakba denial.[31]

Bashir Bashir and Amos Goldberg in 2018 stated 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 respectively. Bashir and Goldberg assert: "Many, perhaps most Jews in Israel, claim that the Nakba is not an event at all", and follow this with the example of the 2011 publication Nakba-Nonsense by organisation Im Tirtzu, that 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 borne by Palestinians before, during and after 1948.[32]

Legislation

In Israel

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 Palestine

In May 2023, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud 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 trends in Israel, where lawmakers in the hardline 37th government have proposed outlawing the waving of Palestinian flags.[2] The decree followed a speech by Abbas at a UN event marking the 75th anniversary of the Nakba, where he called for the suspension of Israel's UN membership, and criticized the US and UK for not holding Israel accountable for its actions.[36][better source needed]

In Germany

In March 2024, amid the Israel–Gaza war, Germany's Social Democratic Party and Christian Democratic Party issued a directive for the distribution of leaflets in high schools in Neukölln that dismissed the historical realities of the Nakba as "myth".[37]

Notes

  1. ^ Yiftachel 2009, p. 11: "Denial of the nakba, as the Palestinians term their defeat in the 1948 war, the loss of their would-be state and the flight of refugees, has become a core Zionist value."
  2. ^ Al-Hardan 2016, pp. 44–46: "Concurrent with these developments, the renewed intellectual interest in the Nakba in the 1980s also resulted from the Israeli government's partial declassification of archives that pertain to the war on the Palestinians. This spurred an ideologically and methodologically varied group of so-called Israeli 'new historians' and 'sociologists' to reconsider the received Zionist narratives about what happened in Palestine during the Nakba."

Citations

  1. ^ Ben Salem 2021, pp. 1–18.
  2. ^ a b c d e The Times of Israel 2023.
  3. ^ a b Fischbach 2021, pp. 183–200.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Nassar 2023.
  5. ^ a b Mori 2009, pp. 95–97.
  6. ^ a b Masalha 2009, pp. 39, 43.
  7. ^ a b Slyomovics 2007, p. 28.
  8. ^ a b c Mori 2009, p. 89.
  9. ^ a b Sa'di 2007, p. 303.
  10. ^ a b Pappé 1998, pp. 14–23.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Kapshuk & Strömbom 2021.
  12. ^ Shalhoub-Kevorkian 2015, p. 39.
  13. ^ Asser 2010.
  14. ^ Masalha 2012.
  15. ^ Masalha 2009, pp. 39, 78.
  16. ^ Masalha 2009, p. 78.
  17. ^ Gur-Ze'ev & Pappé 2003.
  18. ^ Rouhana & Sabbagh-Khoury 2017.
  19. ^ Bashir & Goldberg 2018.
  20. ^ Hasian 2020.
  21. ^ a b Black 2009.
  22. ^ a b c d Esmeir 2007, pp. 231–232.
  23. ^ Buxbaum 2023.
  24. ^ a b c d Sa'di 2007, pp. 287, 304–309.
  25. ^ a b c d e Lentin 2010, pp. 1–2, 10–11, 90.
  26. ^ Sa'di 2007, p. 387.
  27. ^ a b c Sa'di 2007, pp. 304–305.
  28. ^ Golani & Manna 2011.
  29. ^ Shenhav 2019, p. 48.
  30. ^ Gutman & Tirosh 2021.
  31. ^ Abu-Laban & Bakan 2022, pp. 511–512.
  32. ^ Bashir & Goldberg 2018, pp. 1–42.
  33. ^ a b Todorova 2013, p. 260.
  34. ^ Shalhoub-Kevorkian 2015, p. 40.
  35. ^ Shenhav 2019, p. 49.
  36. ^ MEMO 2023.
  37. ^ Ertel 2024.

Sources

Books and journals

  • Abu-Laban, Yasmeen; Bakan, Abigail B. (12 July 2022). "Anti-Palestinian Racism and Racial Gaslighting". The Political Quarterly. 20 (3): 329–378. doi:10.1111/1467-923X.13166.
  • Al-Hardan, Anaheed (2016). "The Nakba in Arab Thought". Palestinians in Syria: Nakba Memories of Shattered Communities. Columbia University Press. pp. 26–49. doi:10.7312/al-h17636. ISBN 978-0-231-54122-0. JSTOR 10.7312/al-h17636.6.
  • Bashir, Bashir; Goldberg, Amos (2018). "Introduction: The Holocaust and the Nakba: A New Syntax of History, Memory, and Political Thought". The Holocaust and the Nakba - A New Grammar of Trauma and History. Columbia University Press. pp. 1–42. ISBN 978-0-231-18297-3.
  • Ben Salem, Lobna (2021). "Humanizing the Enemy: Transcending Victimhood Narratives in Mahmoud Darwish'S and Yehuda Amichai'S Poetry". Postcolonial Text. 16 (1): 1–18. Retrieved 31 January 2024 – via Docslib.org.
  • Ertel, Pauline (23 February 2024). "Berlin schools asked to distribute leaflet describing the 1948 Nakba as a 'myth'". Middle East Eye.
  • Esmeir, S. (2007). "Memories of Conquest: Witnessing Death in Tantura". In Sa'di, Ahmad H.; Abu-Lughod, Lila (eds.). Nakba: Palestine, 1948, and the claims of memory. Columbia University Press. pp. 229–252. ISBN 978-0-231-50970-1. JSTOR 10.7312/sadi13578.16.
  • Fischbach, Michael R. (3 September 2021). "12. Nakba Denial: Israeli Resistance to Palestinian Refugee Reparations". In Bhabha, Jacqueline; Matache, Margareta; Elkins, Caroline (eds.). Time for Reparations: A Global Perspective. Pennsylvania Studies in Human Rights. University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 13–23. doi:10.9783/9780812299915-014. ISBN 978-0-8122-9991-5.
  • Golani, Motti; Manna, Adel (2011). Two Sides of the Coin: Independence and Nakba 1948. Institute for Historical Justice and Reconciliation. pp. 13–23. ISBN 978-90-8979-080-4.
  • Gur-Ze'ev, Ilan; Pappé, Ilan (2003). "Beyond the Destruction of the Other's Collective Memory". Theory, Culture & Society. 20 (1): 93–108. doi:10.1177/0263276403020001922. S2CID 145563406.
  • Gutman, Yifat; Tirosh, Noam (29 January 2021). "Balancing Atrocities and Forced Forgetting: Memory Laws as a Means of Social Control in Israel". Law & Social Inquiry. 46 (3): 705–730. doi:10.1017/lsi.2020.35.
  • Hasian, Marouf (2020). Debates on Colonial Genocide in the 21st Century. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Pivot. pp. 8, 10, 78–81, 103. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-21278-0. ISBN 978-3-030-21277-3. S2CID 198739259.
  • Kapshuk, Yoav; Strömbom, Lisa (2021). "Israeli Pre-Transitional Justice and the Nakba Law". Israel Law Review. 54 (3): 305–323. doi:10.1017/S0021223721000157. S2CID 239053934.
  • Lentin, Ronit (2010). Co-memory and melancholia: Israelis memorialising the Palestinian Nakba. Manchester University Press. doi:10.7228/manchester/9780719081705.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-7190-8170-5. JSTOR j.ctt155jgtk.
  • Masalha, Nur (2009). "60 years after the Nakba: Historical truth, collective memory and ethical obligations" (PDF). Kyoto Bulletin of Islamic Area Studies. 3 (1): 37–88.
  • Masalha, Nur (2012). The Palestine Nakba: decolonising history, narrating the subaltern, reclaiming memory. London; New York: Zed Books. ISBN 978-1-84813-971-8.
  • Mori, Mariko (July 2009). "Zionism and the Nakba: The Mainstream Narrative, the Oppressed Narratives, and the Israeli Collective Memory" (PDF). Kyoto Bulletin of Islamic Area Studies. 3 (1): 89–107. ISSN 1881-8323.
  • Nassar, Maha (2023). "Exodus, Nakba Denialism, and the Mobilization of Anti-Arab Racism". Critical Sociology. 49 (6): 1037–1051. doi:10.1177/08969205221132878. S2CID 253134415.
  • Pappé, Ilan (1998). "Fifty Years Through the Eyes of "New Historians" in Israel". Middle East Report (207): 14–23. doi:10.2307/3013159. ISSN 0899-2851. JSTOR 3013159.
  • Rouhana, Nadim; Sabbagh-Khoury, Areej (2017). Memory and the Return of History in a Settler-colonial Context: The Case of the Palestinians in Israel. Cambridge University Press. pp. 393–432. doi:10.1017/CBO9781107045316. ISBN 978-1-107-04531-6.
  • Sa'di, Ahmad H. (2007). "Reflections on Representations, History and Moral Accountability". In Sa'di, Ahmad H.; Abu-Lughod, Lila (eds.). Nakba: Palestine, 1948, and the claims of memory. Columbia University Press. pp. 285–314. ISBN 978-0-231-50970-1. JSTOR 10.7312/sadi13578.18.
  • Shalhoub-Kevorkian, Nadera (Spring 2015). "Necropolitical Debris: The Dichotomy of Life and Death". State Crime Journal. 4 (1). International State Crime Initiative: 34–51. doi:10.13169/statecrime.4.1.0034. JSTOR 10.13169/statecrime.4.1.0034.
  • Shenhav, Yehouda (2019). "The Palestinian Nakba and the Arab-Jewish Melancholy". In Ginsburg, Shai; Land, Martin; Boyarin, Jonathan (eds.). Jews and the Ends of Theory. Fordham University Press. pp. 48–64. ISBN 978-0-8232-8201-2.
  • Slyomovics, Susan (2007). "The Rape of Qula, a Destroyed Palestinian Village". In Sa'di, Ahmad H.; Abu-Lughod, Lila (eds.). Nakba: Palestine, 1948, and the claims of memory. Columbia University Press. pp. 27–52. ISBN 978-0-231-50970-1. JSTOR 10.7312/sadi13578.8.
  • Todorova, Teodora (2013). "Bearing Witness to al Nakba in a Time of Denial". In Matar, Dina; Harb, Zahera (eds.). Narrating Conflict in the Middle East: Discourse, Image and Communications Practices in Lebanon and Palestine. London: I.B. Tauris. pp. 248–270. doi:10.5040/9780755607709.ch-012. ISBN 978-1-78076-102-2.
  • Yiftachel, Oren (Winter 2009). ""Creeping Apartheid" in Israel-Palestine". Middle East Report. No. 253. Middle East Research and Information Project. pp. 7–15, 37. JSTOR 27735323.

News media

  • "Abbas signs decree criminalizing 'Nakba' denial". The Times of Israel. 30 May 2023.
  • Asser, Martin (2 September 2010). "Obstacles to Arab-Israeli peace: Palestinian refugees". BBC News. Retrieved 9 January 2024.
  • Black, Ian (22 July 2009). "1948 no catastrophe says Israel, as term nakba banned from Arab children's textbooks". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 24 October 2023.
  • Buxbaum, Jessica (5 June 2023). "Tantura massacre: Challenging Israel's denial of the Nakba". The New Arab. Retrieved 24 October 2023.
  • "Palestine president issues decree criminalising denial of Nakba". Middle East Monitor. 31 May 2023.

Further reading

  • Albadawi, Sobhi (December 2017). "Exploring the Issues of Denial and Blame in Relation to the Expulsion of Palestinians from Palestine in 1948". International Humanities Studies. 4 (4). Abu Deis: 18–34. ISSN 2311-7796 – via ResearchGate.
  • Diboyan, Larra M.; Goliath, Jesse R. (2023). "Publicly Underrepresented Genocides of the 20th and 21st Century: A Review". Humans. 3 (2): 82–105. doi:10.3390/humans3020009. ISSN 2673-9461.
  • Khoury, Laura (2013). "The Palestine Nakba: Decolonising History, Narrating the Subaltern, Reclaiming Memory (Book review)". Arab Studies Quarterly. 35 (1): 73–76. doi:10.13169/arabstudquar.35.1.0073.
  • Lustick, Ian S. (Fall 2006). "Negotiating Truth: The Holocaust, "Lehadvil", and "Al-Nakba"". Journal of International Affairs. 60 (1): 51–77. JSTOR 24358013.
  • Masalha, Nur (2003). The Politics of Denial: Israel and the Palestinian Refugee Problem. Pluto Press. doi:10.2307/j.ctt18dztmq. ISBN 978-0-7453-2120-2. JSTOR j.ctt18dztmq.
  • Masalha, Nur (2008). "Remembering the Palestinian Nakba: Commemoration, Oral History and Narratives of Memory" (PDF). Holy Land Studies. 7 (2): 123–156. doi:10.3366/E147494750800019X. S2CID 159471053. Project MUSE 255205. (PDF) from the original on 3 June 2022.
  • Rashed, Haifa; Short, Damien; Docker, John (2014). "Nakba Memoricide: Genocide Studies and the Zionist/Israeli Genocide of Palestine". Journal of Holy Land and Palestine Studies. 13 (1): 1–23. doi:10.3366/hls.2014.0076. ISSN 2054-1996.
  • Sayigh, Rosemary (2022). "On the Burial of the Palestinian Nakba". Routledge International Handbook of Ignorance Studies (2nd ed.). Routledge. ISBN 978-1-003-10060-7.
  • Stav, Shira (2012). "Nakba and Holocaust: Mechanisms of Comparison and Denial in the Israeli Literary Imagination". Jewish Social Studies. 18 (3): 85–98. doi:10.2979/jewisocistud.18.3.85. ISSN 1527-2028. JSTOR 10.2979/jewisocistud.18.3.85. S2CID 144892781.

External links

  • Denying the Nakba, 75 Years Later: A Democracy in Exile Roundtable. DAWN.
  • Nakba Denial. Arab-American Institute.
  • Israel denies the Nakba while perpetuating it. Al Jazeera.
  • Five things the United States knew about the Nakba as it unfolded. Middle East Institute.
  • Erasing the Nakba, Upholding Apartheid: Atrocity Denial in the U.S. Media. Institute of Palestine Studies.

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This article is about an analysis of the discourse around the Nakba For the historical debate around the causes of the Palestinian displacement as the central component of the Nakba see Causes of the 1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight Nakba denial is a form of historical denialism 1 pertaining to the 1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight and its accompanying effects which Palestinians refer to collectively as the Nakba lit catastrophe 2 Underlying assumptions of Nakba denial cited by scholars can include the denial of historically documented violence against Palestinians the denial of a distinct Palestinian identity the theory that Palestine was barren land and the theory that Palestinian dispossession were part of mutual transfers between Arabs and Jews justified by war 3 4 5 Some historians say that the denial of the Nakba has become a core component of Zionist narratives 6 a and was largely facilitated by early Israeli historiography 7 Beginning in the 1980s the New Historians working from declassified archives advanced historical accounts which challenged Nakba denial 8 and significant volumes of Israeli Jewish literature have also emerged shedding more light on the period 9 In 1998 Steve Niva editor of the Middle East Report used the term Nakba denial in describing 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 with anti Arab racism 4 In 2011 Israel enacted a law colloquially referred to as the Nakba Law that authorized the withholding of 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 President Mahmoud Abbas made the denial of the Nakba or 1948 expulsion a crime punishable by two years in jail 2 Contents 1 Background 2 Historical negationism 2 1 In Zionist and Israeli statehood narratives 2 2 In Israeli historiography 2 3 In contemporary public discourse 3 Legislation 3 1 In Israel 3 2 In Palestine 3 3 In Germany 4 Notes 4 1 Citations 5 Sources 5 1 Books and journals 5 2 News media 6 Further reading 7 External linksBackgroundPalestinians accuse Israel of using Nakba denial to absolve itself of responsibility while perpetuating conflict a characterization which Israel forcibly denies Zionist historians justify the 1948 expulsion and flight by stating that the invading Arab armies threatened the existence of the new Jewish state with annihilation However some of Israel s New Historians contend that Israel s founding prime minister David 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 the Middle East Report in describing how the rise of the early Internet led to competing online narratives of the events of 1948 10 Palestinian writer and historian Nur Masalha states that Israeli teachers and educators hide the Nakba s horrors from schoolchildren constructing and upholding a national narrative that excludes Palestinian collective memory Masalha states 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 to Ilan Pappe is the main constitutive element in the construction of collective Jewish identity in the state of Israel 14 Historical negationismIn Zionist and Israeli statehood narratives According to scholar Nur Masalha in Israel there is a politics of denial around the Nakba embodied by statements by the likes of Golda Meir such as the famous line There was no such thing as Palestinians 15 Masalha states that denial is central to the Zionist narrative about what happened in 1948 6 further stating that the politics of denial around the Nakba 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 the Palestinian 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 the 1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight rest on a number of assumptions including that Palestine was an uncultivated barren uninhabited land that Palestinian Arabs were part of a greater Arab nation and were not a nation disputing Palestinian Arab nationalism that Palestinian Arabs were rioters and pogromists that Jews were returning home the negation of the Diaspora and that population transfers were a justifiable universal solution to minority questions 5 In historian Maha Nassar s analysis of Leon Uris 1958 novel Exodus Nassar identified the denial of Zionists responsibility for the 1948 expulsion and flight of Palestinians and the claim that Arabs themselves were to blame utilizing the anti Arab racist tropes present in the novel as constituting a form of historical negationism that she names 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 are easily induced to violence by their leaders 4 Within the paradigm of Zionism as settler colonialism she states 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 for reparations consisting of the following themes 3 the war is war theme in which the expulsion and flight was an unfortunate but inevitable side effect of Israel defending itself from the invading Arab forces and that the Provisional government of Israel was not culpable insofar it did not have a master plan of expulsion while not incorporating subsequent decisions and policies which have ever since prevented refugees return in weighing the responsibility of the state the population exchange theme in which Jews and Arabs seen as the wider Arab world made an irrevocable mutual population and property transfer e g Jews leaving Iraq also left their property behind and that resettling of Jews in Israel also came at a great cost the claim that Israel has generally been willing to provide compensation but that this awaits an international mechanism of some sort which will apportion the funds while not incorporating the possibility of individual redress such as through restitution in light of Israel passing Absentees Property Laws and Palestinian negotiators not opposing the international fund idea during the 2000 Camp David Summit which ended without an agreement in the case of such en masse settlement being implemented Israel would pay out a sum and be absolved from any further obligations constituting an end of claims clause closing all legal avenues to individual Palestinians with remaining claims or who do not wish to be a part of the scheme the belief that the only thing that Israel owes the refugees is property compensation and not any kind of moral reparations beyond a statement of regret Ilan Gur Ze ev and Ilan Pappe 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 Palestinians end the trend was moving away from total denial towards downplaying the moral significance of the Holocaust while on the Israelis end Zionism insists on denying the Nakbah and refuses to admit Israel s role in the Palestinian suffering as victimizer and that nothing justifies the Israeli denial of major responsibility opined Gur Ze ev and Pappe 17 Nadim N Rouhana and Areej Sabbagh Khoury in 2017 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 They opined that it is hard to overestimate the centrality of Nakba denial in Israel of which 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 2011 Nakba Law as the most illuminating example of the Israeli state interpreting the growing consciousness of Palestinians of the Nakba as a threat and thus taking steps to combat it 18 Bashir Bashir and Amos Goldberg agree that the 2011 Nakba Law is a form of Nakba denial 19 Marouf Hasian Jr in 2020 stated that one form of Nakba denial originating from the Global North was that it was ridiculous to consider the birth of Israel as a catastrophe Nakba Hasian highlights one incident in 2009 reported on by Ian Black where Israeli minister of education Gideon 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 that the objective of the education system is not to deny the legitimacy of our state nor promote extremism among Arab Israelis Hasian describes that some Israelis worry that al Nakba consciousness raising threatens state legitimacy 20 21 In Israeli historiography According to historian Saleh 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 a renewed interest among Israeli academics of 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 the New Historians who changed established beliefs regarding 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 within Israeli Jewish society alongside works such as historian Ilan Pappe s that have been unsettling the picture the founding fathers worked so energetically to paint and to institutionalize the hegemonic account of 1948 9 Towards the end of the 20th century the topic of Nakba denial almost went to trial in the context of the discussion of the Tantura massacre and the 1998 thesis by Theodore Katz on it 22 23 Katz a postgraduate researcher was sued by the Alexandroni 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 Ahmad H Sa di social scientist has described three modes of denial of moral responsibility for the Nakba his work has been cited by sociologist Ronit Lentin regarding three strategies of Nakba denial by Israelis and Zionists 24 25 These modes per Sa di 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 highlights From Time Immemorial the 1984 work of Joan Peters and The Case for Israel the 2003 work of Alan Dershowitz for the latter when Peters claimed that the refugees were immigrant Arab workers and Dershowitz advancing similar arguments 24 25 The second mode of Nakba denial with Lentin summarizing 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 where Gur Ze ev writes of the 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 with Lentin summarizing Sa di s views is addressing the moral weight of the Palestinian Nakba unapologetically Lentin writes that this is best exemplified by historian Benny Morris 2004 wish that the 1948 Nakba should have been more complete with Morris stating 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 provides another 2004 quote from Morris on this strategy final good justifies harsh and cruel acts that are committed in the course of history 24 25 In contemporary public discourse Maha Nassar cites Nakba denial as a feature of American discourse on Palestine 4 Ahmad H Sa di advances the viewpoint that it is the discourse of Jewish supporters of Israel 26 With time the narratives surrounding 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 Lawyer Alan Dershowitz s 2003 book The Case for Israel exemplifies this 27 drawing on the 1984 book From Time Immemorial a pseudo historical work by journalist Joan Peters that suggested the majority of Palestinian refugees were not native to Palestine and that with the 1948 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 27 Within Israeli civic society there are grassroots movements against Nakba denial The NGO Zochrot aims to raise awareness of the Nakba by directly challenging its denial through direct memorial action 11 such as by providing tours to 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 the right of return stopping off along the way at neighborhoods built on the sites of former Palestinian villages 11 Motti Golani and Adel Manna in 2011 discussed the Jewish Israeli narrative and the Palestinian Arab narrative of the 1948 war each narrative completely ignores the other narrative the Palestinans viewed the Nakba as a formative trauma when they to a large degree lost their country while the narrative espoused by most Jewish Israelis was 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 the New Historians continued their work by 2010 many though definitely not all Israeli Jews accept that the Nakba occurred though the majority of Israeli Jews view it as a necessary evil which Lentin had in the same writing described as another form of Nakba denial addressing the moral weight of the Palestinian Nakba unapologetically 25 Yehouda Shenhav wrote in 2019 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 in Law 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 a false equivalence between the Nakba and the Jewish exodus from the Muslim world 30 Academics Yasmeen Abu Laban and Abigail B Bakan writing in The Political Quarterly say that equivalizing the Nakba with the migration of Mizrahi Jews to Israel constitutes a form of Nakba denial 31 Bashir Bashir and Amos Goldberg in 2018 stated 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 respectively Bashir and Goldberg assert Many perhaps most Jews in Israel claim that the Nakba is not an event at all and follow this with the example of the 2011 publication Nakba Nonsense by organisation Im Tirtzu that 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 borne by Palestinians before during and after 1948 32 LegislationIn Israel See also Censorship in Israel and Freedom of speech in Israel 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 Strombom 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 Palestine In May 2023 Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud 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 trends in Israel where lawmakers in the hardline 37th government have proposed outlawing the waving of Palestinian flags 2 The decree followed a speech by Abbas at a UN event marking the 75th anniversary of the Nakba where he called for the suspension of Israel s UN membership and criticized the US and UK for not holding Israel accountable for its actions 36 better source needed In Germany In March 2024 amid the Israel Gaza war Germany s Social Democratic Party and Christian Democratic Party issued a directive for the distribution of leaflets in high schools in Neukolln that dismissed the historical realities of the Nakba as myth 37 Notes Yiftachel 2009 p 11 Denial of the nakba as the Palestinians term their defeat in the 1948 war the loss of their would be state and the flight of refugees has become a core Zionist value Al Hardan 2016 pp 44 46 Concurrent with these developments the renewed intellectual interest in the Nakba in the 1980s also resulted from the Israeli government s partial declassification of archives that pertain to the war on the Palestinians This spurred an ideologically and methodologically varied group of so called Israeli new historians and sociologists to reconsider the received Zionist narratives about what happened in Palestine during the Nakba Citations Ben Salem 2021 pp 1 18 a b c d e The Times of Israel 2023 a b Fischbach 2021 pp 183 200 a b c d e f Nassar 2023 a b Mori 2009 pp 95 97 a b Masalha 2009 pp 39 43 a b Slyomovics 2007 p 28 a b c Mori 2009 p 89 a b Sa di 2007 p 303 a b Pappe 1998 pp 14 23 a b c d e f g Kapshuk amp Strombom 2021 Shalhoub Kevorkian 2015 p 39 Asser 2010 Masalha 2012 Masalha 2009 pp 39 78 Masalha 2009 p 78 Gur Ze ev amp Pappe 2003 Rouhana amp Sabbagh Khoury 2017 Bashir amp Goldberg 2018 Hasian 2020 a b Black 2009 a b c d Esmeir 2007 pp 231 232 Buxbaum 2023 a b c d Sa di 2007 pp 287 304 309 a b c d e Lentin 2010 pp 1 2 10 11 90 Sa di 2007 p 387 a b c Sa di 2007 pp 304 305 Golani amp Manna 2011 Shenhav 2019 p 48 Gutman amp Tirosh 2021 Abu Laban amp Bakan 2022 pp 511 512 Bashir amp Goldberg 2018 pp 1 42 a b Todorova 2013 p 260 Shalhoub Kevorkian 2015 p 40 Shenhav 2019 p 49 MEMO 2023 Ertel 2024 SourcesBooks and journals Abu Laban Yasmeen Bakan Abigail B 12 July 2022 Anti Palestinian Racism and Racial Gaslighting The Political Quarterly 20 3 329 378 doi 10 1111 1467 923X 13166 Al Hardan Anaheed 2016 The Nakba in Arab Thought Palestinians in Syria Nakba Memories of Shattered Communities Columbia University Press pp 26 49 doi 10 7312 al h17636 ISBN 978 0 231 54122 0 JSTOR 10 7312 al h17636 6 Bashir Bashir Goldberg Amos 2018 Introduction The Holocaust and the Nakba A New Syntax of History Memory and Political Thought The Holocaust and the Nakba A New Grammar of Trauma and History Columbia University Press pp 1 42 ISBN 978 0 231 18297 3 Ben Salem Lobna 2021 Humanizing the Enemy Transcending Victimhood Narratives in Mahmoud Darwish S and Yehuda Amichai S Poetry Postcolonial Text 16 1 1 18 Retrieved 31 January 2024 via Docslib org Ertel Pauline 23 February 2024 Berlin schools asked to distribute leaflet describing the 1948 Nakba as a myth Middle East Eye Esmeir S 2007 Memories of Conquest Witnessing Death in Tantura In Sa di Ahmad H Abu Lughod Lila eds Nakba Palestine 1948 and the claims of memory Columbia University Press pp 229 252 ISBN 978 0 231 50970 1 JSTOR 10 7312 sadi13578 16 Fischbach Michael R 3 September 2021 12 Nakba Denial Israeli Resistance to Palestinian Refugee Reparations In Bhabha Jacqueline Matache Margareta Elkins Caroline eds Time for Reparations A Global Perspective Pennsylvania Studies in Human Rights University of Pennsylvania Press pp 13 23 doi 10 9783 9780812299915 014 ISBN 978 0 8122 9991 5 Golani Motti Manna Adel 2011 Two Sides of the Coin Independence and Nakba 1948 Institute for Historical Justice and Reconciliation pp 13 23 ISBN 978 90 8979 080 4 Gur Ze ev Ilan Pappe Ilan 2003 Beyond the Destruction of the Other s Collective Memory Theory Culture amp Society 20 1 93 108 doi 10 1177 0263276403020001922 S2CID 145563406 Gutman Yifat Tirosh Noam 29 January 2021 Balancing Atrocities and Forced Forgetting Memory Laws as a Means of Social Control in Israel Law amp Social Inquiry 46 3 705 730 doi 10 1017 lsi 2020 35 Hasian Marouf 2020 Debates on Colonial Genocide in the 21st Century Cham Switzerland Palgrave Pivot pp 8 10 78 81 103 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 21278 0 ISBN 978 3 030 21277 3 S2CID 198739259 Kapshuk Yoav Strombom Lisa 2021 Israeli Pre Transitional Justice and the Nakba Law Israel Law Review 54 3 305 323 doi 10 1017 S0021223721000157 S2CID 239053934 Lentin Ronit 2010 Co memory and melancholia Israelis memorialising the Palestinian Nakba Manchester University Press doi 10 7228 manchester 9780719081705 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 7190 8170 5 JSTOR j ctt155jgtk Masalha Nur 2009 60 years after the Nakba Historical truth collective memory and ethical obligations PDF Kyoto Bulletin of Islamic Area Studies 3 1 37 88 Masalha Nur 2012 The Palestine Nakba decolonising history narrating the subaltern reclaiming memory London New York Zed Books ISBN 978 1 84813 971 8 Mori Mariko July 2009 Zionism and the Nakba The Mainstream Narrative the Oppressed Narratives and the Israeli Collective Memory PDF Kyoto Bulletin of Islamic Area Studies 3 1 89 107 ISSN 1881 8323 Nassar Maha 2023 Exodus Nakba Denialism and the Mobilization of Anti Arab Racism Critical Sociology 49 6 1037 1051 doi 10 1177 08969205221132878 S2CID 253134415 Pappe Ilan 1998 Fifty Years Through the Eyes of New Historians in Israel Middle East Report 207 14 23 doi 10 2307 3013159 ISSN 0899 2851 JSTOR 3013159 Rouhana Nadim Sabbagh Khoury Areej 2017 Memory and the Return of History in a Settler colonial Context The Case of the Palestinians in Israel Cambridge University Press pp 393 432 doi 10 1017 CBO9781107045316 ISBN 978 1 107 04531 6 Sa di Ahmad H 2007 Reflections on Representations History and Moral Accountability In Sa di Ahmad H Abu Lughod Lila eds Nakba Palestine 1948 and the claims of memory Columbia University Press pp 285 314 ISBN 978 0 231 50970 1 JSTOR 10 7312 sadi13578 18 Shalhoub Kevorkian Nadera Spring 2015 Necropolitical Debris The Dichotomy of Life and Death State Crime Journal 4 1 International State Crime Initiative 34 51 doi 10 13169 statecrime 4 1 0034 JSTOR 10 13169 statecrime 4 1 0034 Shenhav Yehouda 2019 The Palestinian Nakba and the Arab Jewish Melancholy In Ginsburg Shai Land Martin Boyarin Jonathan eds Jews and the Ends of Theory Fordham University Press pp 48 64 ISBN 978 0 8232 8201 2 Slyomovics Susan 2007 The Rape of Qula a Destroyed Palestinian Village In Sa di Ahmad H Abu Lughod Lila eds Nakba Palestine 1948 and the claims of memory Columbia University Press pp 27 52 ISBN 978 0 231 50970 1 JSTOR 10 7312 sadi13578 8 Todorova Teodora 2013 Bearing Witness to al Nakba in a Time of Denial In Matar Dina Harb Zahera eds Narrating Conflict in the Middle East Discourse Image and Communications Practices in Lebanon and Palestine London I B Tauris pp 248 270 doi 10 5040 9780755607709 ch 012 ISBN 978 1 78076 102 2 Yiftachel Oren Winter 2009 Creeping Apartheid in Israel Palestine Middle East Report No 253 Middle East Research and Information Project pp 7 15 37 JSTOR 27735323 News media Abbas signs decree criminalizing Nakba denial The Times of Israel 30 May 2023 Asser Martin 2 September 2010 Obstacles to Arab Israeli peace Palestinian refugees BBC News Retrieved 9 January 2024 Black Ian 22 July 2009 1948 no catastrophe says Israel as term nakba banned from Arab children s textbooks The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 24 October 2023 Buxbaum Jessica 5 June 2023 Tantura massacre Challenging Israel s denial of the Nakba The New Arab Retrieved 24 October 2023 Palestine president issues decree criminalising denial of Nakba Middle East Monitor 31 May 2023 Further readingAlbadawi Sobhi December 2017 Exploring the Issues of Denial and Blame in Relation to the Expulsion of Palestinians from Palestine in 1948 International Humanities Studies 4 4 Abu Deis 18 34 ISSN 2311 7796 via ResearchGate Diboyan Larra M Goliath Jesse R 2023 Publicly Underrepresented Genocides of the 20th and 21st Century A Review Humans 3 2 82 105 doi 10 3390 humans3020009 ISSN 2673 9461 Khoury Laura 2013 The Palestine Nakba Decolonising History Narrating the Subaltern Reclaiming Memory Book review Arab Studies Quarterly 35 1 73 76 doi 10 13169 arabstudquar 35 1 0073 Lustick Ian S Fall 2006 Negotiating Truth The Holocaust Lehadvil and Al Nakba Journal of International Affairs 60 1 51 77 JSTOR 24358013 Masalha Nur 2003 The Politics of Denial Israel and the Palestinian Refugee Problem Pluto Press doi 10 2307 j ctt18dztmq ISBN 978 0 7453 2120 2 JSTOR j ctt18dztmq Masalha Nur 2008 Remembering the Palestinian Nakba Commemoration Oral History and Narratives of Memory PDF Holy Land Studies 7 2 123 156 doi 10 3366 E147494750800019X S2CID 159471053 Project MUSE 255205 Archived PDF from the original on 3 June 2022 Rashed Haifa Short Damien Docker John 2014 Nakba Memoricide Genocide Studies and the Zionist Israeli Genocide of Palestine Journal of Holy Land and Palestine Studies 13 1 1 23 doi 10 3366 hls 2014 0076 ISSN 2054 1996 Sayigh Rosemary 2022 On the Burial of the Palestinian Nakba Routledge International Handbook of Ignorance Studies 2nd ed Routledge ISBN 978 1 003 10060 7 Stav Shira 2012 Nakba and Holocaust Mechanisms of Comparison and Denial in the Israeli Literary Imagination Jewish Social Studies 18 3 85 98 doi 10 2979 jewisocistud 18 3 85 ISSN 1527 2028 JSTOR 10 2979 jewisocistud 18 3 85 S2CID 144892781 External linksDenying the Nakba 75 Years Later A Democracy in Exile Roundtable DAWN Nakba Denial Arab American Institute Israel denies the Nakba while perpetuating it Al Jazeera Five things the United States knew about the Nakba as it unfolded Middle East Institute Erasing the Nakba Upholding Apartheid Atrocity Denial in the U S Media Institute of Palestine Studies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nakba denial amp oldid 1217258716, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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