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    Jewish Times of South Jersey.
    Stephen Kramer
    November 27, 2009
    Crybabies

    Israelis are often accused of being crybabies about the
    Holocaust. It's `Holocaust this' and `Holocaust that.' Enough already,
    they say. Of course, every foreign dignitary visiting Israel makes an
    obligatory trip to Yad Vashem, Israel's premier Holocaust resource
    center. Israel is also the epicenter for many legal battles against
    genocide and has adopted the motto, `Never Again!' In addition, Israel
    jealously guards its title as the primary home of Holocaust
    survivors. The Holocaust is at least partially responsible for the
    United Nations' acceptance of Israel into its membership. Inevitably,
    Israelis are accused of trading on the Holocaust.

    As Prime Minister Netanyahu pointed out in his address to the General
    Assembly at the United Nations in September, `Last month, I went to a
    villa in a suburb of Berlin called Wannsee. There, on January 20,
    1942, after a hearty meal, senior Nazi officials met and decided how
    to exterminate the Jewish people. Here is a copy of those minutes, in
    which the Nazis issued precise instructions on how to carry out the
    extermination of the Jews. In Berlin, a day before I was in Wannsee, I
    was given the original construction plans for the Auschwitz-Birkenau
    concentration camp.' Was Netanyahu trading on the Holocaust or
    pointing out the real danger that Israel faces from Iran's quest for
    nuclear weapons?

    Is the Holocaust the first and foremost genocidal tragedy of modern
    times? The Armenians have made a case that the Turkish massacres
    against them during the First World War make that tragedy the
    archetype for genocide. But their claim is problematic: 1` the Ottoman
    Turks didn't have a leader like Hitler who built his whole career on
    the annihilation of the Jews; 2 ` the Turks didn't plan and carry out
    an Armenian genocide to the same extent as the Nazis, who developed a
    blueprint for genocide. The Nazis went so far as to continue
    exterminating Jews even when it detracted from their military efforts
    towards the end of WWII.

    Today, in fact, there's no consensus on whether there was an Armenian
    genocide, and Armenia is even considering giving in on the issue to
    cement a diplomatic deal with Turkey. The Armenians, nor any other
    people for that matter, have never been subjected to such a
    premeditated plan of genocide as the Holocaust. Regardless, genocide
    continues to be a huge problem, especially in Africa.

    So, with genocide being such an important issue and with the Holocaust
    its most compelling example, surely the Israelis aren't crybabies.

    The Palestinians are the biggest crybabies on earth. What are they
    crying about? The so-called usurpation of their country,
    Palestine. Day in and day out, the Palestinians cry: at the United
    Nations, at Arab congresses, on television, anywhere and to
    anyone. But the facts are that there never has been a country called
    Palestine.

    There weren't any `Palestinians' in 1922, when the League of Nations
    gave the British the Mandate for Palestine, using the ancient name for
    the former Ottoman province. (The term became common usage to describe
    Jews born in the Mandatory Palestine.) The name `Palestine' refers to
    the Philistines, an ancient sea people from Asia Minor who inhabited
    the southern coast of Israel. `Philistine Syria' (Greek) and
    `Provincia Syria Palaestina' (Roman) were names used to suppress the
    Jewish influence there.

    The 1947 U.N. Partition Plan divided Palestine into Jewish and Arab
    areas. The Arabs rejected the plan and skirmishes against Jews began
    immediately. Israel was declared a state by the U.N. after the ensuing
    War of Independence. The West Bank and Gazan Arabs failed to declare
    their own state or even agitate for one. Instead, Jordan occupied and
    then annexed the West Bank and Egypt occupied Gaza. According to the
    Arabs, all of Palestine-Israel is disputed territory, `Arab land,'
    that they claim for themselves. (Technically, Jordan and Egypt, which
    each have a treaty with Israel, accept Israel's sovereignty within the
    1949 armistice lines.)

    Something happened after WWII which should have changed the status of
    the Palestinians; it was `population transfer.' The most prominent
    example of this phenomenon happened in 1947 during the partition of
    British India into India and Pakistan. In the largest and most rapid
    population transfer in history, about 18 million Muslims and Hindus
    left their homes to relocate with their co-religionists. Had the Arabs
    accepted the U.N. Partition Plan for Palestine in 1947, Israel would
    have fewer Arab citizens today.The Arabs could have grouped themselves
    in the West Bank and Gaza, either as citizens of Jordan and Egypt or
    as citizens of their own state.

    Emphasizing the pragmatism of population transfer is the exodus of
    Jews from Arab countries in North Africa and Arabia, which happened
    throughout the decade following Israel's Declaration of
    Independence. Up to 800,000 Jews left their homes, almost all
    unwillingly, when the hostility of their Arab neighbors forced them to
    flee ` usually with little but what they could carry with them. Since
    the number of Jewish refugees is roughly equivalent to the number of
    Palestinian refugees in 1948, population transfer of the Palestinians
    would have been a pragmatic solution to their problem. (It wasn't that
    any of the transferred populations chose to be exiled ... it was a
    necessary evil.)

    Instead of accepting the U.N. Partition Plan or later peace offers,
    the Palestinians have wallowed in their self-induced misery,
    complaining bitterly about their conditions. They have made a habit of
    turning down every peace overture from Israeli leaders, and later
    complaining that the Israelis won't begin new negotiations starting
    with the terms that were summarily refused.

    The Palestinians even managed to set up a unique U.N. agency, UNRWA,
    to prolong their refugee status until such time as they could usurp
    the Jewish state. Instead of building lives for themselves in their
    own negotiated state or in neighboring Arab countries, they have
    concentrated on trying to destroy Israel. Palestinians are the
    crybabies, not Israelis.

    Stephen Kramer resided and worked in the Atlantic City area until
    1991, when he moved to Israel with his wife, Michal Langweiler, and
    two sons. He can be reached at [email protected].
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