French publisher pulls Ilan Pappé's seminal 'Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine' book
A leading French publishing house has reportedly withdrawn copies of the book 'The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine' from its shelves asÌýIsrael continues to pound Gaza, amid a wave of pro-Palestinian censorship in Europe.
The book has been discontinued since 7 November, French website ´¡³¦³Ù³Ü²¹³¢¾±³Ù³ÙéÌýreported last week, raising eyebrows amongst customers as the book’s withdrawal came one month after Israel’s military campaign in the Gaza Strip began.
The book, authored by Israeli historian Ilan Pappé and published in 2006, is considered among the most significant works on the violentÌýexpulsionÌýof around 720,000 Palestinians from their villages and towns in 1948 to make way for the creation of Israel.
The book has been praised for challenging the Israeli narrative on the 1948 creation of Israel - known asÌýNakba, or "Catastrophe" by Arabs - and has been recommended over the years for a better understanding of the mass dispossession and displacement of Palestinians 75 years ago.
The Paris-based Fayard had been distributing the book since 2008, and sold at least 307 copies this year, according to French data website Edistat. Around 158 copies of the book were sold between 9 October and 12 November, following the start of Israel’s brutal onslaught on Gaza, which has killed at least 18,787 Palestinians as of Thursday.
Israel has also gone on to placeÌýGaza under a complete, siege depriving residents from basic essentials, and has targeted journalists, bombed schools, refugee camps and hospitals - which rights groups have described as tantamount to war crimes.
Maxime Lledo, head of the Press Service and Communications Director of Fayard told ´¡³¦³Ù³Ü²¹³¢¾±³Ù³Ùé: "Regarding this title, the contract had lapsed since February 27, 2022. The [publishing] house therefore had its last operation on November 3."
Fayard has been contacted by °®Âþµº for further comment but we did not receive a response at the time of publication.
Hachette Livre, Fayard's umbrella company, was bought by controversial right-wing French billionaire Vincent Bolloré in November, who has been dubbed the 'French Rupert Murdoch'.
The move also comes amid an increase in the censorship of pro-Palestinian activism in Europe and the US.
At the beginning of Israel's military campaign in October, pro-Palestinian demonstrations were initially prohibited by the French government. Rallies, however, still went ahead despite the ban.
In November, the popular channelÌý°Õ³Õ5²Ñ´Ç²Ô»å±ðÌý"disowned" French-Algerian journalistÌýMohamed Kaci after he questionedÌýthe Israeli army’s spokesperson about the siege on Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza.