Non­fic­tion

The Acci­den­tal Empire: Israel and the Birth of the Set­tle­ments, 1967 – 1977

Ger­shom Gorenberg
  • Review
By – July 16, 2012

On the eve of the Six-Day War in June 1967, the Israeli gov­ern­ment had rec­on­ciled itself to the par­ti­tion of the land between Jews and Arabs, and to the fixed bor­ders arrived at by the 1948 armistice. Indeed, as Goren­berg notes in his riv­et­ing account of the birth of the West Bank and Gaza set­tle­ments fol­low­ing the Six-Day War, David Ben-Guri­on, Israel’s prime min­is­ter dur­ing the war for Israel’s inde­pen­dence in 1948, under­stood that tying our­selves up in hos­tile Arab ter­ri­to­ry would have imposed on us an unbear­able choice, accept­ing hun­dreds of thou­sands of Arabs among us, or mass expul­sion…” Antic­i­pat­ing an ide­o­log­i­cal argu­ment that would divide the Jew­ish state in decades to come, Ben-Guri­on want­ed a state with a Jew­ish major­i­ty more than he want­ed the entire homeland. 

The Six-Day War that result­ed in Israel’s con­quest of the West Bank and Gaza was not a con­flict with pre­de­ter­mined objec­tives. Prime Min­is­ter Levi Eshkol’s gov­ern­ment had no greater ambi­tion than to defend the coun­try, nego­ti­ate peace talks with the Arabs, and restore the armistice lines of 1948. Indeed, all of the major polit­i­cal fac­tions in Israel, includ­ing Men­achem Begin’s Herut Par­ty, had rec­on­ciled them­selves to the per­ma­nen­cy of the Green Line that sep­a­rat­ed Israel from Arab ter­ri­to­ry. The war dra­mat­i­cal­ly altered the sit­u­a­tion for both sides. 

Fol­low­ing the war, the Arab coun­tries, unwill­ing to accept their defeat, met in Khar­toum and reject­ed any con­tact with Israel. Thus Israel unwill­ing­ly found itself admin­is­trat­ing ter­ri­to­ries with more than a mil­lion Pales­tini­ans under its mil­i­tary con­trol, unpre­pared with any long-term pol­i­cy for the occu­pa­tion. The sud­den­ness of acquir­ing this acci­den­tal empire,” how­ev­er, also unleashed a reli­gious fer­vor in those who saw, in the con­quest of the his­toric home­land and the uni­fi­ca­tion of Jerusalem, the ful­fill­ment of bib­li­cal prophe­cy and the onset of the Mes­sian­ic age. So was born the set­tle­ment move­ment, begin­ning with reli­gious yeshi­va stu­dents led by Rab­bi Moshe Levinger, who cre­at­ed a pres­ence in Kfar Etzion, Hebron. As one rab­bi explained the emer­gence of the Whole Land of Israel Move­ment, God has shown us the way to redeem the Jew­ish nation.” One reli­gious­ly- inspired fol­low­er prayed that this set­tle­ment will be for­ev­er,” and anoth­er assert­ed that we have removed the shame of the term admin­is­trat­ed ter­ri­to­ries, and returned to the true fit­ting term, redeemed territories.’” 

Goren­berg dis­miss­es the belief that the Eshkol gov­ern­ment was reluc­tant­ly pushed by Ortho­dox set­tlers to reestab­lish Kfar Etzion. Rather, states Goren­berg, Eshkol made a choice and imposed his deci­sion on the cab­i­net, mis­rep­re­sent­ing his inten­tions abroad. From this point, he per­son­al­ly direct­ed set­tle­ment in occu­pied ter­ri­to­ry.” Once the first set­tle­ment was found­ed, both Eshkol and his suc­ces­sors gave tac­it con­sent to oth­ers that fol­lowed, some of which were found­ed amidst heav­i­ly pop­u­lat­ed Arab areas. The Arabs, how­ev­er, indi­rect­ly helped this process by refus­ing to nego­ti­ate with Israel, thus cre­at­ing a void in the sta­tus of the ter­ri­to­ries which the set­tlers com­menced to fill by cre­at­ing facts on the ground.” Thus, states Goren­berg, Israel backed into colo­nial­ism in the occu­pied ter­ri­to­ries. Colo­nial­ism, con­cludes Goren­berg, like the con­quest itself, reflect­ed a vac­u­um of strat­e­gy. It was born of a nation­al eva­sion of choices.”

Jack Fis­chel is pro­fes­sor emer­i­tus of his­to­ry at Millersville Uni­ver­si­ty, Millersville, PA and author of The Holo­caust (Green­wood Press) and His­tor­i­cal Dic­tio­nary of the Holo­caust (Row­man and Littlefield).

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