My Personal Story:
A Story of Dispossession and
Suffering.
By Ismail
Zayid
I was born , in 1933, in the village of Beit Nuba in
Palestine, where I was brought up and lived happily with family and friends. The
village of Beit Nuba had existed for thousands of years, as historic records
show. However, Israeli wars of aggression and war crimes made its recent history
painful and tragic.
In May 1948, the Israeli army launched an attack to occupy
the villages of Imwas [Emmaus], Yalu and Beit Nuba, but failed to conquer these
villages. Elsewhere, in Palestine, the Zionist terrorist gangs and the
Israeli army were committing massacres against the predominantly unarmed
Palestinian people and conducted their long-planned campaign of ethnic cleansing
of the Palestinian people from their homeland. There was one day, out of many
during that conflict, that left painful sights in my life. It was on July 10,
1948 that Israeli army troops, led by Yitzhak Rabin, occupied the Palestinian
cities of Lydda and Ramleh. Rabin and his officers proceeded to
drive these 50 - 60,000 civilian inhabitants of these two cities away from their
homes in terror, with low-flying airplanes over their heads shooting the
occasional person and forcing them to run. The sight of the terror-stricken,
hungry and thirsty men, women and children fleeing in terror in the midday sun
of the hot summer, having run approximately twenty-five kilometres to the
village of Beit Nuba, where I, a 15 year old boy, saw them with my own eyes, is
a sight not to be forgotten.
The defeat of the Israeli army and its failure to
occupy these three villages, in May 1948, brought about a brutal revenge 19
years later in the war of aggression that Israel planned and effected on June 5,
1967 against its Arab neighbours. On June 6, these three villages were occupied,
without a single shot being fired, and were systematically dynamited and
bulldozed, on the direct orders of Yitzhak Rabin, the then chief of staff of the
Israeli army. The villagers, over 10,000, were expelled from their land.
In the village of Beit Nuba, 18 were buried alive under the ruins of their homes
because they were old or infirm and unable to move out of their homes before
they were demolished. One of them, Mohammad Ali Baker, was an uncle of my
mother. When our home was demolished, my uncle, who was old and arthritic, was
slow to move out, the Israeli soldiers told him, while they were demolishing the
western part of our home, that he will be buried alive if he did not move when
they will be soon demolishing the eastern part of our home. He was hurriedly
moved out. The pain and
suffering that my mother sustained was immense and continued to feel until her
dying day. My mother, brother, sisters and my uncle were driven out from our
land and never allowed to return, and I continue to bear that
pain.
The
destruction of these three villages in June 1967 was described, in the CBC
documentary below, as an act of revenge, by General Narkiss the commander of the
Israeli forces that demolished these villages.
The destruction of these villages was witnessed and described by the Israeli
journalist Amos Kenan, who was a reserve soldier in the occupying
force in
Beit Nuba. He gave this account to the Israeli newspaper Ha'Olam Hazeh, which
was prohibited by the censor from publishing it. It was sent to all members of
the Knesset, and to the Israeli Prime Minister and Defence minister, but no
response was received.
"The unit commander told us that it had been decided to blow up three
villages in our sector; they were Beit Nuba, Imwas and Yalu ... We were
told
to block the entrances of the villages and prevent inhabitants [from] returning
.... The order was to shoot over their heads and tell them not to
enter the
village.
"Beit Nuba is built of fine quarry stones; some of the houses are
magnificent. Every house is surrounded by an orchard, olive trees,
apricots,
vines and cypresses. They are well kept. Among the trees, there are carefully
tended vegetable beds.
"At noon the first bulldozer arrived and pulled down the first house at
the edge of the village. Within ten minutes the house was turned into
rubble. The olive trees and cypresses were all uprooted. After the
destruction of three houses, the first refugee column arrived from the
direction of Ramallah. We did not fire in the air. There were old people who
could hardly walk, murmuring old women, mothers carrying babies, small children.
The children wept and asked for water. They all carried white flags.
"We told them to go to Beit Sira. They told us they had been driven out. They
had been wandering like this for four days, without food, some dying
on the
road. They asked to return to their village ... Some had a goat, a lamb, a
donkey or a camel. A father ground wheat by hand to feed his four children ....
The children cried. Some of our soldiers started crying too.
We went to fetch the Arabs some water. We stopped a car with a major, two
captains and a woman ... We asked the officers why these refugees were sent from
one place to another and driven out of everywhere. They told us that this was
good for them, they should go. 'Moreover', said the officers, 'what do we care
about the Arabs anyway?' "
"We drove them out. They go on wandering like lost cattle. The weak die. Our
unit was outraged. The refugees gnashed their teeth when they saw the bulldozers
pull down the trees. None of us understood how Jews could behave like this. No
one understood why these fellaheen [villagers] shouldn't be allowed to take
blankets and some food.
"The chickens and doves were buried in the rubble. The fields were
turned into wasteland in front of our eyes. The children who went crying on the
road will be fedayeen in nineteen years, in the next round. Thus we have lost
the victory." (From Israel Imperial News, March 1968.)
Uri Avnery, then a Knesset member, described the destruction of these
villages as a definite war crime. This was carried out on the direct orders
of Yitzhak Rabin, then Chief of Staff of Israel's armed forces. These acts
are in direct violation of The Fourth Geneva Convention, 1949, to which
Israel is a signatory. Article 53 of the convention states: " Any
destruction by the Occupying Power of real or personal property, belonging
individually or collectively to private persons, or to the state, or to other
public authorities or social or cooperative organizations, is prohibited".
It is now difficult to spot the ruins and the rubble. Today there stands on
the site of the ruins of these three village, Imwas [the biblical village
Emmaus, where Jesus Christ first appeared after his Resurrection to meet with
his Apostles], Yalu and Beit Nuba, the infamy called "Canada Park", with picnic
areas for Israelis, built with Canadian tax-deductible dollars provided by the
Canadian Jewish National Fund (JNF), a registered Canadian charity.
It was in 1973 that Bernard Bloomfield of Montreal, then President of
the JNF of Canada, spearheaded a campaign among the Canadian Jewish community to
raise $15 million to establish Canada Park, so as to provide a picnic area
accessible to Israelis from Jerusalem and Tel Aviv.
At the entrance of Canada Park, just off John Diefenbaker Parkway
(opened by Diefenbaker himself in 1975), is a sign that reads: "Welcome to
Canada Park in Ayalon Valley-a project of the Jewish National Fund of Canada."
The JNF, responsible for the upkeep of the park, has removed all signs of the
villages and their inhabitants from the area. It would seem that only
the
Canadian donors are worthy of being remembered; their names are engraved in the
bronze plaques which cover an entire wall. Interestingly,
these donors are
not directly informed that the park is built on the site of the demolished
villages. The Director of the American JNF stated that,
"It is a delicate
situation, and one cannot expect an institution [such as the Canadian JNF] which
gathers money from abroad, to publicise the issue [of the demolition of these
villages]." ("Canada Park: A Case Study," by Ehud Meltz and Michal Selah, Kol
Hair, Aug. 31, 1984.)
The glossy guidebook, published by the JNF of Canada, has an entire
page devoted to the history of the area, including the biblical, Roman, Crusader
and British periods, but has no mention of these villages or their destruction.
Another step in the obliteration of the villages from memory can be seen in
their absence from Israeli maps.
As a new Canadian, my personal pain was compounded when I read on Dec.
4, 1978, in our local newspaper, The Halifax Herald, that Peter Herschorn, a
prominent Halifax businessman and past chairman of the Atlantic branch of the
JNF, was honored by the JNF for his humanitarian work and "choosing the right
goodness" in his participation in the building of Canada Park. The
Lieutenant-Governor of Nova Scotia, the Premier of N.S. and the Mayor of Halifax
were in attendance and offered their greetings. I was mortified that political
leaders in my new country, Canada, would consider the erection of recreation
centres on the site of ruins of criminally demolished peaceful villages,
illegally occupied, as a humanitarian act.
When I was invited to
come to Canada to teach at Dalhousie University Medical Aschool, I accepted with
enthusiasm, as I had a vision of Canada as a country of liberal values upholding
human rights and international law. However, the story of our government,
allowing our tax dollars to be used to build this infamy of Canada Park, a war
crime, has been a source of torment and pain for me. Over many years, I have
written repeatedly, supported by some honourable politicians like Senator Heath
Macquarrie and Mr. R.A. Corbett, MP, to successive Revenue Canada Ministers,
expressing concern about this, and receiving only vague unhelpful answers. It
was in the midst of this that the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Fifth
Estate Programme prepared and broadcast a documentary on Canada Park,
titled: "Park with no Peace", broadcast on Oct. 21, 1991. This deserves
to be viewed and study by all .
http://video.google.ca/videoplay?docid=-2500957394773313398
In summation, I stand before you today, to express gratitude to The Canadian Museum for Human Rights for agreeing to listen to my story exposing the violation of my human rights and to express the pain and suffering of the Palestinian people who were systematically expelled from their homeland and continue to live as refugees denied the fundamental right of return to their homes, a right clearly stipulated in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and repeated UN resolutions. As Israel continues to defy international law and to compound our agony, we witness deafening silence from countries, like Canada, which claim to uphold the UN Charter and universal human rights. To compound that, I, as a Canadian citizen, feel, with pain and shame, the complicity of my country in continuing to subsidize this war crime, sadly called Canada Park, defaming Canada's name.