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ID144589
Title ProperPersevering through colonial transition
Other Title InformationNazareth's palestinian residents after 1948
LanguageENG
AuthorDallasheh, Leena
Summary / Abstract (Note)Nazareth, the only Palestinian city to survive the 1948 war intact, became the social, economic, and political hub of Palestinian life in the postwar period. As such, it provides the ideal setting to study early Palestinian responses to the creation of Israel. This paper reexamines the ambivalent relationship between Nazareth's political leadership and the newly established State of Israel to argue that the Palestinian citizens of Israel were neither traitors and collaborators, on the one hand, nor passively quiescent, on the other. Rather, as a new national minority, Palestinians overcame myriad forms of control as they negotiated the structural obstacles placed before them by their new overlords. Local Communist politicians, in particular, took a leading role to advocate on behalf of Nazarenes beset by the day-to-day hardships of poverty, hunger, displacement, and unemployment. The Israeli authorities harped on the Communist threat in response, echoing the Cold War rhetoric of the time.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Palestine Studies Vol. 45, No.2; Winter 2016: p.8-23
Journal SourceJournal of Palestine Studies 2016-03 45, 2
Key Wordsnational Minority ;  Israeli Communist Party (MAKI) ;  Arab Workers' Congress (AWC) ;  NazarethPalestinian Citizens of Israel (PCI)