A few weeks ago, I sat in the Cinemateque in Tel Aviv and watched a new documentary about the Palestinian village of . Tantura, renamed Hof Dor (âDor Beachâ) after the village was conquered by Israeli forces in 1948, used to be home to over 1000 Palestinian residents.
The film examines how, in the aftermath of Israeli forces taking control of the village, they carried out a of male residents and buried them in a mass grave - now a parking lot. However, such events were never acknowledged by the state. Today, âHof Dorâ is a popular tourist destination, with a beautiful beach, hostel and hotel.
The documentary also tells the story of Israeli historian Teddy Katz, a former masters student at the University of Haifa. In 1998, he submitted a thesis to the department of history exposing the massacre. His historical evidence predominantly relied on the of members of the Alexandroni Brigade, who carried out the massacre.
When news of the thesis became public, there was public outcry - culminating in a defamation case against Katz, who was forced to retract his thesis and apologise, ending his academic career.
Director Alon Schwartz tells this story alongside interviews with members of the brigade who recount their time serving during the 1948 war, at times with . Listening to these men, now in their 90s, recount their role in the murder, the construction of a mass grave, and the violence inflicted on this community, viewers cannot help but ask why they now so feel so comfortable admitting their involvement in such atrocities.
What took place at Tantura likely amounts to a war crime. Yet that is what makes this documentary in part so astounding; Tantura is a mirror of Israeli society. The attitudes of those interviewed are a of how Israeli society understands its histories, the foundation of the state, as well as its contemporary understanding of Palestinians.
Watching the film in the aftermath of the and the ongoing state sanctioned expulsion of residents of , it is clear there is a direct line between the impunity with which these veterans recount their time in 1948 and the impunity with which Israel can attack Palestinians both within and beyond the Green Line, without any material consequences or accountability.
Similarly, amongst many diaspora Jews the knock-on effect of such erasure can be reformulated as hostility towards those who try to expose the truth of what really happened - to buck against the traditional we have grown up with of Israelâs small but army defeating âthe Arabsâ to continue the Zionist dream and establish the socialist utopiaâs of the kibbutz movement.
Never mind, of course, that the Kibbutzim were founded the fragments and rubble of former Palestinian villages. In doing so, transgresses the borders of Israeli society into wider Jewish identity.
The attitude of mainstream Israeli society towards Palestinian resistance and freedom can be traced back to this wilful erasure of the . In the film, an elderly Israeli woman who co-founded the Kibbutz on the land where Tantura once stood rebukes the idea of a memorial to the village being erected: âthey need to understand that this is our land nowâ she says, speaking of the former residents.
Despite the common hasbara (âPRâ) talking point of Israel having âno partner for peaceâ, understanding what really happened in 1948 evidences how since its inception, Israelâs ruling class had little intention of living side by side or in connection with a free and equal Palestine.
In the last decade, hasbara organisations have gone into overdrive to any kind of Palestinian activism with being anti-Semitic. Of course, this doesnât mean that occasional incidents of antisemitism within Palestine advocacy havenât occurred, but this is not the same as the intentional, targeted campaign by Israel advocacy organisation to render simply being Palestinian as a threat to Jews, and in doing so undermining the validity of Palestinian connection to this land.
The blatant refusal by Jewish Israelis to confront 1948 means that the legacy of the war acts like a dormant virus in Israeli society. It forces Israel to render the of Palestinians as an existential threat. A well documented campaign by the state to quash almost any attempts at acknowledgement or education of the true historical realities means, perhaps ironically, the remains present in almost every aspect of society.
The failure to confront the violence, expulsions, and ethnic cleansing that took place is not only immoral, but it also keeps Israel trapped in a constant battle for its own legitimacy. Ultimately, this exposes the fragile ground on which modern Zionism has been built.
Attempts to cover up the past crimes of Tantura, or Manshiye, or Miâar paradoxically cement them firmly in the present day. Even in Israelâs liberal haven of Tel Aviv, the remnants of Palestinian buildings are scattered across the city. The Hilton Hotel is built over a Palestinian cemetery. Once you know this, it is impossible to ignore; the Nakba is everywhere you step in this land.
The film itself is at times flawed; despite being a film about a Palestinian community, only two Palestinian speakers are actually featured throughout the documentary - both eyewitnesses to the horrors of what occurred.
Several historians are also featured, all of them male, Israeli and Ashkenazi but with differing views both on the validity of Katzâs thesis and the historical facts of Tantura. In many ways, this also reflects to the viewer how these subjects are discussed in the public sphere; much of the discussion about Palestine and Palestinians continues to Palestinians themselves.
This Israeli political sphere is overflowing with older, male, Ashkenazi army generals, despite the majority of Israeli Jews being of Middle Eastern or Mizrachi descent. I like to think that this was the directorâs way of getting in another subtle dig at the - to question not only the way in which Israeli teaches its own history, but also the teachers themselves.
Yet what I found to be most interesting, and arguably the most important, about this documentary is how it serves to confront the viewer with question about the role of those who belong to the oppressor or ruling class in anti-colonial and . Art has often been used as a tool through which to cast a critical eye where the political or public discourse has been unable to transgress the boundaries of said discourse.
Indeed, it is not lost on the viewer that Alonâs retelling of the story of Teddy Katzâs disgrace from academia is also a convenient opportunity to bring the story of Tantura to a new Israeli and international public.
Similar attempts by innovative organisations such as Forensic Architecture use the medium of art and to delve into the cost of Israelâs settler colonial violence. Israeli organisation Zochrot (âRemembersâ in Hebrew) has developed an app that maps out all the Palestinian villages that were destroyed during the war of 1948.
As a growing number of Israelis and diaspora Jews seek to join the Palestinian struggle for liberation, questions on what our role should be are increasingly pertinent. Is it to solely take part in Palestinian civil societyâs call for tactics? Or to participate in direct action and civil disobedience with Palestinian activists?
There is a larger question as to whether expecting diaspora Jews or Israelis to take part in such co-resistance because of their identity only serves to replicate Zionist logic in some form.
There is no easy answer. But the first step, as with all processes of decolonisation, is to acknowledge the reality we find ourselves in, the historical events that led us here, and to commemorate Tantura and the many other villages lost as a result of the war in 1948. Only then can we begin to build a new future based on equality and justice for all in this land.
Emily Hilton is a Jewish activist and writer living between Israel-Palestine and the UK. She co-founded, the Jews Against Boris Campaign (now Jewish Solidarity Action) and sits on the steering committee for the .
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