Thursday, April 23, 2020
12:00 – 1:00 p.m.
McKinney Conference Room, Watson Institute
111 Thayer St.
In light of updated COVID-19 related events guidelines, we are cancelling this event but have rescheduled for Thursday, October 15, 2020. For up-to-date information, including campus travel restrictions, please visit the University’s COVID-19 Updates website.
Studies of the violent transition in 1948 from Mandate Palestine to Israel have tended to focus on people and lands. Less has been said about the willful expropriation and misallocation of financial property belonging to the Palestinians who lived through the transition. This talk attempts to rectify that silence. Placing at its core the stories of ordinary people, it explores how they were robbed, during and after the creation of the state of Israel, of their bank accounts, bonds, checks, stocks, pensions, life insurance policies, savings certificates, and safety deposit boxes. This talk has a few related aims: first, it estimates the amounts and types of assets involved. Next, it describes the presumptively legal bureaucratic and diplomatic mechanisms through which the dispossession occurred. It goes on to elaborate how international banks and other financial institutions, as well as the Israeli, British and Jordanian governments, came to actively participate in this dispossession. Finally and most importantly, it recounts how the Palestinians fought to regain their financial property for years as best they could, using the law as their weapon, despite having no state of their own to support their claims. The ultimate aim of this talk is to underline how the absence of sovereignty impacts the economic lives of ordinary people, and robs them not just of their financial property, but of their very means of building their present, and their future.