[4.12. Palestine:
Arab unrest against partition plans
1935-1939 - Joint leaders are against any partition of the Holy Land]
[Palestine: Arab unrest 1935-1939
against Jews and against partition plans of the Peel Commission 1937 -
Joint leaders against partition]
After 1935 the situation changed. Growing Arab unrest finally flared up
in early 1936 into a rebellion that was to last, with interruptions,
until 1939. The British sent a royal commission under Lord Peel to
investigate the causes of the unrest. The Peel Commission reported in
July 1937 and suggested that the country be partitioned into an Arab
and a Jewish state.
JDC was not a political organization, but its leadership consisted of
men who, as members of the Jewish Agency's non-Zionist wing, were
deeply involved in Palestinian affairs. Warburg and his friends were
very definitely against partition, because that would create a Jewish
state, and they thought that such a state would be a calamity for the
Jewish people. The whole concept of Jewish nationhood, as we have seen,
ran counter to their brand of Judaism, and they became very active in
trying to combat partition with all the strength they could command.
JDC was not only informed of Warburg's opposition to the plan,
but also at JDC Executive Committee meetings he took the occasion to
explain his views and to get the unanimous support of the members. The
Jewish state would be a declaration of war against the Arabs, Warburg
argued. Besides, the Jewish state itself would be so small that it
would soon (p.165)
have to restrict immigration. The goal of American Jews was to "open
Palestine as wide as possible for the immigration of Jews from
countries of the Diaspora, at the same time safeguarding the English
interests in Palestine and assuring the Arabs that they will not be
outnumbered."
(End note 69: Executive Committee, 9/23/37 [23 September 1937])
Despite the stand taken by JDC leaders on partition, the argument with
Zionism receded somewhat into the background after 1936.
[Since 1936: Palestine gets
English restrictions for immigration - approach between JDC and United
Palestine Appeal (UPA)]
The British began restricting immigration into Palestine, and Palestine
could no longer be the immediate answer to the pressing problems of
European refugees. In 1937 and 1938 the proportion of refugees that
were absorbed in Palestine dwindled to a half and then a third of what
it had been in the first few years of the Nazi crisis. This and the
failure of the partition scheme - despite its acceptance in principle
by a majority of the Zionist movement - caused JDC and UPA [United
Palestine Appeal] to draw progressively nearer to one another. Both
were now interested in opening the doors of Palestine, and the Zionists
could not but accept the idea that other countries too would have to be
persuaded to accept a share of the refugees coming from Nazi Germany.