Historical archive reveals Israel's plans to expel Negev Palestinians

Historical archive reveals Israel's plans to expel Negev Palestinians
Newly researched documents dating back to 1951 support Palestinian Bedouins' claims to lands in the Negev Desert, where protests have been going on for the past month over lands targeted for seizure.
2 min read
01 February, 2022
The archive exposed General Moshe Dayan's (centre, at front) plans to seize land from Palestinian Bedouin [Getty]

Newly studiedarchives showing Israel's intention to forcibly displace thousands of (also known as the Naqab) could help Bedouins claim back their lands, Israeli media reported on Monday.

Professor Gadi Algazi, a historian from Tel Aviv University, uncovered archives documenting a 1951Israeli military operationto forcibly expel from their lands a large desert historically inhabited and cultivated by Bedouin tribes.

The archival materials were originally released in 2017.

Theyinclude a letter written by Moshe Dayan, then head of the Israeli army's Southern Command, and a document written by the military government in the area. According to Algazi's research, the two documents provethe army'sintention to forcibly move the Bedouins from their lands in order to seize them.

“There was an organized transfer of Bedouin citizens from the northwestern Negev eastward to barren areas, with the goal of taking over their lands. They carried out this operation using a mix of threats, violence, bribery and fraud,” Algazi the Israeli daily Haaretz.

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Some believe the documentscould shift the balance in favour of displaced Negev Palestinians in variouslawsuitsagainstthe Israeli government, and create a legal precedent.

Bedouins from the Negev have testified for years that Israeli soldiers expelled them but this is the first time historical research provides evidence of an orderly state expulsion plan.

Israel's official stand on the Negev is that Palestinian Bedouins left their land following Israel's 1948 declaration of independence, and never returned.

Known as the Nakba -or Catastrophe - by Palestinians, this dramatic eventwitnessed the flight of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from massacres committed by Zionist militias, who seized their villages and towns.

In 1953, Israel passed laws expropriating all land whose owners had been absent and not returnedby April 1952, effectively seizing the property of Palestinians who left during the Nakba.

The new archival revelations come as protests continuein the Negev against an afforestation plan led by thecontroversial Jewish National Fund (JNF), a quasi-state organ whose aim is to buy a maximum amount of land on behalf of Israeli Jews. The protests began in early January.

The Israeli Land Authority assigned some 1,300,000 square metres of land belonging to a Bedouin tribe to the JNF, with 370,000 square metres being allocated for forest planting.

Several protests have taken place across Palestine in solidarity with Negev residents. The latest one took place on Sunday in Jerusalem.

Israeli forceshave arrested dozens of activists and demonstrators, including several children, since the start of their campaign to "Save the Negev".