San Remo The Forgotten Milestone to the
Liberation and Creation of Israel
By Salomon Benzimra, P. Eng.
Founder Canadians for Israel ’s Legal Rights (CILR)
Ninety five years ago, prime
ministers, ambassadors and other dignitaries from Europe
and America gathered in the Italian Riviera. Journalists from
around the world reported on the pending San Remo Peace Conference and the
great expectations the international community placed on this event, just a
year after the Paris Peace Conference had settled the political map of Europe
at the end of World War One.
On Sunday, April 25,
1920 , after hectic
deliberation, the Supreme Council of the Allied Powers (Great Britain , France, Italy , Japan and the U.S. acting as an observer) adopted the San Remo
Resolution -- a 500 word document which defined the future political landscape
of the Middle East out of the defunct Ottoman Empire .
This Resolution led to the
granting of three Mandates, as defined in Article 22 of the 1919 Covenant of
the League of Nations . The future states of Syria-Lebanon and Iraq emerged from two of these Mandates and became
exclusively Arab countries. But in the third Mandate, the Supreme Council
recognized the “historical connection of the Jewish people to Palestine and the grounds for reconstituting their national
home in that country” while safeguarding the “civil and religious rights” of
the non-Jewish population.
Subsequently, the British
limited the Jewish Homeland in Palestine to the area west of the Jordan River and allowed eastern Palestine to be gradually administered by the Hashemites. The
territorial expansion to the east eventually gave birth to the Kingdom of Transjordan , later renamed Jordan in 1950.
The importance of the San
Remo Conference with regard to Palestine cannot be overstated:
For the first time in
history, Palestine became a legal and political entity;
The Jewish people were
recognized as the national beneficiary of the trust granted to Britain in Palestine for the duration of the Mandate -- a “sacred trust of
civilization” as per the League Covenant;
The Balfour Declaration of
1917 -- which “viewed with favor” the establishment of a Jewish National Home
in Palestine -- was now to be “put into effect” and thus became a binding act
of international law;
The de jure sovereignty of Palestine was vested in the Jewish people, though it was kept
in abeyance until the Mandate expired in 1948;
The terms of the San Remo
Resolution were included in the Treaty of Sèvres and remained unchanged in the finally
ratified Treaty of Lausanne of 1923.
The Arabs received equivalent
national rights in all the remaining parts of the Middle East -- over 96% of the total area formerly governed by the Ottoman Turks).
The San Remo Conference was
hailed as a major historical milestone. Celebrations were held throughout the
world with tens of thousands of people marching in London ,
New York and Toronto . But the Arabs of Palestine, led by the Mufti of
Jerusalem, were strongly opposed to any form of national Jewish homeland: the
first anti-Jewish riots erupted in Jaffa just before the San Remo Conference convened -- a
harbinger of the violent Arab rejectionist stance that continues to threaten
the existence of Israel to this day.
While the Middle East peace process has been going on for over two decades, it is
astonishing that San
Remo and the
ensuing Mandate for Palestine have hardly been mentioned. Is it deliberate? Is it a
mere omission? How could there be peace and reconciliation without
acknowledging fundamental historical and legal facts?
Middle-East diplomacy has
often relied on “constructive ambiguity”, a concept earlier introduced by Henry
Kissinger to keep the dialogue open and avoid discussing core issues deemed
problematic. In the ongoing peace process, the ambiguity of language did not
produce constructive results. On the contrary, layer upon layer of distortions
and gross falsehoods piled up over the initial ambiguity of “land for peace.”
When the notion of
“occupation” took root, it soon turned into “illegal occupation”, then “brutal
oppression” and, finally, “apartheid” which is a crime against humanity in
international law. Once corrupted language describes a distorted reality and
the distortion spreads, thought becomes corrupt and any resulting action is bound
to fail.
Commemorating the San Remo
Conference should be more than a mere remembrance. It enjoins us to consider
the legal reach of the binding decisions made in 1920 and to ensure that we do
not entertain incompatible positions when political expediency clashes with
unassailable rights enshrined in international law, namely the acquired rights
of the Jewish people in their ancestral land.
No wonder the Palestinian
Authority -- intent on eliminating the “Zionist entity,” as spelled out in the
PLO Charter -- abhors the provisions of the San Remo Resolution, which they
view as the root of a catastrophe engineered by “Zionist gangs.”
In reality, the San Remo
Resolution and the ensuing clauses of the Mandate for Palestine are akin to a treaty entered into and executed by
each and every one of the 52 member states of the League of Nations , in addition to the United States which is bound by a separate treaty with Great Britain , ratified in 1925.
So next time you hear about
the “occupation of the West Bank” and its supposedly “illegal settlements” --
an almost daily occurrence in the discourse of the Palestinian Arabs and their
supporters -- you should remember that this territory, as the rest of Israel,
was lawfully restored to the Jewish people in 1920 and its legal title has been
internationally guaranteed and never revoked ever since. Any negotiation toward
achieving a lasting peace should be based on this premise.
Last but not least, San Remo marks the end of the longest colonization period in
history.
After 1,850 years of foreign
occupation, oppression and banishment by a succession of foreign powers
(Romans, Byzantines, Sassanid Persians, Arabs, Crusaders, Mameluks and Ottoman
Turks), the Nation of Israel was reborn in April 1920, thus paving the way for
the proclamation of the State of Israel 28 years later.
This liberation from foreign
rule should normally be celebrated by all the progressive elites who have
traditionally supported every national freedom movement. But it isn’t so, for
reasons that defy reason.
What took place in San Remo in 1920 made Israel ’s right to exist into an international legally
binding and unavoidable documented fact. Connect with our history and share the
pride!
Jewish Unity is a key to our survival
ReplyDeleteFrom the dawn of our liberation from Egypt to our current times, unity, mutual responsibility, self-reliability, and accountability have been paramount to our success and survival. Throughout the ages, we have developed scientific and academic skills above and beyond all other nations; which include numerous life-saving inventions and eye-opening discoveries which benefit all nations. We have presented the world with monotheism, humanitarianism, socialism, But while developing these things, we overlooked the one tenet that the world needs most today, and which is altogether absent on our planet: unity.
When I say unity, I do not mean unity based upon any type of bias or to defeat an adversary. This type of alliance has brought us to where we are today; two world wars behind us and possibly en route to a third. The unity I am referring to is unity among all of mankind; unity for the sake of peaceful co-existence, human and worldwide evolution.
Our Jewish people are fractured and divided beyond recognition. If we did not know better, we would probably never assume that Orthodox Jews and the Secular Party Liberals, for example, belong to the same faith; or that Jewish settlers and Ultra liberal left wing party voters share the same origin. Even relations between Israel and the Diaspora are fraught with discord to the point Israel itself is viewed by many as a dividing element among Diaspora Jews, which is not true.
It seems somehow we have forgotten we are all still descendants of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, whose legacy of mercy is embodied in the immortal words of Rabbi Akiva: “love your neighbor as yourself.” This tenet, part of the foundation of our faith, is where our strength lies - in unity above and beyond all our differences.
However, let me reiterate, our unity must not be based on the common cause to defeat an adversary. Rather, our unity must be founded in our faith and understanding in order to overcome our ego-driven singular agendas so as to create a viable, sustainable social fabric; a society where Jews can live side-by-side in peace and harmony among themselves and with their neighbors. Subsequently, our goal must be to share our unity with anyone who is interested in embracing it. Said goal to unify and effort to share our unity in itself, will help dissolve the global campaign to unjustly demonize Israel in the eyes of the world.
Upon examination of the history of the Jewish people, and Israel itself, one cannot deny the empirical evidence both have somehow overcome and managed to survive obstacles no other singular people have historically survived. The common factor forming the very foundation of this Jewish survival has been and will always be “faith and unity”. As such, perhaps our motto, our mission should be: “Unity in Faith - Unity in Mankind”.
YJ Draiman