March 1997 pg. 72
MIDDLE EAST HISTORYIT HAPPENED IN MARCH
Nearly All Bedouins Driven by Israel From Their
Grazing Grounds
By Donald Neff
It was 43 years ago, on March 17, 1954, that 11 Israelis riding
in a bus were killed in an ambush at Scorpion Pass in Israels
eastern Negev desert. The slaughter caused intense outrage and anti-Arab
hatred inside Israel. Arabs and Palestinians were widely suspected
and there was hot talk about revenge. It was only later that investigators
discovered the attackers had been Bedouin nomads retaliating because
Israeli troops had driven them from their traditional Negev grazing
grounds.1
Although the plight of the Bedouins has been largely ignored, their
treatment by Israel has been no kinder, and no less systematic,
than the dispossession of the Palestinians.2 When Israel
came into being in 1948, there were 108 Bedouin villages and localities
with a population of about 135,000. By 1961, only 22,578 Bedouins
remained inside Israel in 41 villages and localities.3
Today there are only a few thousand scattered Bedouins left in the
Negev.
In their place are 280,000 Jews living in 114 villages
and towns.4 Before 1948, there were at most around 4,000 Jews in
the large Beersheva-Negev southern districts.5
Israels campaign to rid the Negev of the Bedouins began the
same year the Jewish state came into being. By the time the fighting
ended in late 1948, Israel had destroyed 67 Bedouin villages and
localities and routed hundreds and perhaps thousands of the nomads
from their grazing areasas it had dispossessed three-quarters of
a million Palestinians.6 The next year 500 Bedouin families
were chased out by Israeli troops from an area south of Hebron,
just north of the Negev.7 In 1950, Egypt complained to
the United Nations that 4,000 Bedouins had been driven from their
homes in the Negev into its territory. Egypt charged that atrocities
had been committed against the Bedouins by Israeli troops and that
the Bedouins herds of goats had been killed. 8
While Israels major concern was to get rid of the Bedouins
and take their land, there were strategic military considerations
as well in moving some of the nomads. This was noted at the time
by the chief of staff of UNTSO, the U.N. Truce Supervision Organization,
Lt. Gen. E.L.M. Burns. He reported that 3,500 of those expelled
in 1950 were from the Azazme tribe who were the original inhabitants
of the El Auja demilitarized zone, an old Turkish garrison area
renamed by Israel as Nitzana. It was a strategic 145-square-kilometer
juncture between Israel and Egypt at the western Negev-Sinai frontier
that had been demilitarized in the 1949 armistice between Egypt
and Israel because it was a major invasion route along the Cairo-Beersheva-Jerusalem
axis.9
To cover up its land-grabbing, the government
presents the expulsions as benevolent.
When members of the Azazme tribe drifted back to El Auja they attracted
the fiery attention of Ariel Sharon, at the time the commander of
Israels terrorist Unit 101 and later a defense minister. Sharon
led the unit in September 1953 in an attack on the Bedouins in the
demilitarized zone. An unknown number of Bedouins were killed.10
Israel eventually took over much of the zone by hook or crook, and
used it to considerable advantage in two wars against Egypt when
the Jewish state launched surprise attacks across the Sinai in 1956
and 1967.
Israels campaign against the Bedouin reached a new height
of brutality in 1959 when troops forcibly drove out 350 Bedouins
from the Negev. On Oct. 6, the United Nations Egyptian-Israeli Mixed
Armistice Commission condemned Israel for the action. The commission
accused the Israelis of killing some Bedouins, burning their tents
and taking their property, including camels, donkeys and sheep.11
Such brutal behavior eventually achieved Israels aims. Israeli
anthropologist Clinton Bailey reported at the end of 1993 that during
the past four decades Israel had forced 99 percent of the Bedouins
off their lands and confiscated their herds. Now, he wrote, Israel
was conducting a discriminatory policy designed to get all
the Bedouins off the land....the last 1 percent of the Bedouins
still living in their native area in the central Negev are fighting
expulsion.
In order to escape criticism for driving the Bedouins into Egypt
or Jordan, Israel over the years also had attempted to gain their
land by congregating them in seven development towns in northern
Negev. But, according to Bailey, most never got beyond the
sprawling desert slums of shanties and ragged tents around Beersheba,
because Israel has never provided the necessary finances to develop
the townships....Many in the townships are unemployed, and some
have become dependent on welfare and turned to drugs.
Bailey added: To cover up its land-grabbing, the government
presents the expulsions as benevolent. The Bedouins, it says, must
be brought into the 21st century. If they are concentrated in the
townships, the argument goes, they will have access to proper schools
and medical care....And if critics say that benevolence alone doesnt
justify the expulsions, the government trots out the sacred cow:
the army needs all the land for training.
The cynicism is clear. No one asks whether Hasidic Jews are
ready for the 21st century, so why ask it about Bedouins?12
RECOMMENDED READING:
Abu-Lughod, Ibrahim (ed.), Transformation of Palestine (2nd
ed.), Evanston, Northwestern University Press, 1987.
Benziman, Uzi, Sharon: An Israeli Caesar, New York, Adama
Books, 1985.
Burns, Lt. Gen. E.L.M., Between Arab and Israeli, New York,
Ivan Obolensky, 1962.
Hutchison, Commander E.H., Violent Truce, New York, The
Bevin-Adair Company, 1956.
Love, Kennett, Suez:The Twice-Fought War, New York, McGraw-Hill
Book Company, 1969.
Lustick, Ian, Arabs in the Jewish State:Israels Control
of a National Minority, Austin, University of Texas Press, 1980.
Morris, Benny, The Birth of the Palestine Refugee Problem,
New York, Cambridge University Press, 1987.
Nakhleh, Issa, Encyclopedia of the Palestine Problem (2
vols.), New York, Intercontinental Books, 1991.
Neff, Donald, Warriors at Suez:Eisenhower Takes America Into
the Middle East, New York, Linden Press/Simon & Schuster,
1981, and Brattleboro, VT, Amana Books, 1988.
FOOTNOTES:
- Love, Suez, p. 61. Also see Hutchison, Violent Truce,
pp. 47-59.
- For a detailed examination of Israels treatment of the
Bedouins, see Kurt Goering, Israel and the Bedouin of the
Negev, Journal of Palestine Studies, Autumn 1979,
pp. 3-20; Nakhleh, Encyclopedia of the Palestine Problem,
pp. 311-14 and 420.
- Nakhleh, Encyclopedia of the Palestine Problem, pp. 311
and 332. Nakhleh provides a short history of the expulsions and
testimony on the subject before the United Nations, pp. 311-14.
- Clinton Bailey, New York Times, 12/29/93.
- Janet L. Abu-Lughod, The Demographic Transformation of
Palestine, p. 153, in Abu-Lughod, Transformation of Palestine.
- Nakhleh, Encyclopedia of the Palestine Problem, p. 332.
Also see Lustick, Arabs in the Jewish State, p. 135.
- Morris, The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem,
pp. 247-48.
- New York Times, 9/16/50. Quotes from Egypts complaint
to the Security Council are in Nakhleh, Encyclopedia of the
Palestine Problem, p. 313. Also see Benziman, Sharon,
p. 49.
- Burns, Between Arab and Israeli, pp. 92-93; Love, Suez,
pp. 11 and 108-9; Neff, Warriors at Suez, p. 112.
- Morris, Israels Border Wars, p. 242.
- Reuters, New York Times, 10/7/59; Jay Walz, New York
Times, 10/18/59.
- Clinton Bailey, New York Times, 12/19/93.
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