Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-x5gtn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-14T06:27:01.978Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Tenants of Wadi Hawarith: Another View of the Land Question in Palestine

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2009

Raya Adler (Cohen)
Affiliation:
Department Of Jewish History, Tel Aviv University

Extract

Zionist historiography of the Mandatory period accords a considerable place to the problem of land purchase and colonization. In the early 1930s, the Zionists feared that Britain would put restrictions on land purchase and that great difficulties would ensue from ordinances designed to protect the tenantcultivators in the event of eviction. The historian's eye has also been caught by the ambivalent position of the Arab national leadership which, while publicly demanding an end to Zionist expansion, privately continued to sell land to the Jews. But the literature hardly deals with the tenants themselves—the human center of the land debates and the subjects of considerable social interest in themselves.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1988

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Stein, Kenneth W., The Land Question in Palestine, 1917–1939 (Chapel Hill, N.C., 1984), pp. 6570, 228–39;Google ScholarPorath, Yehoshua, From Riots to Rebellion: The Palestinian-Arab National Movement, 1929–1939 (London, 1977), vol. II, pp. 8084.Google Scholar

2 See for example, Avneri, Arieh L., Ha Hityashvut Ha Yehudit Ve Te'ant Ha Nishul, 1878–1948 (The Jewish Land Settlement and the Arab Claim of Dispossession, 1878–1948) (Tel Aviv, 1980), pp. 120–21.Google Scholar

3 Stein, , The Land Question, pp. 187–88;Google ScholarStein, Kenneth W., “The Jewish National Fund: Land Purchase Methods and Priorities, 1924–1939,” Middle Eastern Studies, 20, 2 (04 1984), 190205.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

4 See for example, Ruedy, John, “Dynamics of Land Alienation,” in Abu-Lughud, Ibrahim, ed., The Transformation of Palestine (Evanston, Ill.; 1971), pp. 122–24;Google ScholarPolk, W. R., ‘The Arabs and Palestine,’ in Polk, William R., Stamler, David M., and Asfour, Edmund, eds., Backdrop to Tragedy: The Struggle for Palestine (Boston, 1957), p. 230.Google Scholar

5 Granowsky, A., HaMishtar HaKarkai Be'Eretz Israel (The Land System in Palestine) (Tel Aviv, 1949), pp. 281–85;Google ScholarKark, Ruth, “Changing Patterns of Land Ownership in Nineteenth Century Palestine: The European Influence,” Journal of Historical Geography 10, 4 (1984), 357–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

6 Patterns of landowning, based on tradition and religion, are an integral part of the social structure of agrarian societies. Granting extensive rights in freehold, especially in Moslem Societies, where the common ownership and use of land is widespread, may provoke social disorder. The partial introduction of colonial (Western) law parallel to the traditional law created a complicated legal system. See for example Meek, C. K., Land Law and Custom in the Colonies (London, 1968), p. 245.Google Scholar

7 Oluwale, Elias Taslim, British Colonial Law: A Comparative Study of the Interaction between English and Local Laws in British Dependencies (London, 1962), pp. 223–27.Google Scholar

8 Doukhan-Landau, Leah, HaChevrot HaTzioniot LiRchishat Karkaot Be'Eretz Israel, 1897–1914 (The Zionist Companies for Land Purchase in Palestine, 1897–1914) (Jerusalem, 1979), pp. 8485.Google Scholar

9 Official (Palestine) Gazette, October 1, 1920; April 15, 1921; December 15, 1921.Google Scholar

10 Ibid., June 6 & 16, 1929; May 29, 1931; April 22, 1932; and August 8, 1933. For an extensive discussion of the subject, see Stein, Kenneth W., “Legal Protection and Circumvention for Rights of Cultivators in Mandatory Palestine,” in Migdal, Joel S., ed., Palestinian Society and Politics (Princeton, N.J., 1980), pp. 233–61.Google Scholar

11 Kano, Jacques, Parashat HaSichsuch HaKaraki Beyn Yehudim Ve'Aravim (The Land Conflict in Palestine between Jews and Arabs) (Givat Haviva, 1980), p. 27;Google ScholarReichman, Shalom, MiMa'achaz Le'Eretz Moshav, 1918–1948 (From Foothold to Settled Territory, 1918–1948) (Jerusalem, 1979), pp. 2324;Google ScholarPorath, , The National Movement, vol. 2, pp. 8084, and ch. 4;Google ScholarKimmerling, Baruch, “Land and Territorial Elements in the Arab-Jewish Conflict,” Ph.D. thesis, 1973, Hebrew University, Jerusalem.Google Scholar

12 Stein, The Land Question, pp. 178–80.Google Scholar

13 The basic statistics on this issue are misleading since, according to the statistics, large tracts appear to have been purchased after 1929; but apparently many small parcels were registered in the land records as one large purchase.Google Scholar

14 See for example, Reichman, , From Foothold, p. 69;Google ScholarGerz, A., ed., Statistical Handbook of Palestine (Jerusalem 1947), p. 140.Google Scholar

15 List of heirs, Central Zionist Archives (hereafter C.Z.A.), KKL5, box 363, Wadi Hawarith files 1927–1929; Weitz, Joseph, Meqilat Ha'adama: Perot (Scroll of Soil: Fruits) (Jerusalem, 1952), pp. 109–13; Chancellor report to Lord Passfield, March 1, 1930, Public Record Office archives in Israeli State Archives (hereafter P.R.O.), CO733/190/77182.Google Scholar

16 Porath, Y., The Emergence of the Palestinian-Arab National Movement, 1918–1929 (London, 1974), vol. 1, pp. 8687, 253–54.Google Scholar

17 Hankin to the PLDC, December 3, 1929, C.Z.A., Z4/3444/3;Google Scholaral-Jami'a al-'Arabiyya, July 23, 1933, P.R.O., Arabic and Hebrew Press Extracts for 1933;Google ScholarStein, The Land Question, p. 70, 161. On November 4, 1928, Hankin was in possession of a contract according to which the land was free of all legal limitation; C.Z.A., KKL5, box 363, Wadi Hawarith files 1927–1929.Google Scholar

18 The total sum was £144,210 (plus expenses), of which 41,000 were paid at the auction; C.Z.A., KKL5, box 363, Wadi Hawarith files 1927–1929; Chancellor to Passfield, March 1, 1930, P.R.O., CO733/190/77182.Google Scholar

19 Weitz, Fruits, pp. 114–15;Google ScholarAshbal, A., Shishim Shnot HaChsharat HeYishuv (60 Years of Jewish Colonization) (Jerusalem, 1979), pp. 84, 89.Google Scholar

20 Chancellor to Passfield, March 1, 1930, P.R.O., CO733/190/77182.Google Scholar

21 The court recognized the customary practice of the Land Registry according to which the verbal description was decisive; Land Court, file no. 29/29; Chancellor to Passfield, November 12, 1930, P.R.O., CO733/190/77182 (annex III).Google Scholar

22 Land Case 29/29, Tulkarm, September 28, 1932, C.Z.A., KKL5, box 660, file no. 7.Google Scholar

23 May 15, 1933, C.Z.A., KKL5, box 660 file no. 7.Google Scholar

24 “It is not the legal problem that counts but rather the political one. There is no doubt that the question of eviction of Arabs should not be raised;” C.Z.A., Protocols of the Jewish Agency Executive in Jerusalem, November 24, 1929.Google Scholar

25 von Oppenheim, Max Freiherr, Die Beduinen. Die Beduinenstämme in Palästina, Transjordanien, Sinai. Hedjaz (Leipzig, 1943), vol. II, pp. 5155.Google Scholar

26 Weitz, Fruits, pp. 108–11; C.Z.A., KKL5, box 660, file no. 7; box 511, Wadi Hawarith files, October 1, 1929–July 30, 1930.Google Scholar

27 Declaration in the name of the Tribe, Hawarith, Yarmuk, no. 347, 1929, C.Z.A., KKL5, box 511Google Scholar, ibid.

28 The Northern District Commissioner, December 4, 1929, P.R.O., 22/G568, N/3522.Google Scholar

29 Chancellor to Passfield, March 1, 1930, P.R.O., CO733.190.77182.Google Scholar

30 Kark, Changing Patterns, p. 374.Google Scholar

31 Ashbal, 60 Years, p. 83.Google Scholar

32 Ibid.; Ruppin, A., Pirkey Chayay (Three Decades in Palestine), vol. 2 (Tel Aviv, 1947), p. 176.Google Scholar

33 Chancellor to Passfield, November 12, 1930 (annex I), P.R.O., CO733/ 190/77182;Google ScholarWeitz, Fruits, pp. 125–27.Google Scholar

34 Chancellor to Passfield, March 1, 1930, P.R.O., CO733/ 190/77182;Google ScholarWauchope to Cunliffe-Lister, February 18, 1932, P.R.O., CO733/218/97082 (pt. 2). The agreement (draft): February 19, 1932, C.Z.A., KKL5, box 660, file no. 7.Google Scholar

35 Chancellor to Passfield, November 2, 1930, P.R.O., CO733/190/77182;Google ScholarWeitz, Fruits, p. 128;Google ScholarAvneri, Jewish Settlement, p. 119.Google Scholar

36 The government threatened to confiscate the land (Wauchope to Cunliffe-Lister, December 24, 1931, P.R.O., CO733/218/97082 [pt. 2]).Google Scholar

37 The government rented 2,965 dunams from the JNF as of December 3, 1931 to September 30, 1933. See agreement, note 34.Google Scholar

38 Weitz's reports, March 16, 1930, December 18, 1931, C.Z.A., KKL5, box 660, file no. 7;Google ScholarWeitz, Fruits. p. 132;Google ScholarWeitz to Hankin, December 2, 1929, C.Z.A., KKL5, Wadi Hawarith files, 1927–1929.Google Scholar

39 Weitz to Irgun Gimel, October 8, 1931, C.Z.A., KKL5, box 660, file no. 6.Google Scholar

40 Weitz, p. 131; C.Z.A., Protocols of the JNF executive 1928–1935, May 15, 1930.Google Scholar

41 Weitz's report, March 26, 1931, C.Z.A., KKL5, box 512, Wadi Hawarith files;Google ScholarKarbels' letters, January 5, 1931, February 22, 1931Google Scholar, ibid.; Hexters' memorandum, September 5, 1932, C.Z.A., S25/ 10360, Wadi Hawarith files.Google Scholar

42 Avneri, Jewish Settlement, pp. 118–19.Google Scholar

43 Police report, September 13, 1930, P.R.O., CO733/190/77182.Google Scholar

44 Porath, , The National Movement, Vol. II, pp. 3036.Google Scholar

45 Al-Hut, September 12, 1930;Google Scholaral-Sirat al-Mustaqim, September 15, 1930;Google ScholarFilastin, September 24, 1930;Google Scholaral-Karmil, September 24, 1930, P.R.O., CO733/190/77182.Google Scholar

46 Weitz, Fruits, p. 128.Google Scholar

47 Chancellor to Colonial Office, December 27, 1930 P.R.O., CO733/200/87072, and March 1, 1930 P.R.O., CO733/190/77182.Google Scholar

48 As claimed by the Jewish Agency (see Hexter to French, May 24, 1932, C.Z.A., S25/10360, Wadi Hawarith files).Google Scholar

49 List of squatters see C.Z.A., KKL5, box 660, file no. 7; Report on the situation, C.Z.A., Protocols of the JNF Executive, December 21, 1931.Google Scholar

50 Arlosoroff to Young, February 2, 1932, P.R.O., CO733/218/97082 (pt. 2); C.Z.A., Protocols of the Jewish Agency Executive, June 26, 1932.Google Scholar

51 Aharon Cohen files, C.Z.A., S25/3542, and especially report from February 24, 1931; Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA), March 6, 1932.Google Scholar

52 See for example the letter from Socialist Zionist Colonizers (HaShomer HaTzair) to the Jewish Agency Executive, Kibbutz Ein Ha'Choresh Archives, Security file 4/24.Google Scholar

53 Jewish colonizers from Wadi Hawarith to JNF, August 29, 1932, and Karbel to Weitz, September 4, 1932, C.Z.A., KKL5, box 660, file no. 6.Google Scholar

54 Porath mentions Bedouin tribes in the area in connection with the 1921 disturbances. During the anti-Jewish outbreak of 1921, British army forces were sent to the Tulkarm area and collective fines were imposed on the villages. According to the Tulkarm district officer, Bedouin tribes of this area also participated in the outbreak. However, according to Porath, they were recruited to attack Jewish settlements by spreading rumors among them that the Jews were killing Arabs in Jaff a rather than by using national slogans. The only Bedouin tribe mentioned by Porath is Abu Kishek. See Porath, , The National Movement, vol. 1, pp. 130–33.Google Scholar

55 Porath, , The National Movement, vol. 11, pp. 3637.Google Scholar

56 Out of 3,000 only 664 families were recognized as “landless Arabs” (Cunliffe-Lister Memorandum to HMG, March 1932, P.R.O., CO733/215/97050/9). Some more families were added later, Report by the Development Department to the Year 1934/5, P.R.O., CO733/75049/1/36).Google Scholar

57 Government of Palestine, Reports on Agricultural Development and Land Settlement in Palestine by Lewish French (Jerusalem, First report, December 1931; supplementary report, April 1932).Google Scholar

58 See note no. 37.Google Scholar

59 Report by the Development Department on Resettled Arabs, P.R.O., CO773/75049/1/36.Google Scholar

60 French's report on his visit in Wadi Hawarith, May 9, 1932, C.Z.A., S25/10360, Wadi Hawarith files.Google Scholar

61 JTA, May 5, 1932; Samara, who leased some of his land to the tenants of Wadi Hawarith, doubtlessly looked also after his own interests.Google Scholar

62 Reports on the commission activities, May 9, 1932, July 7, 1932, July 21, 1932, July 29, 1932, November 4, 1932, C.Z.A., S25/10360.Google Scholar

63 Wauchope to Cunliffe-Lister, July 22, 1933, P.R.O., CO733/231/17249. The idea of transferring evicted Arabs to Transjordan was supported only by a majority in the JNF executive (see C.Z.A., Protocols of the JNF Executive, June 17, 1930, April 29, 1931).Google Scholar

64 Wauchope—Cunliffe-Lister correspondence, January 3, 1933–December 21, 1932, P.R.O., CO733/218/97082 (pt. 2).Google Scholar

65 Annual report of the Development Department to the year 1933/1934, P.R.O., CO733/251/37249/1.Google Scholar

66 Davar, May 1, 1933.Google Scholar

67 May 15, 1933, C.Z.A., KKL5, box 660, file no. 7.Google Scholar

68 Doar Hayom, May 21, 1933: Davar, May 21, 1933.Google Scholar

69 Davar, May 22, 1933, May 23, 1933, May 28, 1933, May 29, 1933. For further details on governmental aid see C.Z.A., S25/9835, Wadi Hawarith files.Google Scholar

70 Karbel to Weitz. May 29, 1933, C.Z.A., KKL5, box 660, file no. 7.Google Scholar

71 Davar, June 4, 1933.Google Scholar

72 June 13, 1933, C.Z.A., KKL5, box 660, file no. 7. The eviction order, June 3, 1933Google Scholar, ibid.; Davar, June 14, 1933;Google ScholarDoar Hayom, June 15, 1933, June 11, 1933.Google Scholar

73 Andrews' letters, June 13, 1933, June 19, 1933, C.Z.A., KKL5, box 660, file no. 7; C.Z.A., Protocols of the JNF Executive, July 4, 1933; Report on “disputed area,” June 12, 1933, C.Z.A., S25/9835, Wadi Hawarith files.Google Scholar

74 Arabic Press Extracts, June 13, 1933, al-Jamic'a al-'Arabiyya (see note no. 76); Karbel to Weitz, June 5, 1933, C.Z.A., KKL5, box 660, file no. 7;Google ScholarDoar Hayom, June 16, 1933.Google Scholar

75 Report on “disputed area,” June 12, 1933, C.Z.A., S25/9835.Google Scholar

76 Translations and summaries were made for the Colonial Office entitled Weekly Press Summary to Colonial Office, and Arabic and Hebrew Press Extracts, 1932 and 1933. See especially Weekly Press no. 24, 1933;Google ScholarFilastin (in opposition to the Mufti), June 16, 1933, June 17, 1933;Google Scholaral-Jami'a al-Islamiyya (pan-Islamic), June 16, 1933;Google Scholaral-Jamia' al-'Arabiyya (pro-Mufti), June 20, 1933; see also CID reports, June 20, 1933, P.R.O., FO371/ 16926.Google Scholar

77 Al-Jami'a al-Islamiyya, June 13, 1933 and June 19, 1933.Google Scholar

78 See for example, al-Jami'a al-Islamiyya, June 13, 1933, June 14, 1933, June 15, 1933, June 19, 1933, June 21, 1933, July 7, 1933, July 9, 1933; al-'Jami'a al-'Arabiyya, June 14, 1933, June 25, 1933, June 28, 1933; al-'Arab (pro-Istiqlal party), June 17, 1933; Filastin, June 17, 1933, June 21, 1933.Google Scholar

79 lnterview in Doar Hayom, August 2, 1933.Google Scholar

80 The members of the Arab Executive were accused of selling land to Jews. The Arab Executive did not refute it and nominated an investigation committee on November 1932, but no meetings were held thereafter (Porath, , The National Movement, vol. II, pp. 3839).Google Scholar See Stein, The Land Question, pp. 228–39, for a partial listing of the Palestinian Arabs who personally profited in the land sale to Jews in Palestine.Google Scholar

81 Al-Jami'a al-Islamiyya, June 25, 1933;Google Scholaral-Jami'a al-'Arabiyya, June 28, 1933.Google Scholar

82 Al-Jami'a al-'Arabiyya, July 23, 1933, August 13, 1933;Google Scholaral-Jami'a al-Islamiyya, August 9, 1933, August 15, 1933;Google ScholarFilastin, August 12, 1933, August 23, 1933, August 26, 1933.Google Scholar

83 Reports on political activity see: al-Jami'a al-Islamiyya, June 24, 1933; August 13, 1933;Google Scholaral-Jami'a al-'Arabiyya, June 26, 1933; and CID report, P.R.O., FO371/19626.Google Scholar

84 CID reports, July 7, 1933, July 21, 1933, P.R.O., FO371/ 19626. On August 10, 1933, it was said, the solidarity with the Arabs of Wadi Hawarith had been weakened but that they had continued to declare their refusal to leave the area (ibid.).

85 Ben-Zwi to JNF, August 3, 1933, C.Z.A., S25/9835, Wadi Hawarith files; CID report, September 22, 1933, P.R.O., FO371//19626;Google ScholarWeitz, p. 155;Google Scholaral-Jami'a al'Arabiyya, August 13, 1933.Google Scholar

86 Al-Jami'a al-Islamiyya, August 16, 1933;Google ScholarFilastin, August 18, 1933;Google ScholarDavar, September 5, 1933.Google Scholar

87 Al-Jami'a al- 'Arabiyya, September 6, 1933 (see note no. 76).Google Scholar

88 CID report, January 5, 1934, P.R.O., FO371/17878.Google Scholar

89 CID report, November 15, 1933, P.R.O., FO371/16926.Google Scholar

90 Weitz, Fruits, p. 158;Google ScholarAndrews to JNF, December 17, 1933, and Granovsky to Andrews, December 18, 1933, C.Z.A., S25/9835, Wadi Hawarith files.Google Scholar

91 CID reports, October 23, 1933, P.R.O., FO371/16926.Google Scholar

92 Report by the Development Department to the year 1934/1935, P.R.O., CD733/75 049/1/36.Google Scholar

93 Wauchope to Cunliffe-Lister, January 26, 1934, P.R.O., CO733/251/37249.Google Scholar

94 Stein, The Land Question, pp. 78–79.Google Scholar

95 Granowsky, The Land System, pp. 314–15;Google ScholarGerz, , ed. Yearbook, pp. 416ff.Google Scholar

96 Porath, , The National Movement, vol. II, pp. 9092.Google Scholar

97 Al-Jami'a al-Islamiyya, August 15, 1933.Google Scholar

98 Porath, , The National Movement, vol. II, pp. 40–41.Google Scholar

99 Bustan, April 19, 1933.Google Scholar

100 Porath, , The National Movement, vol. II, p. 90;Google ScholarAvneri, Jewish Settlement, pp. 97–103.Google Scholar