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Loot

How Israel Stole Palestinian Property

Adam Raz Philip Hollander

$49.99

Hardback

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English
Bloomsbury
03 December 2024
During the 1948 war, looting was a general and widespread phenomenon whereby Israeli fighters and residents alike plundered Palestinian property - including homes, shops, businesses, and farms - left behind by those who were expelled or fled during the war.

This bitter truth was then silenced and forgotten by the Jewish public in Israel over the years: thousands of shops and tens of thousands of homes and buildings were pillaged by the Jewish residents of the country during and after the war.

The pillage of Palestinian property was carried out by tens of thousands who stole the belongings of those who had been their neighbours. However, this mass looting has implications that go far beyond the personality or moral fortitude of those who took part in it. The widespread looting served a political agenda that sought to empty the country of its Palestinian residents. It should be seen in its context as an aspect of the prevailing policy during the war - a policy that sought, among other things, to crush the Palestinian economy, destroy villages, and to confiscate and sometimes destroy crops and harvests remaining in displaced villages.

The participating Jewish public became a stakeholder in preventing Palestinian residents from returning to the villages and cities they left, and as such, was mobilized to support a political agenda that pushed for segregation between Jews and Arabs in the early years of statehood.
By:  
Translated by:  
Imprint:   Bloomsbury
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 153mm, 
Weight:   510g
ISBN:   9781804295151
ISBN 10:   1804295159
Pages:   352
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Archival Collections and Abbreviations Introduction Part I: THE PLUNDER OF PALESTINIAN PROPERTY - CHRONICLE OF A DISAPPEARANCE Tiberias Haifa Jerusalem Jaffa Acre Safed Beisan (Beit She'an) Ramle and Lydda Beersheba Mosques and Churches The Palestinian Villages Collective Looting Part II: THE PLUNDER OF PALESTINIAN PROPERTY - POLITICS AND SOCIETY A Poison Spreading Through the Arteries of Society Personal Plunder and Collective Pillaging Opposing the Plunder Sheetrit, 'Professional Mourner' Ben-Gurion Ignores Minister Sheetrit and the Ministry of Minorities The Existence of a Policy for Expelling and Robbing the Arabs 'Ben-Gurion, This Is Your Fault!' The Nazareth Affair: Ben-Gurion Had 'the Strongest Historical Instincts' Ben-Gurion and the Plunder of Property Complicity in a Crime A Brief Conclusion Index

Adam Raz is a human rights researcher and historian whose field of research is the political history of the twentieth century and Marxist thought. In recent years Raz has written several books on the history of nuclear weapons in Israel and the Israel-Palestinian conflict. Among his books in Hebrew are: The Struggle for the Bomb (2015), Herzl: The Conflicts of Zionism’s Founder with Supporters and Opponents (2017), Kafr Qassem Massacre: A Political Biography (2018), The Military Rule 1948-1966 (2021). His most recent book is The Demagogue – the Mechanics of Political Power (2023). Raz works at Akevot: Institute for Israeli-Palestinian Conflict Research.

Reviews for Loot: How Israel Stole Palestinian Property

The dark sides of the War of Independence are illuminated in a book on the massive Jewish looting of Arab property then, showing the link between the plunder and Ben-Gurion's policy to rid the country of its Arab residents. -- Benny Morris * Haaretz * Historian Adam Raz has produced groundbreaking research. -- Daniel Blatman * Haaretz * Raz's book meticulously describes the history of the looting of Palestine. It was especially difficult for me to read about the destruction and looting of my hometown, Haifa. Raz shows the central political role that looting played in the creation of the phenomenon of Palestinian refugees, as well as how Prime Minister David Ben Gurion used looting for his own political needs. This is a fascinating book for anyone who wants to understand not only history, but also today's reality. -- Ayman Odeh, member of Knesset and leader of the Hadash party Denialism still runs deep in Israeli society around the dark events of 1948. Adam Raz is unafraid to bravely investigate the real situation of Israel's birth, and it was ugly. This unrelenting and essential text should forever shape how the world views the birth of the Jewish state as violent and exploitative. Only through compensation, acknowledgement and truth-telling can Israelis ever hope to reconcile with their Palestinian neighbours. -- Antony Loewenstein, author of <i>The Palestine Laboratory</i> A true archive mouse and gifted writer, Adam Raz is the foremost of a new generation of Israel's ""new historians"". While the story of the theft of Palestinian land and property has been told, Loot tells the story of how Israeli settlers stole the ordinary things - books, ploughs, pots - of their former Palestinian neighbours. -- Eyal Weizman, co-author of <i>Investigative Aesthetics</i> This book is a powerful and disturbing document. We in Israel know so little about the Nakba because we are told little. Adam Raz exposes us to another dark side of the 1948 war: the looting. The private form, committed by many individuals, which was almost considered legitimate. This looting was another face of the de-humanization of the Palestinians, which is now, 76 years later, at its peak. -- Gideon Levy, author of <i>The Killing of Gaza</i> An important addition ... Raz has written a book that successfully provides the evidence to break through the 'conspiracy of silence' about the origins of the Israeli state. -- John Westmoreland * Counterfire *


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