June 8, 2021
Scandalous media lies about Jerusalem’s Sheikh Jarrah feed a
false Palestinian narrative
Dear Friend of FLAME: In the days leading up to the recent Israel-Hamas conflict, the mainstream
media and various talking-heads were provocatively reporting the
“evictions” or “ethnic-cleansing” of Palestinians
from their homes in eastern Jerusalem in favor of “Jewish
settlers.” Thus begins one of the most outrageous sagas of twisted
journalism and media disinformation so far this century.
The New Yorker’s Steve Coll disingenuously put it this way:
“For many Palestinians, the eviction cases evoked a long history of dispossession while presenting evidence of continued
efforts to remove them from the city.”
Missing context.
Few journalists—and certainly not Mr. Coll—bothered to provide
background beyond these breathless declarations, which at times bordered on
incitement and anti-Semitism, and which are part of the wider battle against legitimacy of Jews in their national, indigenous and
ancestral homeland.
Rule of law.
While the Palestinian Arab street is free to think what it wants, the
Sheikh Jarrah case is neither a case of ethnic dispossession nor evidence of efforts to remove anyone from Jerusalem. In fact,
it’s the evidence of nothing more than the rule of law
—a seemingly unmentionable issue for mainstream journalists where
Israel is concerned.
Hidden facts.
Coll and other commentators hid the fact that the Jerusalem neighborhood
today known as Sheikh Jarrah is actually the site of the gravesite of Shimon Hatzadik, a prominent high priest of the Jewish
Second Temple period and a pilgrimage site for many Jews. Shimon Hazadik
served from about 300-200 BCE, some 700-800 years before the arrival of
Muslim invaders.
Jewish ownership.
Most importantly the New Yorker (and NPR in its coverage) failed
to clarify that this area was legally purchased in 1875 by two
Jewish trusts committed to the development of the Jewish population of
Jerusalem, as the Jewish community started to build neighborhoods beyond
the Old City. During the War of Independence in 1948, the Jewish residents
of these neighborhoods fled for their lives in fear of the attacking
Jordanian army.
Illegal Arab occupation.
In 1956, the government of Jordan, which illegally occupied most of
Jerusalem, in cooperation with the United Nations Relief Works Association,
arranged for the housing of 28 Arab families in the area of the abandoned residential compounds in the Shimon Hatzadik neighborhood.
The families leased the apartments subsequently built from the government
of Jordan, paying a nominal rent.
Owners return.
After Israel liberated these areas in the Six Day War in 1967, the Jewish
families who had their homes and lands confiscated—and had the deeds to prove it—began proceedings to reclaim them.
In 1972 these claims were accepted by the courts, and ownership was
returned to the original owners.
Arabs agree—then refuse—to pay rent.
An agreement was reached, according to which the Arab families recognized
the ownership of the Jewish owners, and in return received the status of
protected tenants. As part of the agreement, the families were afforded long-term rental rights, and undertook to pay rent to the owners and
to maintain the apartments. In practice, despite agreeing to do so, no rent
was paid, and the Arabs damaged and destroyed part of the buildings,
including an old synagogue.
Agreement nullified.
Like all tenants who refuse to pay their agreed rent and damage property,
they were legally called to leave. Eviction notices were issued, but the Arabs refused to leave, despite exhausting all legal avenues
open to them. This is when the Palestinian Authority, possibly to deflect
from the fact that its leader Mahmoud Abbas had cancelled elections once
again, decided to make an international campaign about an open-and-shut
legal dispute.
Journalistic malpractice.
Reading and watching the mainstream media, you would never have known these
facts. How could respectable—honorable—journalists not
have reported this critical, legally dispositive background?
Whenever Sheikh Jarrah was mentioned, it was to highlight the false story
of unfair and illegal evictions of Palestinian Arabs, who were constantly
described as having lived there “for generations”. While this
latter fact may be strictly true, it gives the false impression that
these Arabs lived on their own property since time immemorial.
Reuters headlined the events as “East Jerusalem’s Sheikh Jarrah
becomes emblem of Palestinian struggle” and proceeded to give a
history of the neighborhood beginning in the 1950s, conveniently leaving out events preceding—and not providing a single
Israeli voice.
Condemnation . . . and violence.
Envoys of the Middle East quartet from the European Union, Russia, the
United States and the United Nations released a statement noting with
“serious concern the possible evictions of Palestinian families from
homes they have lived in for generations in Sheikh Jarrah.”
This was echoed by the U.S. State Department and National Security Adviser
Jake Sullivan.
Despite the truth of the matter, bloody riots soon erupted in Arab-Israeli
towns in Israel to protest “Israeli theft of Palestinian land.”
Many Jewish citizens were violently attacked by Arab gangs, and mobs
lit buildings and vehicles on fire. Shortly thereafter, Hamas began an
11-day bombing campaign on Israeli civilians, unleashing more than 4,300
missiles.
Media swallow Palestinian narrative.
The Palestinians have long understood the idiom, “If it bleeds, it
leads”—meaning that the media only become interested when
violence, conflict or death is involved. They have a willing international
media, ignorant of or disregarding the conflict’s history and
background, as well as the deeper context of the events they witness. They
provide maximum space to the Palestinian narrative, which they broadcast
frequently in its entirety, rarely providing context or complete facts, let
alone an Israeli perspective.
Please point out to friends, family, colleagues and your elected
representatives that it’s time American and foreign media commit to telling the whole story when conflicts between Israel and her
enemies erupt. They should start by learning—and reporting—the
truth about the millennia-old roots of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
If they did, frankly, it would mean the death of the Palestinian narrative.
Likewise, the truth of Sheikh Jarrah/Shimon Hatzadik demonstrates that
facts about current events are usually more complex than the media narrative—and they would likely
favor Jewish legitimacy . . . and destroy persistent Arab claims to the
entire Land of Israel.
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