Ex-ambassador: Israel Used My Father To Cover Up Ethnic Cleansing
22 November 2016
By Jonathan Cook
Former Dutch diplomat donates 1,100 olive trees to make amends for forest
planted over ruins of Palestinian village
Former Dutch ambassador Erik Ader stands with Khader Dibs (right), whose
father was expelled from Bayt Nattif during the Nakba (copyright: Jonathan
Cook)
Middle East Eye – 20 November 2016
A former Dutch ambassador was due to plant 1,100 olive trees in the West Bank
on Sunday to make amends, he said, for the fact that Israel had exploited his
family's name to ''cover up an act of ethnic cleansing''.
Erik Ader, a former ambassador to Norway, said the trees were his way of
apologising for a similar number of pine trees planted in Israel in the 1960s
to honour his father.
The Rev Bastiaan Jan Ader, who was executed by the Nazis in 1944, was named a
''Righteous among the Nations'' in 1967 by Israel's Yad Vashem Holocaust
museum. He had helped hundreds of Dutch Jews escape the extermination camps.
Ader said he had been shocked to discover a decade ago that under the small
conifer forest dedicated to his father were concealed the ruins of a
Palestinian village.
All of the 2,400 Palestinian inhabitants of Bayt Nattif, south-west of
Jerusalem, were expelled in 1948, the year Israel was established. The Israeli
army destroyed the 350 homes there; none of the villagers has ever been
allowed to return.
Ader reserved especial anger for the Jewish National Fund, an international
Zionist charity with semi-governmental authority in Israel, that had raised
funds from Dutch Jews to plant the trees.
He said those who made the donations had been deceived and did not know what
their money was used for.
''It is scandalous what JNF did,'' he told Middle East Eye. ''These trees
served both as a way to prevent the refugees from returning to their homes and
to conceal the act of ethnic cleansing that was committed against them in
1948.''
He added: ''The fact that they used the name of my father, who paid with his
life for upholding human rights, to carry this out makes it all the more
shameful. They have made him complicit in the village's ethnic cleansing.''
Ader also turned his fire on the Dutch government for taking part in the
original dedication ceremony of the forest planted over Bayt Nattif. ''They
must have known what had happened here but they raised no objections,'' he
said.
Theft of olive harvest
The former ambassador was due to join a group of farmers and activists on
Sunday planting hundreds of trees in the small village of Farata, close to
Nablus in the West Bank.
He said he had selected Farata because he had learnt during a visit in 2010 of
repeated attacks by armed Jewish settlers on the village and its groves. Over
the past decade settlers from neighbouring Havat Gilad have cut down and burnt
trees, stolen the harvest and assaulted Farata's farmers.
As recently as last month settlers were reported to have beaten families from
Farata as they tried to harvest olives.
One of Farata's farmers, Zahi Suwad, aged 43, said the trees would restore to
the villagers income that had been lost from the repeated attacks.
''The coordinated strategy of the settlers and the Israeli army is to drive us
off our land through this constant pressure so that they can take it for
themselves,'' he told MEE. ''These trees will help us to keep working the land
and stay in our village.''
Muhannad Qaisy, coordinator of the Olive Tree Campaign, which organised the
planting, said the trees donated by the former ambassador had sent ''a
powerful message to Palestinians that he stands with them against these acts
of injustice''.
Refugees denied entry
Two days earlier, Ader had taken an emotional journey to Bayt Nattif, escorted
by Khader Dibs, whose late father, Hamed, was among those expelled from the
village in 1948.
The Dibs family, who live in the Shuafat refugee camp in East Jerusalem, have
Israeli residency permits. Today they are the only Bayt Nattif family still
able to travel freely into Israel and visit their former village.
Organisers had hoped more refugees would be able to attend to hear Ader's
statement of apology. But other families are in camps in Jordan and the West
Bank, many in Bethlehem, and can only enter Israel with a difficult-to-obtain
permit from Israel.
Dibs said in the mid-1970s, as a boy, he had joined his grandfather on the
family's first visit to the village after the 1948 war. It had been possible
to reach Bayt Nattif again only after Israel occupied Jerusalem and the West
Bank in 1967.
''He saw the village lying in ruins and was devastated,'' he told MEE. ''He
sobbed inconsolably. He wanted to return to his lands here till his dying
day.''
Dibs said his family tried to preserve a connection to the village by bringing
the younger generation a few times a year, often holding a picnic amid the
ruins.
Today, part of the village's lands are used by Israelis as a hiking trail.
Dibs said Ader's apology was important to the villagers, and reassured them
that not everyone in the international community had turned a blind eye to the
refugees' plight.
The Jewish National Fund's plaque dedicating the forest over the ruins of Bayt
Nattif to the Rev Bastiaan Jan Ader was vandalised after it was made public
that his son, Erik Ader, was due to issue an apology to the village's refugees
(copyright: Jonathan Cook)
The Jewish National Fund's plaque dedicating the forest over the ruins of Bayt
Nattif to the Rev Bastiaan Jan Ader was vandalised after it was made public
that his son, Erik Ader, was due to issue an apology to the village's refugees
(copyright: Jonathan Cook)
Plaque vandalised
The former ambassador arrived at the forest on Friday to discover the
dedication plaque to his father had been smashed by vandals a few days
earlier, after news of the event was publicised online.
He addressed a group of several dozen Israeli activists from an organisation
called Zochrot, or Remembering in Hebrew, which tries to educate Israeli Jews
about the Nakba, the mass dispossession of Palestinians in 1948 to create a
Jewish state.
Ader told them he was ''ashamed'' of his country for giving Israel ''a blank
cheque'' to carry out acts like the expulsions from Bayt Nattif.
The village is one of more than 500 that were razed after some 750,000
Palestinians were expelled from their homes in 1948. In most, the JNF has
planted forests to conceal the destruction.
Neighbouring Jewish communities are often unaware that they are sitting on
lands that once belonged to Palestinians.
Ader said the JNF was responsible not only for planting forests over the
villages destroyed in 1948. It also assisted Israel in taking over Palestinian
lands in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, and in dispossessing Israel's
Bedouin citizens in the Negev through forestation programmes.
He called on his government to end the tax-deductible status of donations to
the JNF.
He concluded that it was time for Israel to create a truth and reconciliation
commission like the one that followed the abolition of apartheid in South
Africa.
''Instead of covering up its sins by means of the JNF, instead of denying it's
past, it would help if Israel finally stood up and acknowledged the sins it
committed in its creation,'' he said.
Signposts erected
Dibs, aged 51, led the group on a tour of the destroyed village, locating the
ruins of the mosque, school and homes, as well as crumbling agricultural
terraces and the cemetery.
At each spot Zochrot erected a signpost in three languages – Hebrew, Arabic
and English – identifying the rubble.
Parts of Bayt Nattif were under immediate threat of further destruction, said
Dibs, from the rapid expansion of the city of Beit Shemesh. Cranes and
apartment buildings loomed over the group as a signpost was placed at the
cemetery.
Ader said he had first started to have doubts about what was underneath the
forest when he visited it a decade ago, while he was ambassador to Norway.
Close to his father's forest, he found old carob, almond and pomegranate trees
and the agricultural terraces.
''I raised the question with the JNF about who these other trees belonged to,
but got no real answer,'' he said.
After he returned to Oslo, he kept up the pressure long-distance on the JNF.
''They promised they would do the research and get back to me. Well, I'm still
waiting to hear from them more than a decade later.''
Dan Weinstein, a spokesman for the JNF, issued a statement to MEE rejecting
the criticisms, saying the organisation was dedicated to ''environmental
development''.
He said the JNF ''has never deprived a person [of] his or her property … and
has not planted a single tree on land that does not belong to it or to the
state.''
Erik Ader, far right, joins a signposting tour of the ruins of the Palestinian
village of Bayt Nattif (copyright: Jonathan Cook)
Erik Ader, far right, joins a signposting tour of the ruins of the Palestinian
village of Bayt Nattif (copyright: Jonathan Cook)
Lands 'not barren'
Niva Grunzweig, of Zochrot, said Ader had approached the organisation for help
in finding out about the site and to locate Bayt Nattif's refugees.
''This is a very significant moment for us,'' she told MEE. ''We hope Erik's
apology to the refugees of Bayt Nattif for the misuse of his family's name
might encourage Jews to follow suit.
''It may open their minds a little to consider whether it is time to take
responsibility for what was done in their name during the Nakba, to apologise
and to begin a process of reconciliation.''
For many decades the JNF has collected donations from Jews in Europe and the
United States in its small blue boxes, telling donors their money would help
to ''make the desert bloom''.
''It was a total nonsense,'' said Ader. ''These trees were not planted on
barren land. They were planted over lands that were already bearing fruit, as
can be seen in Bayt Nattif.''
Grunzweig said Zochrot had sent an invitation to the Dutch embassy to attend
the apology ceremony but had received no response.
The JNF is currently planting an Ambassador's Forest – in honour of serving
ambassadors – over the Bedouin village of Al-Araqib in the Negev. So far, only
one ambassador, Ismail Coovadia of South Africa, has publicly refused the
trees named for him.
Ader chose Sunday to plant the trees in Farata because it was the 72nd
anniversary of his father's execution by the Nazis.
Jonathan Cook won the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism. His
latest books are ''Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the
Plan to Remake the Middle East'' (Pluto Press) and ''Disappearing Palestine:
Israel's Experiments in Human Despair'' (Zed Books). His website is
www.jonathan-cook.net.
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