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Sunday, March 23, 2014
Alan Baker takes off the gloves: Saeb Erekat's family from Saudi Arabia, most Arabs immigrated to area with economic growth starting 19th century

Changing the Historical Narrative: Saeb Erekat’s New Spin
Amb. Alan Baker, March 23, 2014
Jerusalem Issue Briefs Vol. 14, No. 8 March 23, 2014
http://jcpa.org/article/changing-historical-narrative-saeb-erekats-new-spin/

-Palestinian leaders are manipulating the history of geographic
Palestine/Land of Israel. They have manufactured a curious claim, expressed
recently by Saeb Erekat, the chief Palestinian negotiator, that they are
descended from Canaanites and are therefore the indigenous people of the
area, present before the emergence of the Jewish people around the year 1500
BCE.
-Saeb Erekat’s family is Bedouin. According to Bedouin genealogy, the family
is part of the Huweitat clan which originated in the Hejaz area of Saudi
Arabia, arrived in Palestine from the south of Jordan, and settled in the
village of Abu Dis in the early twentieth century.
-Several leading scholars of Middle Eastern studies and Islamic history have
confirmed that the Palestinians do not have ancient roots in the area and
are trying to invent origins for themselves that predate the Jewish people’s
presence.
-They explain that most of the Palestinians arrived as part of the waves of
immigration that began in the nineteenth century at the time of the
emergence of Zionism, attracted by employment opportunities and economic
benefits.
-The historical presence of the Jewish people in the “Holy Land” is
well-documented, not only in the scriptures of all three monotheistic
religions, and visible in extensive archeological remains, but also in
historic writings by early Greek, Roman, pagan, and other visitors to the
area. The fact that Christianity emanated from Judaism is further proof of
the presence of a thriving Jewish community in the area.

Manipulating History for Political Purposes

Aside from the topical and pragmatic issues on the negotiating table between
Israel and the Palestinians – borders, settlements, refugees, Jerusalem,
water, and security arrangements – there is a far deeper discussion that is
not taking place in the negotiating room but in the international arena.
This discussion involves the issue of historical narratives and the basic
question of historic rights to geographic and historic Palestine.

Palestinian leaders are manipulating their history in the land for political
purposes. They have manufactured a curious claim, expressed recently by Saeb
Erekat, the chief Palestinian negotiator, that they are descended from
Canaanites and are therefore the indigenous people of the area, present
before the emergence of the Jewish people around the year 1500 BCE.

Erekat, the chief Palestinian negotiator, has already established an
international reputation for stretching the truth. Many Israelis recall
during Operation Defensive Shield in 2002 when Erekat went on CNN to assert
that Israel had killed “more than 500 people” in Jenin in a “real massacre,”1
adding that 300 Palestinians were being buried in mass graves. It soon
became clear that in combat operations at the time, the Palestinian death
toll in Jenin was 52: 34 of whom (65 percent) were known military operatives
of Hamas, Islamic Jihad, or Fatah-Tanzim. Now Erekat’s wild assertions have
moved into the field of history as part of a Palestinian battle over the
narrative of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

The Palestinian leadership relies on the thirst of the international media
to seriously take up any wild and baseless Palestinian claim; on the
pressures of the ongoing negotiating process with the high-level involvement
of senior U.S. and European politicians who are keen to show achievements;
and, above all, on the wide and almost automatic inclination of the
international community to criticize Israel and to buy into any artificial
claim uttered by the Palestinian leadership.

Saeb Erekat’s Curious Claim

While one might assume that as the chief Palestinian negotiator and
long-term participant in negotiations with Israel since the Madrid
Conference of 1991, Saeb Erekat would, and indeed should, be deeply
ensconced in the ongoing negotiating process – a process that needs to be
conducted in a confidential, serious, and civil manner – this regrettably
does not seem to be the case.

In fact, in direct contrast to what any serious chief negotiator should be
doing vis-a-vis the other negotiating party, Erekat prefers to indulge on a
daily basis in blatant demagogy, hostile outbursts, wild accusations, and
attacks against Israel, its leaders and negotiators, and above all, in
simply misleading the international community and media.2

A recent fabrication, vented at an international security conference in
Munich on February 1, 2014, and which received considerable prominence in
international political and media circles, has generated considerable
criticism and even ridicule. According to Erekat’s curious claim, he is a
direct descendant of the Canaanite tribes who lived in Israel some 9,000
years ago:

I am the proud son of the Canaanites who were there 5,500 years before
Joshua bin Nun burned down the town of Jericho.3

No less amazing is the recent statement by a member of the Jordanian
Parliament, Sheikh Mousa Abu Sweilam, on February 3, 2014, according to
which:

The Palestinians are the original owners of Palestine, who lived on its land
when they moved from the western Mediterranean basin to its east in 7000
BC.4

Ahmed Tibi, a member of Israel’s Knesset, is quoted in the Ha’aretz
newspaper from January 19, 2014, stating:

….the Arab citizens of Israel are an indigenous population.5

The Erekat claim was immediately controverted by several authoritative
sources who cited, among other things, Erekat’s own Facebook entry
describing the origin of the Erekat clan to be from the Huweitat clan in the
northwestern Arabian Peninsula.6

The Erekat Family History

Erekat’s family, presently residing in Jericho, previously lived in the
village of Abu Dis near Jerusalem. In fact, the Erekat family was never part
of the Jericho tribal system. It is a Bedouin family which, according to
Bedouin genealogy, came to the area from the south of Jordan, an area called
Husseyniya and Rashaida, at an undisclosed time.7

According to genealogical research of the Bedouin families in Israel, the
Erekat family belongs to the extensive Huweitat clan, which originated in
the area between the Liya valley, near Taif, in the vicinity of Mecca in the
northern Hejaz region, close to the town of Hekl in the Sarawat Mountains,
350 km. from the Jordanian border, and northern Aqaba.8 Bedouin genealogical
literature claims that the Huweitat clan is a Sharifi clan allied with their
cousins the Hashemites.9 The Huweitat clan settled not only in Israel but
also in Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and the Sinai Peninsula by Ras Seeder.10

A branch of this clan settled in geographic Palestine in several waves of
immigration that started some 200 years ago, ending during the period of the
Arab Revolt and First World War. Apparently, the family to which Erekat
belongs settled in Abu Dis near Jerusalem during the last of these waves,
which occurred in the early twentieth century, after the Jewish immigration
to the area.

The first wave of this immigration brought the Fahum and Hanun branches of
the clan to settle in Nazareth and Tul-Karem. They were followed by another
branch of the well-known Shuman family, which settled in Nablus (owners of
the Amman-based Arab Bank, one of the biggest banks in the Arab world).

According to Bedouin genealogy, the branches of the Huweitat clan that had
already settled in Jordan welcomed the clan’s newcomers, who came with the
Hashemite Sharifi army during the Arab Revolt at the beginning of the last
century and helped found the Kingdom of Jordan. This branch came from
southern Jordan, from the center of the Huweitat clans’ area, and is
considered entirely Jordanian rather than Palestinian.

Scholars on Islam Question Palestinian Claims

The claims by Erekat and his colleagues of their Canaanite provenance, if
they were considered serious, could in fact give rise to some difficult
questions as to the very character and identity of the Palestinian people as
a part of the Arab peoples. Taking Erekat’s claim to its logical and
sequential conclusion, is he claiming that Palestine should be recognized as
the nation-state of the Canaanite people?

In a similar vein, his declaration raises serious questions regarding the
very roots of Islam and the origins of the Hashemite dynasty (connected with
the Huweitat clan11), and as such regarding the ethnic origin of the Imam
Ali, cousin of the Prophet Mohammad, to whom the Shi’a denomination of Islam
relates. If the Huweitat are Canaanites, as claimed by Erekat, this would
logically lead to the absurd conclusion that the descendants of the Imam
Hussein Ibn Ali are not Arabs but Canaanites.

The general claim to Palestinian indigenous status has been questioned by a
number of scholars of the Middle East and experts on Islam:

- Professor Rafi Israeli from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem notes the
absurdity in the link that the Palestinians have tried to create with the
ancient Canaanites.12

“The early origins of the Arabs who came to this country are in the Arabian
peninsula….The first ones came from there. Now they are standing on their
heads. Instead of saying that they are Arabs who immigrated to Canaan and
turned it into a Muslim country, they have rendered themselves indigenous
Canaanites.”

“Even their Arab surnames give clear clues that they immigrated here. In Umm
al-Fahm, there are four large clans who originated in Egypt. In the Old City
of Jerusalem, one can find the Moroccan Quarter, which was home to Muslims
who came from North Africa, the Maghreb, and settled in the Land of Israel.”

“Furthermore, the Ottoman Empire transferred populations from place to place
in order to tighten its control over those areas….[T]ake, for example, the
Circassians, Muslims who were brought here from the Caucasus.”

“The Palestinians don’t really have roots here. They know this very well, so
they are trying to invent origins for themselves. Whenever you offer
historic or archaeological criticism of this nonsense, learned scholars the
world over immediately insist that you ‘respect the narrative.’ It doesn’t
matter one bit to them whether there is historical truth there. If we do not
debunk this, it will be accepted as fact. If you repeat a lie thousands of
times, it eventually becomes accepted as true, so we mustn’t keep quiet.”13

- Dr. Rivka Shpak Lissak, in her book Responding to Palestinian Rewriting of
History – How and When the Jewish Majority in the Land of Israel Was
Eliminated and the Jewish Diaspora Was Created,14 states:

“Historically, no national Arab entity ever has established a national state
in this country. The Land of Israel was conquered in 640 A.D. and occupied
by Muslim-Arabs until 1071. A large percent of the Palestinians are
descendants of Arabs and Muslims who immigrated to the Land of Israel a few
generations ago illegally from Arab and Muslim countries.”

On the general question of the Arab conquest, Dr. Rivka Shpak Lissak
summarizes the chain of developments as follows:

“The Arab occupation of the Land of Israel lasted from 640 to 1071, roughly
400 years. The Seljuks, Muslim Turks, conquered the land from the Arabs, but
on the eve of the First Crusade, they lost it to the Fatimid who ruled it
until 1099, when the Crusaders took over. Saladin, who was not an Arab, but
a Muslim Kurd from Iraq, defeated the Crusaders in 1187 and ruled until his
death (1192). Following the Battle of Hattin and the conquest of Jerusalem
by Saladin in 1187, he took over other parts of the country while the
Crusaders maintained their hold over the rest. An agreement signed by his
successors with the Crusaders returned the Galilee to them and they moved
their capital to Acre. The Mamelukes, Muslim Turks, conquered the Land of
Israel from the Crusaders in 1260 and ruled it until 1516, when it was taken
over by the Ottoman Turks who ruled the Land of Israel for 400 years. The
Muslim rule in the Land of Israel ended in 1918 and a Mandate over the
country was given to the British.”15

-Dr. Shaul Bartal, a Middle Eastern scholar from Bar-Ilan University, says16
that while in many Palestinian history books, heavy emphasis is placed on
“the Arab conquest of Palestine” in 638, “a conquest that for 1,300 years
made Palestine into Islamic territory,” in fact, the waves of immigration
from the Arabian Peninsula and the subsequent arrivals of Arabs from
Transjordan and Syria are what led to the continued settlement of Arabs in
this country.

“Even in Ramallah, the administrative capital of the Palestinian Authority,
the origins of Arab families are traced back to those who came here from
Jordan in the late 15th century.”

A research study that Bartal co-authored with Dr. Rivka Shpak Lissak shows
that the four main clans that make up the population of Umm el-Fahm –
Makhagna, Jabrin, Mahamid, and Aghbariya – trace their roots back to
families who immigrated to Palestine in the seventeenth century onward from
Saudi Arabia, Yemen, and Syria. It was only afterward, during the nineteenth
century, when many families from Egypt and Transjordan joined them.

“The Palestinians are not the farmers who have lived in Palestine for
generations, but rather immigrants who only arrived recently. It was only
toward the latter stages of the nineteenth century that the country began to
blossom thanks to the emergence of a new presence – Zionism – and the
amazing results. In 1878, the population of the country numbered 141,000
Muslims who lived here permanently, with at least 25 percent of them
considered to be newly arrived immigrants who came mostly from Egypt.”

“Various studies done over a span of years by Moshe Brawer, Gideon Kressel,
and other scholars clearly show that most Arab families who settled in the
villages along the coastal plain and the area that would later become the
State of Israel originated from Sudan, Libya, Egypt, and Jordan….Other
studies show that the waves of immigrants came here in droves from Arab
countries during the period of the British Mandate.”

The Arab immigrants were drawn to the land because Jewish settlement there
brought on development of economic opportunities as well as improvement in
sanitation and medicine.

Attesting to the huge Muslim immigration into the area, U.S. President
Franklin D. Roosevelt remarked in 1939 that the immigration of Arabs to
Palestine since 1921 was outpacing the immigration of Jews during that same
period. Winston Churchill commented on the massive waves of Arab immigration
into the country during that time. “Despite the fact that they were never
persecuted, masses of Arabs poured into the country and multiplied until the
Arab population grew more than what all of world Jewry could add to the
Jewish population,” he said.

-Dr. Arieh Perlman, in his book The Origin of Palestinian Arabs,17 records
the entry into and conquest of the “Holy Land” since the seventh century CE
(636 to be exact) by various Arab, Muslim, and Christian elements, dynasties
and tribes, including, among others, the Abbasid dynasty (750), the Egyptian
Fatimid dynasty in 969, the Turks and Seleucids in the eleventh century, the
Crusaders (1099) and then back to the Egyptian Fatimid dynasty, and then to
the Muslims of Sallah-a-Din, Turks, Tatars (1260), Egyptian kingdom,
Mongols, and Ottomans (1517), the occupation of Galilee by Shiekh Daher
el-Omar in the mid-eighteenth century, and the occupation of the area by the
Egyptian Ibrahim Pasha in the mid-nineteenth century.

To the above may be added raids and movement by Bedouin tribes from the
western desert since the late nineteenth and up to the mid-twentieth
centuries, and the above-noted influx of Arab populations from Syria,
Lebanon, Trans-Jordan, Sudan, Morocco, Cyprus, Yemen, Spain, Albania and
Australia and other North African countries, seeking to benefit from the
relatively advanced development and modernization in the area instituted by
the Jewish population, and concomitant chances of increased income.

-Prof. Gideon M. Kressel, Professor Emeritus of Cultural-Social Anthropology
at Ben-Gurion University, and Dr. Reuven Aharoni, Dept. of Middle Eastern
History at Haifa University, in their study Egyptian Emigres in the Levant
of the 19th and 20th Centuries,18 recall a statement on March 23, 2012, by
Hamas Interior and National Security Minister Fathi Hammad that “half of the
Palestinians are Egyptian and the other half Saudis.”19

- Prof. Solomon Zeitlin of Dropsie College, in his monograph Jewish Rights
in Palestine,20 observes:

“The Palestinian Arabs or the Arabs of Trans-Jordania never ruled Palestine.
Palestine had been conquered by the Arabs who came from the South….The
dynasties of the Omayyads and the Abbasids were not natives of Palestine.
Certainly the Mamelukes and later the Turks not only were not Palestinian
Arabs, but were an entirely different race; they were not even Semitic.

“Palestine up to 734 C.E. was never an Arabic country and was never so
considered by geographers and historians. Josephus as well as the Roman
geographer Strabo placed Arabia beyond the boundaries of Palestine, or as it
was then called, Judaea.”
?Dr. Yitzhak Ben-Zvi and other experts view the forced conversion of Jews to
Christianity and then to Islam as a contributing factor to the extensive
rise in the Muslim population in the area in the early nineteenth century.21
They trace a not insignificant percentage of Palestinian residents of the
area to their Jewish forbears.

Conclusion

No one should take Saeb Erekat’s claims about Canaanite ancestry seriously.
His attempt to inject a false narrative into Israeli-Palestinian relations
undermines negotiations between the parties and is a diversion from the
substantive issues that must be discussed.

The historical presence and existence of the Jewish people in the Middle
East generally, and the area of Palestine or “the Holy Land,” in particular,
has continued from time immemorial up to the present day. It is
well-documented and proven, not only in the scriptures of all three
monotheistic religions, and visible in extensive archeological remains, but
is also borne-out by empirical historic writings and records by early Greek,
Roman, pagan and other visitors to the area.

The fact that the sources of Christianity evolved and emanated from Judaism
is, in and of itself, further proof of the presence of a thriving Jewish
community in the area generally, and in the specific areas in which the Jews
existed from biblical times, including Judea (from which the term “Jew”
stems), Samaria, and the other neighboring tribal areas.

Of all extant peoples, the Jewish people have the strongest claim to be
indigenous to the “Holy Land,” where Judaism, the Hebrew language, and the
Jewish people were born around 3,000 years ago. No one, Saeb Erekat
included, can cast any doubt on this fact.

* * *

Notes

* The views expressed in this paper are solely those of the author.

1. See Erekat on CNN making claims about the Jenin “massacre” in the video
“Who Else Is Being Injured by the Vilification of Israel?” (Jerusalem Center
for Public Affairs, 2013),
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=im7lVj9AE7M&list=PL1uUSrjSnB01hMKCu6TZnq-pamjhX8UHl

2. Recent examples of Erekat’s threats, accusations and attacks include:

rejection of Israel as a Jewish state –
http://www.timesofisrael.com/israel-said-set-to-accept-kerrys-framework-proposals/?utm_source=The+Times+of+Israel+Daily+Edition&utm_campaign=2149ae0f1a-2014_02_02&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_adb46cec92-2149ae0f1a-54502869;
threats to petition the international criminal court against Israel -

http://www.jpost.com/Diplomacy-and-Politics/Erekat-Israeli-announcement-of-new-settlement-building-would-destroy-peace-process-336356;

rejection of Israelis living in a Palestinian state –
http://www.timesofisrael.com/sources-in-pmo-slam-pa-for-saying-no-settlers-can-stay-in-palestine/
http://www.timesofisrael.com/abbas-threatens-to-rally-un-against-settlement-cancer/;
http://www.aawsat.net/2014/01/article55326673;
http://www.aawsat.net/2014/01/article55326673;
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=662366;

glorifying and praising terrorist leaders Al-Ayyam, Jan. 6 2014; threats to
call for a global economic boycott of Israel –
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4490386,00.html; threat regarding
the 1967 borders http://www.commentarymagazine.com/topic/saeb-erekat/;

accusation that Israel propping up the Hamas administration in Gaza –
http://www.timesofisrael.com/erekat-israel-is-keeping-hamas-in-power/

3.
http://www.timesofisrael.com/israel-said-set-to-accept-kerrys-framework-proposals/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter.
See also
http://www.algemeiner.com/2014/02/02/pa-negotiator-saeb-erekat-claims-family-was-canaanite-in-israel-for-9000-years/.
See also
http://elderofziyon.blogspot.co.il/2014/02/erekats-latest-lie-my-family-was-in.html#.Uws_DjjNuM-,
and see the Palestinian press at
http://www.palpress.co.uk/arabic/?Action=Details&ID=106519.

4.
http://www.mfs-theothernews.com/2014/02/video-antisemitic-remarks-by-jordanian.html

5. http://www.haaretz.co.il/magazine/.premium-1.2212485

6. See the Erekat family Facebook page at
https://www.facebook.com/notes/arekat-family/%D8%B9%D8%A7%D8%A6%D9%84%D8%A9-%D8%B9%D8%B1%D9%8A%D9%82%D8%A7%D8%AA/255831057552

7. http://amayra.yoo7.com/t3-topic

8. Ibid., based on several genealogy books of the Arab tribes in the Levant.
See also “The Huweitat Clans,”
http://alahaywat.blogspot.ca/2013/12/blog-post_2522.html

9. https://www.facebook.com/hewitat.masr/posts/311737358840143 The close
relationship between the Huweitat Sharifi clan and the Hashemite Sharifi
clan explains the importance of the Huweitat clan as one of the pillars of
the Arab revolt.

10. http://www.youm7.com/News.asp?NewsID=70192#.Uw23r8tWHhx

11. Ibid.

12. Reported by Nadav Shragai, in “The Fabricated Palestinian History,”
Israel Hayom, February 7, 2014, based inter alia on an interview with
Professor Israeli,
http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=15323

13. Ibid.

14. http://rslissak.com/content/responding-palestinian-rewriting-history

15. Lissak, op. cit., at chapter 5.

16. Shragai, “The Fabricated Palestinian History.”

17. Arie Perlman, “The Origin of Palestinian Arabs,” (Hebrew),
http://www.faz.co.il/story_2469. See also
http://www.jpost.com/Magazine/Features/The-lost-Palestinian-Jews, describing
the research of historian Zvi Misinai.

18.
http://jcpa.org/article/egyptian-emigres-in-the-levant-of-the-19th-and-20th-centuries/
February 11, 2013

19. Al-Hekma TV (Egypt) http://www.memritv.org/clipen/3389.htm

20. Jewish Quarterly Review, New Series, Vol. 38, No. 2 (Oct. 1947), pp.
119-134, published by the University of Pennsylvania Press
http://www.jstor.org/stable/1453037

21. See Yitzhak Ben-Zvi, “The Populations of our Land” (1932) (Hebrew) –
“Yesodot” Library No. 14. See also Zvi Misinai, quoted in “The Lost
Palestinian Jews” Jerusalem Post, August 20, 2009,
http://www.jpost.com/Magazine/Features/The-lost-Palestinian-Jews. In a
separate interview Misinai refers to the fact that the Erekat family from
Abu Dis is well aware of its own Jewish roots – see
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gs0-RGJ_CFA.

====
About Amb. Alan Baker

Amb. Alan Baker, Director of the Institute for Contemporary Affairs at the
Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, participated in the negotiation and
drafting of the Oslo Accords with the Palestinians, as well as agreements
and peace treaties with Egypt, Jordan, and Lebanon. He served as legal
adviser and deputy director-general of Israel's Ministry of Foreign Affairs
and as Israel's ambassador to Canada.

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