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P**R
Well-written, well-documented must read book on Israeli treatment of Palestinians
Since the 1970s Professor Pappe has studied. researched and documented the history of the Palestinan/Israel tragedy. He was born a Jew; served in the Israeli army; and taught at Israeli higher education until he was shunned by colleagues because he began to write about the "hidden" truths of the tragedy. He's one of the very few authorities on the topic; read every book he has written to be accurately informed.
A**V
Excellent, like all of Ilan Pappe's work
This is the fourth Pappe book I have read. While some of his books (including this one) are hard to read because of their content, they offer invaluable information that is not widely known by the general public. If you are interested in getting a better idea of the history of what is going on in Gaza today, I highly recommend this book. Thank you again, Prof. Pappe, for your insights and for your bravery.
L**L
Well research
This was a well researched and written book. It reveals common practices of Israel that shed light on the actions and motives to its brutality towards Palestinians. A great read if you want to understand what is happening in Israel and why.
X**K
Impressive book
Easy readable, well documented, detailed, complete, convincing and impressive work. It sums up and explains the zionist policy in the Occupied Territories, settler colonialism, as well as the measuments towards and consequences for the indigious population. A must read for anyone who wants to understand the origin of this conflict, its effect on both populations in particular the dispocession and rightless position of the Palestinians.
L**N
Pappe's Controversial Takes on 1967, Oslo, and More
I was in high school in the late 1980s when the first intifada erupted. Luckily for me, my father and I stopped into a university bookstore around this time, where I stumbled upon a copy of "The Israel-Arab Reader." This was a collection of primary source material presenting both sides of the history of the conflict. It proved invaluable in helping me see through the propaganda of the day.Unbeknownst to me, also around this time, Israel's "new historians," including Ilan Pappe, were starting to uncover more evidence, in IDF archives for instance, to substantiate challenges to the version of history pushed by Israeli propaganda, which "The Israel-Arab Reader" had brought to my attention.My interest in the conflict waned after college, however, due to the breakdown of Oslo, and especially after 9/11. I thought maybe the Palestinians would just keep fighting forever, with unrealistic expectations of what Israel's military dominance meant they could ever hope for, whether they were right or not, in terms of a peace agreement. Israel's rhetoric after the horrific events of Oct 7, 2023, for instance, calling Palestinians "human animals" and saying that every inch of Gaza was a war zone, alarmed me and made me realize that I needed to revisit the conflict. To that end, Ilan Pappe's work has been tremendously helpful in getting me up to speed on what has been learned since the late 1980s. "The Biggest Prison on Earth" is essential to this work. It is particularly effective in challenging the common perspective about the causes of the 1967 War, the breakdown of Oslo, and whether or not peace initiatives have failed primarily due to inexplicable Arab aggression and intransigence.The Six-Day WayThis book covers Israeli/Palestinian history, starting with the end of the War of Independence and continuing to the time the book was written: 2017, the 50th anniversary of the Six-Day War, which is a particular area of focus.Pappe makes the case that many Zionists in 1948-9 were disappointed that Israel did not take the West Bank when it could have. They harbored thoughts of using conflicts with Israel's neighbors after that as pretexts to correct this mistake. Pappe mentions 1963, in particular, as the beginning of meticulous planning in Israel on how they would go about occupying the West Bank and Gaza Strip once a suitable pretext occurred.Pappe then dives into the proximate causes of the 1967 War. Pappe's thesis is that although there were some border skirmishes around this time and some saber-rattling by Nasser, it was nothing out of the ordinary and certainly nothing that called for a pre-emptive Israeli strike on its neighbors. Instead, Pappe believes that it was merely the pretext that Zionists had long been looking for but something that could easily have been managed back to relative peace had Israel been willing. Pappe argues, however, that Israel was not willing, largely due to its increased military prowess, especially in terms of its air force, which it had acquired thanks to a closer relationship with Washington, DC.The OccupationA substantial portion of Pappe's book describes how quickly Israel began to implement its occupation plans: a testimony to how systematic and thorough the planning had been. Pappe makes it clear that almost immediately, many Palestinians were expelled from their homes. He puts the total for 1967 at around 180,000. Also, almost immediately, Israel began a program of moving settlers into the occupied territories.Pappe describes the extraordinary legal reasoning, sometimes blocked by Israel's Supreme Court, and how Israeli leaders such as Sharon sought to work around it by various subterfuge. This included the invocation of laws from Jordan, Mandatory Palestine, and even the Ottoman Empire to justify the land grabs.As the title implies, Pappe believes a prison model describes the situation well. He cites Israeli officials explicitly stating they wanted to use a carrot-and-stick model. If Palestinians were accepting of the situation, treatment would be better, an open-air prison, although expansion via settlements would continue. If Palestinians, however, were resistant, there would be a crackdown where freedoms were severely restricted: a maximum security prison. Pappe points out that although there are some imperfections with the analogy, for instance, Israel would love for all prison inhabitants to just leave for another country, it is a good description overall.Pappe sees the prison model as a strategy for dealing with the fact that Israel does not want to annex the territories, as that would mean making the Palestinians citizens. That, in turn, would mean Jews would no longer be a substantial majority in Israel. Along these lines, Pappe sees the peace process as a canard: Israel has no intention of giving up much of its gains in the West Bank, although it is less interested in Gaza. The occupation, as opposed to annexation, means that it does not have to grant citizenship to the Palestinians. It can point to the unsurprising resistance, often provoked by Israel, as a reason to continue expansion and not make a serious offer regarding a two-state solution. Israel, Pappe argues, also points to the resistance as a reason not to seriously discuss the Palestinians' right of return.Another particularly fascinating aspect of Pappe's book is his discussion of the role of Orthodox and other marginalized Jews in implementing the expansionist plan. Pappe describes how their religious beliefs mean they feel they are entitled to expand into the West Bank and engage in violence with Palestinians already there. They are further encouraged to do so by tax breaks and the understanding that Israel's government will leave them alone in creating religious communities even where there are some conflicts with laws in the rest of Israel.Strengths and WeaknessesThe book is remarkably engaging, given that a substantial part deals with the laws and bureaucracy of occupation: something one would not expect to be the most riveting of subjects. Here, Pappe manages to find a good balance in providing enough detail to see the harm the bureaucracy did to the Palestinians while also not going into excessive details as "The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine" did in parts.The book also does a good job of discussing the critical events in the last 75 years in what is relatively short for a history book. Beyond just a raw recounting of events, however, Pappe generally makes a compelling case that there is a strategy behind it all dating back to the late 1930s. In addition, Pappe, in this book, does more to proactively address challenges to his admittedly controversial interpretations of history. An example of this is his dismissal of common arguments taken as evidence that Israel's neighbors' actions warranted a pre-emptive strike in 1967.In terms of downside, I was not ultimately convinced by Pappe's argument that Israel's policy turned into one of genocide in Gaza beginning around 2006. He claims that one needs to look beyond numbers and consider whether Israel wants to kill many people and otherwise wreak sufficient destruction to make the place unlivable. This, of course, is logically possible. Still, it seems more plausible that Israel had no plan to deal with Gaza other than to maintain a tight blockade and accept that Hamas would fire some rockets and make some occasional raids necessitating "mowing the lawn" every few years. This was damage that, until Oct 7, they likely felt was small enough to live with.ConclusionThis book, like "The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine," is invaluable in understanding the current conflict in Gaza. Specifically, it helps in analyzing whether pro-Palestinian protesters are correct in claiming that Israel is engaged in settler-colonialism, apartheid, genocide, and, of course, maintaining an open-air prison. Other than for genocide, I felt that Pappe made a convincing case. The book also substantially challenges the notion that Israel's pre-emptive strike in 1967 was necessary. This, of course, is controversial, and readers should compare it with Benny Morris's view, for instance, that although a pre-emptive strike was justified, the case is not as clear-cut as it has historically been made out to be.Pappe, additionally, makes a compelling case that it was not primarily Arafat and the Palestinians "never missing an opportunity to miss an opportunity" that led to the breakdown of the Oslo Accords.Overall, I rate the book 4.25/5.0. This book is better written than "The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine" as it is more engaging and better at anticipating counterarguments. On the other hand, if you only wish to read one book by Pappe, "The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine" is better as it discusses the origins of the more fundamental issue: the history and aftermath of the Nakba, in greater detail.
C**D
Everyone should be grateful that Ilan Pappe has the courage ...
Everyone should be grateful that Ilan Pappe has the courage and erudition to expose in detail what is obviously one of the longest attempts of ‘ethnic cleansing’ in modern history.From the policy of ‘tihur’, ‘ethnic cleansing’, of 800,000 Palestinians to create the Jewish State, to the hundred thousand or more Palestinians ‘transferred’ after Israel’s 1967 second territorial expansion (the first attempt was in 1956 to seize the Suez Canal), to the daily oppression of Palestinian ‘inhabitants’ to force them to abandon their homeland, this is a slow destruction of a centuries-old society.Thoughtful and/or compassionate people should both appreciate Professor Pappe’s efforts to illuminate the dark religious cloud of deceit which camouflages this on-going modern atrocity.
K**N
This is well worth reading.
It is amazing what a bad actor Israel really is. Their leadership has been very bad. I'm surprised so many are willing to put up with how their country treats the Palestinians. Apartheid is going on right under their noses and they don't object?
S**Z
Read it and weep.
Terribly unsettling. What is being done and funded — paid for by the US blank check to Israeli government— would shock most Israelis, let alone the Americans who pay their taxes and care where the money goes. Anti-semitism isn’t Israel’s problem. The problem is the lack of human rights for anyone but Israelis. Anyone who declares “never again” but supports Israel’s treatment of indigenous people in the land is a hypocrite. The US must stop paying for the prison; the destruction of human lives. What a travesty.
A**R
Informative !
Very interesting
R**.
Should be mandatory reading for the governments of the USA, the UK and Germany
With the current terrible situation in Gaza and Israel, I've been trying to find out more about the background. The courageous and honest Jewish Israeli historian, Illan Pappe, has access to Israeli government archives, that are not so accessible to non-Hebrew speakers, and he paints a dire picture. From the founding of Israel, based on a UN resolution, in which the inhabitants of Palestine had no say, the Zionists have been occupying more and more land that was not intended for them under the original UN resolution. With sophisticated plans and propaganda they have been seeking pretexts to de facto annect more and more Palestinian land, so that a Two-State "solution" is now no longer possible, despite the the now belated bleatings of some Western governments. This is documented in detail in the sources quoted by Pappe, which set out the statements of leading Israeli politicians from the 1940s until recently. Since the founding of Israel, all other relevant UN resolutions have been blatantly ignored, with the support of the USA. The encroaching occupation of Palestine and the tailor-made Israeli laws to justify these crimes according to international law, that have been widely ignored by the world, are meticulously set out in this book. In particular, the sections dealing with Gaza, this tiny strip of land that is home to a couple of million human beings, most of whom were driven from their homes (even before this terrible war), and the plans to make it uninhabitable for Palestinians are horrific. And this book was written almost 7 years ago!My review is in no way a justification of the heinous attack by Hamas on 7 October 2023. Impartial and honest/unhypocrital people, however, have to agree with António Guterres that this horrendous attack did not happen in a vacuum. Pappe's book explains the context.This book really is a "must read" for anyone who is open-minded and intelligent enough to see through the propaganda.
S**7
Heutzutage Allgemeinwissen
Das Buch beschreibt den Zustand in Palästina, es ist tatsächlich ein riesen freiluft Gefängnis.Heut zu tage gehört sowas sogar schon zum Allgemeinwissen jedes Menschen(sollte). Es sollte dabei auch Allgemeinwissen sein dass, das Buch nicht antisemitisch ist und auch keine Religion beschuldigt wird, sondern Staaten.
A**R
History of Gaza
Very detailed book that everyone should read.
G**L
Liberal Democracy
We hear a lot about the superiority of the Western Liberal Democracy. This form of government is supposed to protect free thought, freedom and justice. Yet when one reads Ilan Pappe’s book and other books dealing with the suppression of the Palestinians one wonders where are the Liberal Democracies to be found. The North American Democracies and the European Democracies openly support Israel which is also a Democracy.It is very puzzling to form an opinion about Liberal or Western Democracies.
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