Gil Zohar

Gil Zohar – The first Palestinian dispossession and loss of citizenship Part II

Gil Zohar – The first Palestinian dispossession and loss of citizenship Part II

Continued:

Article 21: Definitions

For the purpose of this Order:

  1. The expression “Palestine” includes the territories to which the mandate for Palestine applies, except such parts of the territories comprised in Palestine to the east of Jordan and the Dead Sea as were defined by Order of the High Commissioner dated the first of September 1922.
  2. The expression “Palestinian citizen” means a person who is by birth or becomes by naturalisation of otherwise a Palestinian citizen.

SCHEDULE OATH OF ALLEGIANCE

I, A.B., Swear by Almighty God that I will be Faithful and Loyal to the Government of Palestine”.

Meanwhile after ratification, Jewish immigrants who took up residence in Palestine would become Palestinian citizens after two years.  The ratified mandate and the draft stipulated that the government must enact an official nationality law for the acquisition of Palestinian citizenship for Jews within two years after the final approval of the mandate.

 

The creation of Palestinian citizenship under an international mandate: 1918-1925

Lauren Banko

November 6, 2012

An internationally-recognised citizenship of the Arab Middle East designed during the era of mandates by the British came out of exclusively colonial processes, despite the fact that the British were meant to be an international trustee in Palestine.  This article explores what happened.

The British civil administration of Palestine began in 1920 under High Commissioner Herbert Samuel with a very clear policy plan for the facilitation of Jewish immigration and the creation of a national status for Jewish immigrants – but little else was clear in terms of how to carry out the proper legislative processes, especially for the latter, once the League of Nations ratified the Palestine Mandate.  The entire process of inventing a legal Palestinian citizenship in the crucial early 1920s raised huge questions over the status, sovereignty and civil rights of subjects as opposed to nationals or citizens in a mandated territory. British notions of citizenship were finally imported into Palestine after approval by His Majesty’s Government (HMG) in London, and blended with existing Ottoman-era legislation, Palestinian municipal law and international laws of state succession.

In particular, the British came to Palestine with extensive experience in the governing of ‘oriental races’ in Egypt and India, and this shaped colonial officials’ perception of ‘subject races’. The mandate text required the British to create a law for the acquisition of Palestinian nationality for the Jews.  This nationality would give certain rights and obligations not only to the Jewish immigrants, but also to the majority Arab population, since the mandate also stipulated that the Jewish national home policy could not prejudice the civil or religious rights of the existing majority population.  Hence, the British had to walk a fine line in their legislation on nationality and citizenship, acting as a colonial power rather than as a trustee in order to draft a colonial citizenship that gave only limited civil and political rights.

The British mission to shape an apolitical status of citizenship for the Arabs was served by their previous experience of colonial concepts of citizenship in the empire.  Some of this inspiration came from Lord Cromer in Egypt, whose bureaucracy featured racial distinctions and procedures designed to separate Europeans from local natives.  In the case of Palestine, the procedures to acquire nationality and citizenship status separated Jewish immigrants from the local Arab majority population.

Palestine – Egypt border in the 1920s. Wikimedia Commons/Public domain.

The British feared granting explicit liberal citizenship rights along with citizenship status, such as an independent legislative or executive body made up of representatives and proportional voting rights. Since Palestine’s population was ninety-three percent Arab at the time the British arrived, these types of rights would essentially allow the Arabs to have control of Palestine and its government.  The League of Nations’ mandate system was set up as an international trusteeship meant to facilitate eventual self-government in the former Arab provinces of the Ottoman Empire. The British had initially promised a legislative council, municipal councils, voting registers and other measures of self-rule.  After the ratification of the mandate, they realized that these proposed democratic measures severely challenged the foundation of British policy in Palestine – the facilitation of a Jewish national home through unrestricted immigration and land sales as promised by the Balfour Declaration.  Therefore, Palestinian citizenship had to be created in such a way that it would not allow for any civil, political or social rights or practices which threatened the Balfour Declaration as enshrined in the mandate.

The Palestinian counter-discourse

The Palestinian Arabs’ own popular discourses and practices of citizenship contradicted the British conception of the Palestinian citizen and ‘counter-created’ a set of behaviours associated with nationality and citizenship. From the beginning of the British occupation of Palestine in 1918, the inhabitants and their popular leadership and social organisations had actively lobbied the British and the newly-created League of Nations with their demands for ‘natural and civil’ national rights.  This was done through conferences, protest letters, petitions, demonstrations, boycotts, strikes and the press.  In this way, the concept of the Palestinian national, embodied with certain rights and duties by right of his native birth in Palestine, was one which the urban and rural classes became at least familiar with throughout the first decade of the mandate.

Palestinian leadership viewed the British legislation of citizenship, codified by an order of HMG in 1925, as a product of colonialism due to the involvement of the Zionist Organisation in the draft of the order and the fact the Palestinians were neither informed of the wording of the draft nor able to voice concerns with it.  By contrast, the Palestinians and indeed the Arabs of the former Ottoman provinces felt that nationality was a primordial status received by right of birth and language, which came with the right to self-determination.  The Ottoman Law of Nationality, passed in 1869, had affirmed citizenship conferred by means of both jus sanguinis and jus soli and the Palestinian national movement expected a Palestinian nationality law to allow for the same.

At no other time, except between 1925 and 1948, did a Palestinian citizen exist, yet even today the citizenship laws of the successor states of Palestine (Israel, the West Bank under Jordanian administration, Gaza under Egyptian administration, and the current Palestinian Authority) have included some elements of Ottoman nationality legislation and Palestine Mandate citizenship legislation.

The British administration in Palestine, 1918-1925

The British set up their military administration in Palestine in December 1917.  The military administration decided in 1918 to keep the status quo of Ottoman laws until bureaucratic measures could be undertaken upon the arrival of the first High Commissioner Herbert Samuel in July 1920.  During these two years, and for quite some time after, the most pressing issue was that of sovereignty in the area that became Palestine. The Zionist movement led by Chaim Weizmann had a disproportionately large influence on the discussions regarding the nationality of inhabitants of Palestine.  Weizmann, after seeing the earliest draft mandate, made several proposals regarding nationality to the British Colonial Secretary in early 1919.  He and other Zionists suggested that Jews should receive preferential treatment and that Jewish citizens were to be distinct from other citizens of Palestine.  The British responded by noting that the potential difficulties of such a measure included the Arab demands for the same subject status and the impossibility of maintaining a suitable mandate with such a provision.

Herbert Samuel, British High Commissioner to Palestine, walking into Jaffa 1921.
Wikimedia Commons. Public domain.

The actual specifics of who these ‘citizens’ were came in further clauses of the draft mandate.  The drafters of the mandate stated that all Ottoman subjects of Palestine would become Palestinian citizens at the date of the ratification of the peace treaty and thereby lose their Ottoman nationality unless an individual notified the government within twelve months of his desire to keep Ottoman nationality and leave Palestine.  Clause Twelve of the draft further specified that Ottoman subjects who usually reside in Palestine and who were absent on the date of ratification of the peace treaty would become citizens if they returned to Palestine within twelve months and took up permanent residence.  Meanwhile after ratification, Jewish immigrants who took up residence in Palestine would become Palestinian citizens after two years.  The ratified mandate and the draft stipulated that the government must enact an official nationality law for the acquisition of Palestinian citizenship for Jews within two years after the final approval of the mandate.

A second important clause of the draft, later to be intensely debated, stated that the foreign relations of the Palestine government were to be undertaken by Great Britain, and the citizens of Palestine were entitled to British protection when outside of Palestine.  The extent of protection offered for native Ottomans before a peace treaty was signed remained questionable.  The draft laid out very few points that could be used to construct a proper nationality law and indeed did not differentiate between nationality and citizenship or the status of Palestinian nationals vis-à-vis Britain.  Colonial officials discussed the issue of citizenship at length in the years before the mandate was officially given to the British in 1923, but a complete order on the topic did not appear in the 1922 Order-in-Council or elsewhere until HMG introduced the citizenship order-in-council in 1925.

Imperial protection, British nationality or citizenship?

Amid the confusion and the competing opinions over sovereignty, the discussions of Palestinian nationality centered on the status of the Palestinians. Were they meant to be treated as British-protected persons, Ottoman subjects, foreigners, or nationals of an ‘A’ mandate? Furthermore, what did these statuses mean outside of Palestine?  What was to be the status of non-Ottoman Jewish immigrants to Palestine?  Dependent on their country of origin, these immigrants were subjected to different consequences when they arrived in Palestine and applied for provisional certificates of nationality.  British-protected persons, Jews or otherwise, were not considered colonial subjects or naturalized citizens of the power whose protection they were under.

A practical issue for the British over privileges was the benefits accrued by former Ottoman subjects under the jurisdiction of Egypt’s Mixed Courts.  Under a British mandate, if the Palestinian Arabs received British protection, they could be tried in Mixed Courts by British or French judges.  At the very least, this would affirm their status as British-protected persons and at most it would indicate the Palestinians were akin to British subjects.  Curzon suggested that the British government was entitled under the mandate terms to provide British protection and attempt to withdraw ‘selected individuals’ from the Native Courts and place their trials in the Mixed Courts.  The phrase ‘selected individuals’ had a specific meaning: Curzon clarified that the ‘better-educated’ Palestinian Arabs and Jews would not receive an ‘adequate standard of justice’ in the Egyptian Native Courts.  To further prove whom he meant to receive capitulatory privileges, he added that the British protectorate government in Egypt assumed the Levantine Arabs to be ‘on a lower plane of civilisation than the average Egyptian, and, generally speaking, at the present time the statement would appear to be correct’.  This correspondence shows the colonial officials’ perception of two distinct nationalities in Palestine: the native non-Jewish Arabs and the native and immigrant Jewish inhabitants.  The documents also reveal that the pre-mandate national identity of the inhabitants of Palestine determined which privileges became part of their identity under British administration.

Nationality legislation

After the ratification of the Palestine Mandate in September 1922, Great Britain immediately finished its draft constitution and legislative council election orders.  Both were ratified by the King, as was the case in colonies and protectorates.  The Palestine Order-in-Council of 1922 served as the first constitution of the Palestine government.  Once the 1922 Order-in-Council came into force, the British began to dismantle some Ottoman laws but did not repeal the 1869 Ottoman Nationality Order.  The British passed an important second piece of legislation: the 1922 Palestine Electoral Order-in-Council, which set the regulations for elections to the future Legislative Council.

The electoral order decreed that voting rights, the first political right of citizenship given to Palestinians, would be on the basis of communal identity defined by religion – an important concept for British rule in Palestine.  Since the Ottoman Empire had attempted in the second half of the nineteenth century to do away with the millet system in favour of secular nationality, this voting division by religious communities did not reflect any emerging trend toward an equal citizenship.  The perception of Palestine as based on religious communities is an example of the key role played by orientalism in the British interpretation of Ottoman and mandate citizenship status: colonial officials applied this type of imperial thought through the provision for voting rights based on religion.  Through the mentality of orientalism and separation of religions in Palestine, the British officials in London in 1922 took full control in the process of ‘inventing’ identity by their definition of what constituted both a foreigner and a citizen.

Despite the ratification of Lausanne in September 1924, internal differences of opinion within the British government continued to have an impact on the status of Palestinians.  The Foreign Office wrote to the Home Office that Palestine did ‘not bear the slightest resemblances to an independent state’ and its citizens had no such status as belonging to one in international law. The status of the mandate as a British trusteeship rather than an outright colony or protectorate had little precedence.

The King of England passed the Palestine Citizenship Order-in-Council one year after the Lausanne Treaty and its provisions officially came into force on 1 August 1925.  This was the only such citizenship order enacted by Great Britain in any of their mandates or territories at that time; in Iraq and Transjordan, local Arab authorities enacted nationality legislation and had their own official representation to the British mandatory.  In Britain’s African mandates, inhabitants remained British-protected persons.  Just like the other imperial orders, the Citizenship Order was enacted by the British Government, not by the Government of Palestine.

It is interesting to note that until the middle of 1924, the order-in-council draft to regulate Palestinian citizenship was titled the Palestinian Nationality Order-in-Council.  Only in May did colonial officials recommend this be changed to the Palestinian Citizenship Order-in-Council to avoid complications.  By July, the draft order had ‘nationality’ crossed out and replaced with ‘citizenship’.  Only shortly before the order passed, the Colonial Office changed ‘subject’ to ‘citizen’ in all places and made a note that ‘national’ in the Treaty of Lausanne meant both subject and citizen in the Citizenship Order.  A short article written fifteen years later by the former Attorney General of Palestine Norman Bentwich (who drafted much of Palestine’s citizenship legislation through 1930) offered an explanation grounded in orientalism. Bentwich noted that citizen and citizenship replaced national and nationality in the final order because of the ‘Oriental’ difference of the terminology.  In oriental countries, citizenship marked the allegiance to a state whereas membership of nationality was a matter of race and religion.  Both Arabs and Jews were equally Palestinian citizens, wrote Bentwich, but they both claimed to have separate Arab or Jewish nationality.

The activation of Palestinian citizenship: reactions and problems

The Palestinian Arab Executive leadership unanimously rejected the citizenship legislation on the basis that it denied citizenship to native-born Palestinians while privileging Jewish immigrants, and that it neglected provisions for natural civil and political rights.  The press, especially Issa Bandak’s newspaper Sawt al-Sha’b, became the main medium through which discussions on the citizenship order and letters from the diaspora were published.  In periodicals as well as in protest memorandum, Palestinians referred to the order as the ‘nationality law’ (qanoon al-jinsiyya or haq al-jinsiyya) and generally used the Arabic term for ‘nationality’ (jinsiyya) in reference to the more legalistic and perhaps modern ‘citizenship’ (muwatina).  Popular leaders and newspaper editors wrote to the British and League to decry the denial of citizenship to thousands of Palestinians who emigrated or lived abroad.  In 1926, Bandak established the Committee for the Defense of Palestinian Arab Emigrant Citizenship Rights which lobbied tirelessly into the 1930s against the citizenship order and its amendments.

The Palestinians argued that the order was unlawful because it was not enacted by a parliament elected by the people.  Indeed, the Palestinians were never allowed to see any drafts of the order.  If the Palestinians accepted the legitimacy of the enactment ‘of this controversial law,’ the order remained illegal and benefited what was then still only a small minority of Jewish immigrants.  Bandak concluded that many world governments enacted strong barriers to the facilitation of nationality of foreigners who sought the same livelihoods as their own native populations.  In Palestine, the establishment of a Jewish national home, strengthened by the nationality order, would annihilate Arab national control of the country’s facilities, take land from Arab hands and deplete Arab financial wealth.  This condition would continue despite the existence of a nationality law, Bandak argued.  He pledged that the Palestinians would work to stop the law unless they could enact a new law ‘legitimately by constitutional means’ (‘The law prejudices the rights of the Arabs’, 1925).

Conclusion

The Palestine citizenship order did not grant Palestinian citizens the rights they agitated for as citizens: control over their own government or rights to their borders, treaties, educational affairs, public works, election laws, taxation and tithe rates or trade laws.

Confusion and questions over the order and its implementation, amendments and inequalities in application between the Jews and Arabs continued to be discussed by the Palestinians well into the 1930s especially due to the denial of citizenship to thousands of native-born Arab emigrants.  Because the mandate was run as a colony and not a trusteeship, the voice of the Palestinian citizens themselves was silenced.  Throughout the time of British administration, laws, regulations and decrees were handed down by British colonial officials or the government in London only.  Despite the British liberal notions of citizenship, only an orientalist conception existed in Palestine.  The British ruled over subject races through the principle of exception (as in Egypt and India) rather than a liberal model of bureaucracy, and officials created nationality distinctions through a dual administrative system to serve the purposes of the mandate and the Jewish national home policy.

The British amended the order several times before the end of the mandate, but the amendments reflected the problems the law posed for the Jewish immigrants – the amendments rarely benefited the Arabs.  In the 1930s, the British made changes to their legislation that effectively allowed all native Palestinians to obtain naturalization provided they returned from abroad and resided permanently in Palestine.

Citizenship in Palestine came only as a legal certificate of status and did not convey Great Britain’s own liberal, republican or ‘occidental’ citizenship.  Nationality remained in sharp contrast with legal citizenship in the discourses of the Palestinians.  What was clear to the Palestinians was that the ultimate power to decide on their legal identity lay with the British Empire. The only solution – the exit of the British from Palestine in 1947 – came in exchange for the creation of the state of Israel in 1948 and the cancellation of any internationally-recognised Palestinian citizenship.

 

 

Therefore, Palestinian citizenship had to be created in such a way that it would not allow for any civil, political or social rights ..

  • 1 Introduction (pp. 1-22)

In August of 1929, shortly after the end of the outbreak of violence that had flared up over access to the Wailing Wall (or Western Wall) in Jerusalem, one Arabic press editorial concluded that the riots stemmed from the Palestine Citizenship Order-in-Council issued four years prior, in 1925. That citizenship order-in-council, the author of the editorial wrote, supported not only Jewish immigration in large numbers into the territory but it did not foster any sense of loyalty between newly created Jewish Palestinian citizens and the Palestine Mandate Government. He described many of the Jewish immigrants to Palestine as English, Italian…

  • 2 Inventing the National and the Citizen in Palestine: Great Britain, Sovereignty and the Legislative Context, 1918–1925 (pp. 23-54)

In October 1922, just two years after the establishment of the mandates system by the League of Nations, the Arab members of the Palestine Mandate’s administrative advisory committee met High Commissioner Herbert Samuel in Jerusalem to read through the draft of a law to regulate Palestinian nationality. Nationality did not yet exist as a legal status within the territory ceded to Great Britain’s administrative control as a mandate, nor as an internationally recognised identity. By that point Palestine’s first attorney general, an Englishman named Norman Bentwich, wrote a large portion of the draft legislation and submitted drafts to the Colonial Office…

  • 3 The Notion of ‘Rights’ and the Practices of Nationality and Citizenship from the Palestinian Arab Perspective, 1918–1925 (pp. 55-83)

In early 1925 Lord Arthur Balfour, the former British Foreign Secretary and author of the 1917 Balfour Declaration, visited Palestine for the first time. For the occasion of Balfour’s visit, the Palestinian Arab leadership of the Arab Executive Committee (al-lajna al-tanafīdhiyya al-‘arabiyya) declared a general strike throughout Palestine and emphasised optimistically that the strike would ‘instill this patriotism to the youngest of our Palestinian Arab citizens’.¹ The Arabic press ran several features on the visit. Referring to Balfour’s planned visit to Tel Aviv the editor ofSawt al-Sha‘b, a local Bethlehem politician named ‘Isa Bandak, addressed the nationality of the…

  • 4 The Diaspora and the Meanings of Palestinian Citizenship, 1925–1931 (pp. 84-112)

In 1927, the British Legation at La Paz, Bolivia rejected the cases of Palestinian Arab Sari Ismael and others who applied for recognition of their Palestinian citizenship under Article 2 of the 1925 Citizenship Order-in-Council. The rejection was based on the legation’s assessment that they did not intend to return to Palestine because their lengthy absence (seven years in Ismael’s case) supposedly indicated that connections with their native homeland were severed. In an attempt to prove his case, Ismael even produced alaissez-passerfrom the Military Governor of Jerusalem that proved he was in Palestine as recently as 1920. The…

  • 5 Institutionalising Citizenship: Creating Distinctions between Arab and Jewish Palestinian Citizens, 1926–1934 (pp. 113-146)

In 1930 the Colonial Office in London received a notice of the ‘borderline case’ of a Jewish Palestinian citizen who faced the revocation of his naturalisation due to his residence outside Palestine. Certificates of naturalisation could be annulled if their holders were absent from Palestine for three years and could not offer an explanation for their residence elsewhere. In large part the Colonial and Foreign Offices followed this policy because they feared that Palestinian citizenship could be used by individuals to claim ‘un-entitled’ British imperial protection. The two offices also stressed that any citizen absent for more than three years…

  • 6 Whose Rights to Citizenship? Expressions and Variations of Palestinian Mandate Citizenship, 1926-1935 (pp. 147-168)

In August 1931 a number of Palestinian Arab populist groups convened a congress in the city of Nablus that subsequently called a general strike throughout the territory to oppose British policy that allowed Jewish settlements to be armed.¹ The main nationalist body in Palestine, the Arab Executive Committee, ultimately issued the official call to strike on 23 August 1931 but the strike and demonstrations would not have attracted the attention that they did without the growth of Palestinian civil society and its general emphasis on a number of demands for political, civil and national rights of the Arab population. Populist…

  • 7 The Palestine Revolt and Stalled Citizenship (pp. 169-195)

There is no genuine enthusiasm to be observed in Palestine for Palestinian citizenship,’ wrote the members of the Royal Commission in 1937 after their return from Palestine where they had been sent by the Government of Great Britain in order to investigate the causes of the general strike, adding that ‘it is only the Arabs in South America who are really anxious for it. And under present conditions this does not surprise us … To the educated Palestinian Arab, who has always resented the separation of Palestine from Syria, the very idea of Palestinian citizenship is obnoxious as being associated…

  • 8 Conclusion – The End of the Experiment: Discourses on Citizenship at the Close of the Mandate (pp. 196-214)

In 1938, the last full year of the Palestine Revolt, most of Palestine’s more radical Arab leaders including former Istiqlalists and members of the Higher Arab Committee (HAC) had been deported to the Seychelles following their involvement in the general strike and revolt. Most remained interned as political prisoners through 1939. For these men, Palestinian citizenship seemed to be a meaningless status. As he began a hunger strike to protest his imprisonment, former Jerusalem mayor Husayn Khalidi wrote to High Commissioner Harold MacMichael (Arthur Wauchope’s replacement) of his shame in ‘remember[ing] I carry a British passport’. That passport issued by…

 

 

Ottoman Nationality Law of 1869

Contemporary ideas of nationality and citizenship not in use then

Envisioned as similar to colonial citizenship in Egypt and India

Paralleling debates in the late 19th century on how a Russian subject could acquire Ottoman citizenship

Signed of nominally by King George V

Framed by the Colonial Office in London

Resulted in statelessness of Arabs living in Egypt and the Americas

Honduras, Brazil. Chile, Cuba

Required Turkish citizens born in Palestine who had left to undergo naturalization to get a passport

Some people circumvented the British by getting Syrian visas from French mandate authorities. Others turned to the League of Nations

20,000 to 30,000 Palestinians Arabs left out with a passport, dispossessed

Peel Commission report of 1937 mentioned the plight of the stateless Palestinians

Touches on the scrambled picture of the immigration of Algerians, Circassians, and Bosnians who settle in Palestine in the late Ottoman period just as Jews are moving to the country

 

Said “British Passport” as well as Palestine, and were the same color and design as British passports

 

Many people never travelled and didn’t have a passport

Spoke of “the right of return” already in the 1920s

Huge grievance that fed into the Arab Revolt of 1936

“A fascinating account of the origins of citizenship in Palestine against a tumultuous background of a declining empire (Ottoman), a transforming empire (British) and an incipient state (Israel). It makes an original and major contribution to our understanding of post-imperial and post-colonial citizenship and sheds a significant light on periods of political and legal transition.” — Engin Isin, The Open University

 

The 1925 Palestine Citizenship Order-in-Council, passed by the British government and implemented in the Palestine Mandate, was the first piece of mandate legislation to officially recognize Palestine’s Arab community as citizens of Palestine rather than ‘ex-enemy Ottoman subjects.’  This marked a change in the legal position of Palestine’s Arab residents, and a confirmation of the de facto status of Palestine’s Jewish residents. But as our guest Lauren Banko explains in this episode, the reality on the ground for the Arab inhabitants of Palestine and emigrants settled outside of the former Ottoman realms did not reflect the British mandatory understanding of citizenship.  In line with a communitarian understanding of nationality and civic belonging, the Palestinian Arabs reacted to the order-in-council and its subsequent amendments through actions, behaviours, and discourses which emphasized their understanding of Ottoman-era jus sanguinis and jus soli provisions of nationality and citizenship. This contrasted sharply with the order’s provisions for Jewish citizenship and immigrant naturalization policy, and its denial of Palestinian citizenship to Arabs who emigrated temporarily or habitually abroad.  In the mandate decades, nationality and citizenship became less like abstract or ideological concepts for Palestine’s Arab community both inside and outside of Palestine as these legal statuses were integrated into most aspects of social, civic, and political life as markers of a new (and often contested) identity in a changing quasi-colonial, political, national, and social landscape. For Palestine’s indigenous population, the Ottoman markers of citizenship and identity remained essential components of the opposition to, and negotiation with, the apolitical status imposed by Great Britain in the territory during the interwar period.

Banko is a postdoctoral research fellow in Israel/Palestine Studies in the department of Arabic and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Manchester. She completed her PhD in 2014 in History at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), London. Her research focuses on nationality, citizenship, popular politics, borders, and emigration as related to Ottoman and Mandate Palestine and the Eastern Mediterranean between the late nineteenth to mid-twentieth century.

In the two decades after the First World War, nationality and citizenship in Palestine became less like abstract concepts for the Arab population and more like meaningful statuses integrated into political, social and civil life and as markers of civic identity in a changing society. Banko situates the evolution of citizenship at the centre of state formation under the quasi-colonial mandate administration in Palestine and emphasises the ways in which British officials crafted citizenship to be separate from nationality based on prior colonial legislation elsewhere, a view of the territory as divided communally, and the need to offer Jewish immigrants the easiest path to acquisition of Palestinian citizenship in order to uphold the mandate’s policy.

Lauren Banko is a Research Associate in Israel-Palestine Studies within the Arabic and Middle Eastern Studies department at the University of Manchester. She received her PhD in History in 2014 from SOAS University of London, and her MA in History from the University of Louisville. She has previously taught at SOAS and Royal Holloway, University of London.

 

The Invention of Palestinian Citizenship, 1918-1947

Lauren Banko

Explores the colonial, social and political history of the creation of citizenship in mandate Palestine

In the two decades after the First World War, nationality and citizenship in Palestine became less like abstract concepts for the Arab population and more like meaningful statuses integrated into political, social and civil life and as markers of civic identity in a changing society. This book situates the evolution of citizenship at the centre of state formation under the quasi-colonial mandate administration in Palestine. It emphasises the ways in which British officials crafted citizenship to be separate from nationality based on prior colonial legislation elsewhere, a view of the territory as divided communally, and the need to offer Jewish immigrants the easiest path to acquisition of Palestinian citizenship in order to uphold the mandate’s policy. In parallel, the book examines the reactions of the Arab population to their new status. It argues that the Arabs relied heavily on their pre-war experience as nationals of the Ottoman Empire to negotiate the definitions and meanings of mandate citizenship.

Key features

  • Covers the overlapping social, administrative and political eras in the creation of Palestinian citizenship, from the final decades of the Ottoman imperial age through the first two decades of the mandate
  • Explores a transitional period in Palestine’s history that has seen little nuanced historical research
  • Places the development of the changing status of citizenship in mandate Palestine in its historical context
  • Approaches the ‘invention’ of citizenship in Palestine through a number of frameworks: the wider British imperial project, the development of Arab populist politics and civil society, and the circulation of ideas to and from the Palestinian Arab diaspora
  • Incorporates a number of under-used and un-used Arabic press and other documentary sources

 

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