Wednesday, 19 July 2017

The Birth of the Problem in the Modern Middle East


Middle East has always intrigued me, not only because it is always in the news today, especially for the violence that is bred there. May be the fascination is because of Israel, a country that was carved out of Palestine in 1948, very much close to the partition and independence of India which happened in 1947. A home for a homeless people!

The Jews lost their home twice, once when the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar conquered them finally in 586 BC and took the people captive. The Babylonians razed the City of David, destroyed their Temple on Mount Zion, destroyed their city Jerusalem and left it forlorn and deserted. Prophets Jeremiah and Zephaniah were active during these troubled years.

After 70 years of exile, the Israelite were permitted to go back to their country and rebuild their Temple, during the reign of Cyrus, the King Persia, who overruled the Babylonian kingdom in 539 BC. The exiles returned under Nehemiah and Ezra.

These events were all predicted by the Prophets of Yahweh, God of Israel and happened exactly as it was foretold. Prophets Haggai and Zachariah encouraged the returned exiles to rebuild their city and the Temple, which was done, though in a much smaller scale when compared to the first Temple build by King Solomon.

King Herod enlarged and beautified the Temple and made it a marvel and pride of Israelite. Then came the birth, crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus Christ, who prophesied that the Temple will be destroyed with not one stone resting on another. This happened in 70 AD, when Roman army invaded Jerusalem and his commander Titus, destroyed the Temple and the city Jerusalem completely and sent the Jews scurrying all over the world.

For the next almost 2000 years the Jews lived as exiles in different countries, persecuted, isolated and treated as second class citizens, especially in Russia, where they were in large numbers. But in their hearts the flame always burnt that one day they will return to their land, the Land promised by their God to their forefathers, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. This has been foretold in Bible by many prophets. And the Jews awaited that day of return.

The seeds were planted after the First World War (WWI), when the mighty Ottoman Empire tottered and fell to pieces. The then reigning British Empire inherited most of the Arab peopled-lands after the war.

Britain acquired 200,000 square miles of additional territory, and ruled from Egypt and Iran, which were with her earlier, to Palestine, Iraq and Jordan. This was seven times bigger than the Roman Empire at its helm. The League of Nations gave the Mandate for these broken pieces of Ottoman Empire to the victorious nations, the British and French. Syria and Lebanon fell to the lot of France.

Britain made a few promises during that time, including the Belfast Declaration, promising a home land to the Israel. This promise to establish a Jewish homeland in Palestine, a land with Arab majority, seems to have birthed not only Israel, but also the Middle East conflicts that we witness even today, including the growth of terrorism.

How did the Belfast Declaration come to be? It transpires that in 1915, Lloyd George, the then Chairman of Munitions War Committee, Britain, noticed with concern the shortage of acetone, a crucial element in manufacture of cordite, necessary for weapons. A Jewish chemist Weizmann, produced synthetically and supplied acetone, which was crucial in Britain winning the war.

As a reward for the great services rendered, Weizmann was asked what he would like the British government to do in return. He asked for a national home for Jews in Palestine and it was assured to him.[1] It was a reward given to Weizmann, a Zionist, when Lloyd George became the Prime Minister of Britain.

Balfour was the First Lord and Weizmann became technical adviser to the Admiralty in relation to acetone supplies in 1915. It was Balfour who played a crucial role in the whole matter. That the dispersed Jews must have a home land was supported by the successful allied powers after WWI, America, Italy, France and Britain. Britain took the lead because Palestine mandate fell to her lot.

The promise of a national home to the Jews, known later as the Balfour Declaration, was contained in a letter written by the then foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour to the leader of the British Jewish community, dated 2 November 1917, which was later incorporated into the British Mandate.

Trouble started immediately as the local population in Palestine consisted of 90% Muslims and some Christians. Though the Declaration said that the home for Jews will be carved out without prejudice to the civil and religious rights of the existing non-Jewish population in the area, inter community conflicts started from 1920.

These conflicts became so severe that Britain could not manage its Mandate, surrendered it and had to leave in disgrace in 1948. Palestine problem became that of the world.

Balfour declaration, entered into in good faith to help the dispersed Jewish people, ended as a monumental failure, not just because of the mismanagement of the British authorities, but also because of the hardening of the hearts of the surrounding Arabs. The Declaration itself did not commit Israel-Arab conflict. They chose that conflict themselves.  

This need not have been, for the Zionists offered areas of autonomy within Palestine for the Arabs and economic concessions to the Arabs, in the early years itself. Palestine could have developed to the benefit of both the communities. But the Arabs were uncompromising, they would not agree to a Jewish homeland at all. This obduracy, in my opinion is the major reason for the conflict in the area.

Ever since the stand of the Palestine Arabs and other Arab nations surrounding Jewish Israel had been that the Jewish nation has no right to existence and that it should be exterminated. Ever war that followed between Israel and the surrounding Arab neighbors only enhanced the area of control by Israel.

What would be the end? We do not know. Two-nation Palestine? We are not sure.

Any divide and rule strategy would back fire. In India itself, what was partitioned in 1947, has caused three wars between India and Pakistan and continued interference and troubles in India-held Kashmir.

With Pakistan becoming a training land for the terrorists with American largesse, and China cultivating the friendship of Pakistan, India has more troubles to face on its borders in the coming years.

So also in Palestine.



[1] Walter Reid, “Empire of Sand: How Britain made the Middle East,” Birlinn-Edinburgh, UK, pp.93-94.

No comments:

Post a Comment