Rachel's Tomb, early 20th century
Have Arabs been in the area west of the Jordan River from time immemorial?
In
1881, Arthur Penrhyn Stanley, a leading British cartographer and Dean
of Westminster Abbey, reported that “in Judea it is hardly an
exaggeration to say that for miles and miles there was no appearance of
life or habitation” (Sinai and Palestine in Connection with Their History, New York 1895, pp. 184-186).
The Egyptian immigration
According to Arieh Avneri, a ground-breaking historian of Arab and Jewish migration to Palestine (The Claim of Dispossession, 1980),
during the Egyptian conquest (1831-1840), “there was a limited influx
of some thousands of [Egyptian] immigrants, whom Ibrahim Pasha [the
ruler of Egypt] brought in to settle the empty stretches of the country.
Before them, a goodly number of Egyptians had fled Egypt, seeking to
evade the military draft…. They sought sanctuary with the governor of
Acre, who granted it readily.”
The French-Egyptian scholar, Muhammad Sabry [The Egyptian Empire under Mohammed Ali and the question of the Orient,
1930], confirmed that “the Governor of Acre encouraged the migration of
fellaheen [peasants] from Egypt and gave them shelter…. In 1831, more
than 6,000 fellaheen crossed the Egyptian border…. After he conquered
Palestine, not only did Mohammed Ali [Ibrahim Pasha’s father] refrain
from sending back the draft evaders to Egypt, but he sent new settlers
to consolidate his rule…. The Egyptian ruler also brought the Bedouin
slave-tribe, Arab ed-Damair….”
Avneri highlights (ibid.) many documents published by the British Palestine Exploration Fund. For instance:
“Most of Jaffa was made up of Egyptian-populated
districts…. Philip Baldensperger [a renowned anthropologist] stated that
in 1893, the inhabitants of many villages in the southern part of the
country [between Gaza and Tulkarem] were of Egyptian origin…. The
dwellers of some parts of the south were originally brought to Palestine
from Libya…. Hundreds of families of Egyptian origin
accompanied the conquering forces of Ibrahim Pasha…. Similarly, in the
cities of Samaria and Judea there are hundreds of families which, to
this day, are named Masri [the Egyptian]…. Before WW1, Egyptian laborers
worked on the reclamation of the swamp-lands…. Egyptians participated
in the laying of the railroad tracks from Jerusalem to Jaffa, and
thereafter remained in the country….
“According to Baldensperger, the existing population in Jaffa contained at least twenty-five different nationalities [mostly Egyptians, but also Syrians, Yemenites, Persians, Afghanis, Hindus and Baluchis]….
Additional Arab/Moslem migrants
Avneri adds (ibid.) that “in 1856, the French [conquerors of Algeria]
permitted Abd al-Qadir al-Husseini [the leader of the anti-French
rebellion] to leave Algeria together with some
followers. Some went to Syria and others to Palestine…. These immigrants
were called Mughrabis [originating in the Maghreb, North Africa]. They founded four villages in the Lower Galilee…. Quite a number of Mughrabis settled in Safed, and probably in Tiberias….
“In
1914, Masterman [British Palestine Exploration Fund] described the
Moslem population of Safed as being of mixed origin. One of the
neighborhoods was called Hareth el-Karad, which denotes a population of Kurdish origin…. Half of the Moslem population of Safed were Mughrabis…. Other Moslem Arabs were immigrants from Damascus and Bedouins from the Jordan Valley…. In 1893, Baldensperger wrote [British Palestine Exploration Fund Quarterly] about the Mughrabis of Jaffa…. The Persians, Afghans, Hindus and Baluchis were engaged in commerce….
“In
1878, the Ottoman Sultan, Abd el-Hamid took under his protection
Circassian refugees who had fled the Christian-Russian rule in the Caucasus. Many settled in Jordan. Others settled west of the Jordan River in Kafer Kamma, Sarona and Reihaniya. Some Moslems from Bosnia
also found refuge in Palestine and settled near Caesarea… Laurence
Oliphant [a British traveler, author and diplomat] wrote about one of
the Turkoman tribes that pitched their black tents near a Circassian village, arriving from the mountains of Iraq…. In 1908, a group of Arabs arrived in Jaffa from Yemen and settled there….
“In
1878, Claude Reignier Conder [British Palestine Exploration Fund]
reported that the large Jezreel Valley was the refuge of the Bedouins whenever war or famine threatened their existence in Jordan….
In 1870, only a sixth of the lands were ploughed, because the valley
was occupied by Bedouins…. The same phenomenon occurred in the southern
part of the country [e.g., from the Hebron area and southward]….
Infrastructure projects enticed Arab immigration
Avneri adds (ibid.): “The building of the Jerusalem-Jaffa railroad
[inaugurated in 1892] employed many local and outside labor. The
Belgian company that built the railroad imported Egyptian laborers, many of whom remained in the country. At the start of the 20th
century, work on the railway track between Haifa and Dera’a [in
southwestern Syria] began. At the outbreak of WW1, the Haifa-Nablus
railroad was launched…. Many workers were imported from neighboring
countries….
“In 1880, Haifa was a small town of 6,000 souls. In
1910 it tripled to 18,000 inhabitants, of whom 15,000 were Moslem and
Christian Arabs. Many of the newcomers were from Lebanon and Syria….
Jaffa developed as a port city… through which passed pilgrims…. Some
of them remained in Jaffa. Jaffa’s population doubled during 1890-1910,
numbering 43,000 of whom 30,000 were Moslem and Christian Arabs. Also, a
large number of pilgrims from North Africa settled in Jerusalem amidst their countrymen, who arrived in earlier times….
“The
rapid population growth in Jaffa and Haifa (following the British
victory in WW1) was, in large part, due to the influx of many Egyptian
laborers, policemen, contractors, foremen and businessmen, who
accompanied the advance of the British Army…. The building of the
railroad to Qantara on the Egyptian border employed thousands of
Egyptians, many of whom preferred to settle in Haifa….
“The British authorities preferred Egyptian, Syrian or other foreign Arab laborers [ e.g., Sudan]
– over Jewish immigrants – when it came to erecting military bases,
operating quarries, paving roads and the construction of the port of
Haifa….
“During 1919-1922, the Arab-Moslem population grew from 515,000 to 590,000, largely, due to Arab immigration….
“The years 1932-1936 were marked by unprecedented economic prosperity… and a considerable influx of Arab immigrants….
“During
WW2, there was a severe labor shortage in Palestine. Thousands of Arabs
immigrated…. In 1942, the British Mandate issues emergency regulations
permitting the British Army to bring laborers from Arab countries….
“The
outbreak of violence that occurred from time to time [against Jews and
intra-Arab], especially during 1936-1938, drew thousands of Arab
mercenaries from the neighboring countries…. Many mercenaries remained
in the country….”
In conclusion
Prof. Efraim Karsh features a report by the British Peel Commission (Palestine Betrayed, 2010): “during 1922-1931, the increase of Arab population in Haifa, Jaffa and Jerusalem was 86%, 62% and 37% respectively.”
As
a result of the 1880-1947 waves of Arab immigration, the Arab
population of Jaffa, Haifa and Ramla grew 17, 12 and 5 times
respectively.
Thus, contrary to Palestinian claims, Arab residents
west of the Jordan River (Judea, Samaria and pre-1967 Israel) are not
descendants of the Canaanites, but of Arab migrants.
Moreover, in defiance of a myth advanced by the Palestinian Authority, Palestine has not been Arab/Moslem from time immemorial.
In fact, since the Greek Empire era (5th century BCE), the term Palestine (Palaistine) referred to the Land of Israel, directly linked to the People of Israel.
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