Palestine 1948: War, Escape and the Emergence of the Palestinian Refugee Problem
by Yoav Gelber
Brighton, England: Sussex Academic Press, 2001. 399 pp. $75
Reviewed by Daniel Pipes
Middle East Quarterly
https://www.danielpipes.org/409/palestine-1948-war-escape-and-the-emergence-of
Translations of this item:
Gelber argues that the first phase of the war began just one day after the United Nations decision to partition Palestine on November 29, 1947 and continued through to the British retreat on May 15, 1948. During that half-year, a civil war took place within the boundaries of Mandatory Palestine, with the British not willing to expend lives to stop it. The Zionists won this round with an ease that astounded them almost as much as the Arabs, an ease which Gelber attributes not to their greater martial abilities but to the vast infrastructural superiority they enjoyed. He also makes the interesting point that the voluntary Arab flight from the contested areas fit into a cultural pattern; historically by-standers to the wars of their rulers, the farmers and townspeople escaped the hostilities temporary, then returned when the fighting ended. But Zionists came out of a Europe context in which abandoning the land was tantamount to forfeiting it.
The second round began with the Arab armies' invasion on May 15. Those armies were almost as ill-prepared for fighting as the Palestinians had been and, like them, were soundly defeated, with shuddering consequences for all the regimes involved. But don't be satisfied with this potted version - read the full version Gelber so capably recounts in Palestine 1948.
Related Topics: Arab-Israel conflict & diplomacy, Palestinians
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