AN INTERIM REPORT
ON THE
CIVIL
ADMINISTRATION OF PALESTINE
during the
period
1st JULY, 1920--30th JUNE, 1921.
AN INTERIM REPORT
ON
THE
CIVIL
ADMINISTRATION
OF
PALESTINE.
I.--THE CONDITION
OF PALESTINE AFTER THE WAR.
When
General Allenby's army swept over Palestine, in a campaign as brilliant and
decisive as any recorded in history, it occupied a country exhausted by war. The
population had been depleted; the people of the towns were in severe distress;
much cultivated land was left untilled; the stocks of cattle and horses had
fallen to a low ebb; the woodlands, always scanty, had almost disappeared;
orange groves had been ruined by lack of irrigation; commerce had long been at a
standstill. A Military Administration was established to govern the country. For
nearly two years it laboured, with great devotion, at its restoration. An
administrative system, as efficient as the conditions allowed, was set up. The
revenue authorised by the Turkish law was collected, and was spent on the needs
of the country. A considerable sum, advanced by the Anglo-Egyptian Bank, was
lent by the Government in small amounts to the agriculturists, and enabled them
to purchase stock and seed, and partly to restore their cultivation.
Philanthropic agencies in other countries came to the relief of the most
necessitous. Commerce began to revive. It was encouraged by the new railway
connection with Egypt, established during the campaign for purposes of military
transport. It was assisted also by the construction, with the same object, of a
net-work of good roads. The country showed all the signs of gradually returning
life.
But the prospects of Palestine are not limited, on the economic
side, merely to a return to the standard attained before the war. It has the
possibilities of a far more prosperous future. Small in area--comparable in size
to Belgium or Wales--its geographical position rendered it in ancient times, and
may render it again, a centre of no small importance to the commercial traffic
of the larger territories that surround it. Within the limits of a province, it
offers the varieties of soil and climate of a continent. It is a country of
mountain and plain, of desert and pleasant valleys, of lake and sea-board, of
barren hills, desolate to the last degree of desolation, and of broad stretches
of deep, fruitful soil. The rainfall of Jerusalem equals that of London. The
water problem, over most of the country, is not a question of quantity, but of
storage, of pumping and of distribution.
It is obvious to every passing
traveller, and well-known to every European resident, that the country was
before the War, and is now, undeveloped and under-populated. The methods of
agriculture are, for the most part, primitive; the area of land now cultivated
could yield a far greater product. There are in addition large cultivable areas
that are left untilled. The summits and slopes of the hills are admirably suited
to the growth of trees, but there are no forests. Miles of sand dunes that could
be redeemed, are untouched, a danger, by their encroachment, to the neighbouring
tillage. The Jordan and the Yarmuk offer an abundance of water-power; but it is
unused. Some industries--fishing and the culture and manufacture of tobacco are
examples--have been killed by Turkish laws; none have been encouraged; the
markets of Palestine and of the neighbouring countries are supplied almost
wholly from Europe. The seaborne commerce, such as it is, is loaded and
discharged in the open roadsteads of Jaffa and Haifa: there are no harbours. The
religious and historical associations that offer most powerful attractions to
the whole of the Western, and to a large part of the Eastern world, have
hitherto brought to Palestine but a fraction of the pilgrims and travellers,
who, under better conditions, would flock to her sacred shrines and famous
sites.
The country is under-populated because of this lack of
development. There are now in the whole of Palestine hardly 700,000 people, a
population much less than that of the province of Gallilee alone in the time of
Christ.* (*See Sir George Adam Smith "Historical Geography of the Holy
Land", Chap. 20.) Of these 235,000 live in the larger towns, 465,000 in the
smaller towns and villages. Four-fifths of the whole population are Moslems. A
small proportion of these are Bedouin Arabs; the remainder, although they speak
Arabic and are termed Arabs, are largely of mixed race. Some 77,000 of the
population are Christians, in large majority belonging to the Orthodox Church,
and speaking Arabic. The minority are members of the Latin or of the Uniate
Greek Catholic Church, or--a small number--are Protestants.
The Jewish
element of the population numbers 76,000. Almost all have entered Palestine
during the last 40 years. Prior to 1850 there were in the country only a handful
of Jews. In the following 30 years a few hundreds came to Palestine. Most of
them were animated by religious motives; they came to pray and to die in the
Holy Land, and to be buried in its soil. After the persecutions in Russia forty
years ago, the movement of the
Jews to Palestine assumed larger proportions.
Jewish agricultural colonies were founded. They developed the culture of oranges
and gave importance to the Jaffa orange trade. They cultivated the vine, and
manufactured and exported wine. They drained swamps. They planted eucalyptus
trees. They practised, with modern methods, all the processes of agriculture.
There are at the present time 64 of these settlements, large and small, with a
population of some 15,000. Every traveller in Palestine who visits them is
impressed by the contrast between these pleasant villages, with the beautiful
stretches of prosperous cultivation about them and the primitive conditions of
life and work by which they are surrounded.
The success of these
agricultural colonies attracted the eager interest of the masses of the Jewish
people scattered throughout the world. In many countries they were living under
the pressure of laws or customs which cramped their capacities and thwarted
their energies; they saw in Palestine the prospect of a home in which they might
live at ease. Profoundly discontented, as numbers of them were, with a life of
petty trade in crowded cities, they listened with ready ears to the call of a
healthier and finer life as producers on the land. Some among them,
agriculturists already, saw in Palestine the prospect of a soil not less
fertile, and an environment far more free, than those to which they were
accustomed. Everywhere great numbers of Jews, whose religion causes them to
live, spiritually, largely in the past, began to take an active interest in
those passages of their ritual, that dwelt, with constant emphasis, upon the
connection of their race with Palestine; passages which they had hitherto read
day by day and week by week, with the lax attention that is given to contingency
that is possible but remote. Among a great proportion, at least, of the fourteen
millions of Jews, who are dispersed in all the countries of the globe, the
Zionist idea took hold. They found in it that larger and higher interest,
outside and beyond the cares and concerns of daily life, which every man, who is
not wholly materialist, must seek somewhere.
Societies were formed which
purchased areas of land in Palestine for further Jewish colonization. The Hebrew
language, which, except for purposes of ritual, had been dead for many
centuries, was revived as a vernacular. A new vocabulary, to meet the needs of
modern life, was welded into it. Hebrew is now the language spoken by almost all
the younger generation of the Jews of Palestine and by a large proportion of
their elders. The Jewish newspapers are published in it. It is the language of
instruction in the schools and colleges, the language used for sermons in the
synagogues, for political speeches and for scientific lectures.
Large
sums of money were collected in Europe and America, and spent in Palestine, for
forwarding the movement. Many looked forward to a steady process of Jewish
immigration, of Jewish land colonization and industrial development, until at
last the Jews throughout the world would be able to see one country in which
their race had a political and a spiritual home, in which, perhaps, the Jewish
genius might repeat the services it had rendered to mankind from the same soil
long ago.
The British Government was impressed by the reality, the
strength and the idealism of this movement. It recognised its value in ensuring
the future development of Palestine, which now appears likely to come within the
British sphere of influence. It decided to give to the Zionist idea, within
certain limits, its approval and support. By the hand of Mr. Balfour, then
Foreign Secretary, it made, in November, 1917, the following
Declaration:
"His Majesty's Government view with favour the
establishment in Palestine of a National Home for the Jewish People, and
will use their best endeavours to facilitate the achievement of this object,
it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice
the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish Communities in
Palestine or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other
Country."
This pronouncement was received
with the warmest gratitude and enthusiasm by the mass of the Jewish people
throughout the world. After the occupation of Palestine, a Zionist Commission
was sent there, with the approval of the Government, to concert measures for
carrying into effect the policy of the Declaration.
Meanwhile, however, a
section of native opinion in Palestine was becoming disturbed as to the meaning
of British policy. Welcoming release from Turkish misgovernment, anxious to
accept the benefit of British assistance in securing an efficient
administration, it was uneasy as to the implications of the Balfour Declaration.
To instal the Jews in Palestine might mean the expulsion of the Arabs. If there
were an unlimited Jewish immigration and finally a Jewish majority in the
population, how could the safeguards embodied in the second half of the
Declaration be enforced? The ownership by the Arabs of their lands and homes
would be imperilled. The Moslem Holy Places, and particularly the
Haram-esh-Sherif on Mount Moriah, might be taken from them. Quotations from the
speeches and writings of Zionist leaders, which were said to justify these
forebodings, were translated into Arabic and circulated by the press among the
people. An organization was formed, with branches in many parts of the country,
to combat the application of the Zionist policy. Individuals or groups, in
Palestine or elsewhere, who had some interest in causing embarrassment to the
Administration, stimulated the agitation. The wildest stories as to the
intentions of the Jews and the fate awaiting the Arabs were circulated in the
towns and villages, and were often believed by a credulous people. Among a
section of the Arabs, who had all previously lived on excellent terms with the
Jewish population, a bitter feeling was evoked against the Jews. It was fostered
and developed until it culminated in a serious outbreak in the streets of
Jerusalem in April, 1920, when a number of Jews were killed and wounded and
Jewish shops were looted.
Many men of education and enlightenment among
the Arabs took no part, however, in this antagonism. They recognised that the
fears that had been expressed were illusory. They realised that Jewish
co-operation was the best means, perhaps the only means, of promoting the
prosperity of Palestine, a prosperity from which the Arabs could not fail to
benefit. They desired the maintenance of peace and order, and they had
confidence that the British Government would permit no injustice, even if
injustice were intended. And among the mass of the population there were large
numbers who, taking no interest in politics, thinking only of the needs of daily
life, made no response to the agitation that sought to arouse their fears and
inflame their passions.
Such was the economic condition of the country,
and such was the political atmosphere, when on July 1st, 1920, by order of His
Majesty's Government a Civil Administration was established in Palestine.
II.--POLICY OF THE
ADMINISTRATION.
In a later section of this
Report I will furnish a summary of the specific measures that have been adopted
in the various Departments of Government. It will be convenient first to
continue and complete this survey of the general political
situation.
Zionism takes many forms, and its individual adherents, like
the adherents of any other political creed, hold various views as to its proper
aims. There are those among them who sometimes forget or ignore the present
inhabitants of Palestine. Inspired by the greatness of their ideal, feeling
behind them the pressure of two thousand years of Jewish history, intent upon
the practical measures that are requisite to carry their purpose into effect,
they learn with surprise, and often with incredulity, that there are
half-a-million people in Palestine, many of whom hold, and hold strongly, very
different views. Some among this school of Zionists, when they realise that
there is opposition, would wish to ride over it rough-shod, and are ready to
condemn any other policy as a surrender by weakness to violence. At the other
end of the scale there are Zionists who believe that the establishment of a
further number of Jewish agricultural colonies, with some industrial
enterprises, and perhaps a University, is all that can, or should, be done.
Between these two views there is every gradation.
The policy of His
Majesty's Government contemplates the satisfaction of the legitimate aspirations
of the Jewish race throughout the world in relation to Palestine, combined with
a full protection of the rights of the existing population. For my own part, I
am convinced that the means can be found to effect this combination. The Zionism
that is practicable is the Zionism that fulfils this essential
condition.
It is the clear duty of the Mandatory Power to promote the
well-being of the Arab population, in the same way as a British Administration
would regard it as its duty to promote the welfare of the local population in
any part of our Empire. The measures to foster the well-being of the Arabs
should be precisely those which we should adopt in Palestine if there were no
Zionist question and if there had been no Balfour Declaration. There is in this
policy nothing incompatible with reasonable Zionist aspirations. On the
contrary, if the growth of Jewish influence were accompanied by Arab
degradation, or even by a neglect to promote Arab advancement, it would fail in
one of its essential purposes. The grievance of the Arab would be a discredit to
the Jew, and in the result the moral influence of Zionism would be gravely
impaired.
Simultaneously, there must be satisfaction of that sentiment
regarding Palestine--a worthy and ennobling sentiment--which, in increasing
degree, animates the Jewries of the world. The aspirations of these fourteen
millions of people also have a right to be considered. They ask for the
opportunity to establish a "home" in the land which was the political, and has
always been the religious, centre of their race. They ask that this home should
possess national characteristics--in language and customs, in intellectual
interests, in religious and political institutions.
This is not to say
that Jewish immigration is to involve Arab emigration, that the greater
prosperity of the country, through the development of Jewish enterprises, is to
be at the expense, and not to the benefit of the Arabs, that the use of Hebrew
is to imply the disappearance of Arabic, that the establishment of elected
Councils in the Jewish Community for the control of its affairs is to be
followed by the subjection of the Arabs to the rule
of those Councils. In a
word, the degree to which Jewish national aspirations can be fulfilled in
Palestine is conditioned by the rights of the present inhabitants.
These
have been the principles which have guided the policy of the Administration. The
year under review has not been, however, a period favourable to their
application. The long delay in the formal settlement of the international status
of Palestine has tended to disturb the minds of the people. Even more serious
has been the consequence that it has not been possible to issue a Government
loan. Without a loan, many public works that would be directly or indirectly
remunerative, cannot be executed. The financial conditions of Eastern and
Central Europe, and internal difficulties within the Zionist Organisation in the
United States, have prevented the Zionist Movement from providing as yet any
large sums for enterprises of development or colonization--although, indeed,
several land purchases have been completed and many preparations made for the
future. As a consequence, while there has been much pressure to admit Jewish
immigrants there has been comparatively little expansion in the opportunities
for employment. Between September, 1920, and May, 1921, about 10,000 immigrants
arrived.
In conformity with one of the articles in the draft Mandate for
Palestine, the Hebrew language has been recognized, with English and Arabic, as
one of the official languages of the country. It is employed in all the notices
and publications of the Central Government, and for local purposes in those
districts where the Jews form a considerable element in the
population.
The agitation, to which reference has been made, against what
was thought to be the policy to be adopted in relation to the Jews, was revived
during last winter and spring. In the atmosphere that prevailed an outbreak
might take place at any time. On May 1st there was a riot at Jaffa. Disturbances
continued during the following days. Attacks were made from Arab villages upon
the Jewish colonies of Petah Tikvah and Chederah. Troops were employed and
suppressed the disturbances, and the attacks on the colonies were dispersed with
considerable loss to the attackers. Martial law was proclaimed over the area
affected, but much excitement prevailed for several days in Jaffa and the
neighbouring districts, and for some weeks there was considerable unrest. 88
persons were killed and 238 injured, most of them slightly, in these
disturbances, and there was much looting and
destruction of property. There
were no casualties among the troops. A number of persons were prosecuted for
offences committed, and special Civil and Military Courts were established for
their trial. The sentences inflicted included one of 13 years penal servitude,
two of 10 years, one of 5 years, and 42 of less severity.
A Commission of
Enquiry was appointed, under the Chairmanship of the Chief Justice of Palestine,
Sir Thomas Haycraft, to investigate the causes of the riots and the
circumstances that attended them. The Commission has taken much evidence and has
completed its inquiry, but it has not yet presented its report at the time this
is written. I refrain, therefore, from further description of the Jaffa
disturbances, or from comment upon these unhappy events.
At an assembly
of Notables held in Jerusalem on June 3rd, on the occasion of His Majesty's
Birthday, I made a statement of the policy of the Government in relation to the
Jewish National Home, following the lines indicated in the preceding
paragraphs.
A delegation of eight members, appointed by a Conference
representing a considerable body of Moslem and Christian opinion, has proceeded
to England in the month of July to lay their views upon the political situation
before the authorities.
III.--FORM OF
GOVERNMENT.
The administration of the
country, entrusted to the High Commissioner, is conducted through a staff, the
heads of which, both in the central Departments and in the Districts, are
British. A new framework of government has had to be constructed; it has been
found necessary in certain cases to introduce new laws and regulations;
experienced administrators, familiar with Western methods and impartial in local
disputes, have been indispensable. But as the preliminary work is completed, and
as Palestinians possessing the necessary qualities can be chosen and trained to
administrative work, it is intended to reduce the number of British and to
increase the number of Palestinian officials. This process has, indeed, already
begun.
In October, 1920, an Advisory Council was constituted. It consists
of ten unofficial members nominated by the High Commissioner, of whom four are
Moslems, three Christians, and three Jews; and of ten members of the
Administration. It meets every month, usually on two consecutive days. Its
functions are consultative, but no case has yet arisen in which the Government
has been unable to accept the opinion of the majority of the unofficial members.
The proceedings are published in the Press.
A list of the Ordinances
passed by the Council is given in Appendix I. It is the policy of the
Administration to continue, whenever possible, to apply the Turkish Laws, to
which the people are accustomed. Changes are made only where they are
indispensable. Efficiency is essential to good government, but there is a point
where efficiency may become harassing. The danger of passing that point is
foreseen. Ne pas trop gouverner
is a good maxim, particularly in an Eastern
country, and above all in the early years of a new régime.
It was stated
at the inauguration of the Advisory Council that its establishment was no more
than a first step in the development of self-governing institutions. The success
that has attended its work justifies an early extension. On June 3rd it was
announced that His Majesty's Government were giving the closest attention to the
question of ensuring in Palestine a free and authoritative expression of popular
opinion. Steps are now being taken to frame a constitution for the country,
which will include an elective element, and the leaders of the various sections
of the population are being consulted as to its terms.
IV.--FINANCE.
The cost of the Civil Administration of Palestine has been kept
within the amount of the local revenue, and no grant-in-aid is received from the
British Exchequer. Several taxes, oppressive in their incidence and small in
their yield, have been abolished. The Military Administration repealed the
Military Exoneration Tax, the Road Tax, the Temettu (a tax upon all professions,
arts and crafts) and certain minor fees. The Civil Administration has abolished
the Fish Tax of 20 per cent. ad valorem, and the local Octroi duties. It
has reduced the import duties on building materials and on live stock from 11
per cent. to 3 per cent. In substitution for the octroi, an additional import
duty is levied of 1 per cent. on most articles, and of 2 per cent. on some. A
more important reform has been the abolition of the tobacco monopoly established
by the Turks and conducted by the Tobacco Regie. The effect has been that the
price of tobacco to the consumer has greatly fallen; that the cultivation of
tobacco, hitherto prohibited, is about to be begun in several districts; that
two factories for the manufacture of cigarettes have already been opened,
employing a considerable number of workpeople, and others are in prospect;
while, at the same time, the Government is drawing a large new Customs revenue
from the importation of tobacco.
The railways of Palestine were taken
over from the Military Authorities in October, 1920, and their revenue and
expenditure included in those of the Government. The revenue of the Ottoman
Public Debt Administration in Palestine was amalgamated with the general revenue
of Palestine as from April 1st, 1921. On the other side of the account,
Palestine will be charged, under the provisions of the Treaty of Sèvres, with an
annuity in respect of her share of the Ottoman Pre-War Debt. The amount of that
share has not yet been definitely fixed, but it is estimated to be less than
£E200,000.
The principal heads of Revenue and Expenditure for the year
1921-22, as presented to the Advisory Council in March last, are given in
Appendix III.
V.--DEFENCE AND PUBLIC
SECURITY.
The Defence of Palestine is assured
by a garrison maintained by the Mandatory Power. The numbers of the garrison
have now been reduced to 5,000 combatant troops. The charge thereby imposed upon
the British Exchequer is £2,500,000 a year. It therefore appears that the cost
of a British garrison with its complement of ancillary troops, officers,
artillery, horses and mules, is now at the rate of £1,000 a year for every two
fighting men, or a million pounds for every two thousand men.
The
Palestine Administration maintains a Police Force with a strength of 1,300 drawn
from all sections of the local population. The force is not yet at a
satisfactory standard of efficiency, but a training school has been established,
and is already achieving good results, and every effort is being made to raise
the standard of the force. In addition a new Gendarmerie of 500 men, 300
mounted, of whom 50 on camels, and 200 unmounted, is being organised. This
force, while it will form a part of the Palestine Police, will not be employed
on ordinary police duties. It will be highly trained under British Officers,
will receive better pay than the ordinary police, and will be employed, in
bodies of not less than twenty-five men, in the protection of the frontiers
against raids from neighbouring territories and in suppressing any internal
disturbances that may occur.
A great number of blood feuds among the
Bedouins of Palestine have been settled by the intervention of the District
Officials. In the Beersheba district alone 134 have been dealt with. The peace
and order of the country have thereby been improved.
VI.--RELIGIOUS
QUESTIONS.
The most complete liberty of
religion prevails in Palestine. The many faiths and sects which find in the Holy
Land their origin or their inspiration, are free to maintain their teachers and
pastors, and to practise their cults, without let or hindrance. In the
controversies that occasionally arise between them, the policy of the
Administration has been strictly to maintain the status quo. The Treaty
of Sèvres provides for the appointment of a Commission on the Holy Places, on
which representatives of the principal faiths will find a place. For the
decision of that Commission, the settlement of such controversies is
reserved.
In certain matters of internal organization, however, action
has been taken to assist the communities. A purely Moslem authority is being
constituted for the control of the Moslem religious endowments (Wakfs), and for
the appointment of judges in the Moslem religious courts. To this authority the
Government will transfer the revenues of certain wealthy endowments, which were
sequestrated by the Turkish Government eighty years ago.
The Orthodox
Patriarchate of Jerusalem has been in recent years the theatre of bitter
internal disputes, and the victim of serious financial embarrassments. The
intervention of the Government, following upon a laborious enquiry by commission
has ended the disputes and has vindicated the authority of the Patriarch. A
Financial Commission is being established, with the sanction of the Patriarch
and Synod, to put order into their affairs.
The Jewish Community of
Palestine possessed no recognised ecclesiastical organization. On the invitation
of the Government, that Community has now established an elective Rabbinical
Council, embodying a lay element, under presidency of two joint Chief
Rabbis.
VII.--LEGAL
DEPARTMENT.
A judicial system has been
established by the Military, and developed by the Civil Administration, which
dispenses justice with a degree of integrity, impartiality and promptitude
hitherto unknown in Palestine. Minor jurisdiction in civil and criminal cases is
exercised by Palestinian magistrates. Four District Courts presided over by
British judges, who sit with two Palestinian members, try the more serious civil
and criminal cases, and hear appeals from the magistrates' judgments. There is a
Court of Appeal at Jerusalem with a British Chief Justice and a British
Vice-President, which is the Supreme Court and hears appeals from the District
Courts.
In cases in which a British or foreign subject is tried for a
criminal offence, the Court is constituted with a British magistrate or with a
majority of British judges. The prosecution of offences is under the control of
a British official, and is carried out in the District Courts by a Palestinian
Public Prosecutor. In the three principal towns, benches of honorary magistrates
are being constituted from the notables of the locality for the trial of
contraventions.
The Ottoman Law remains as the foundation of the legal
system, with such amendments, principally affecting a simplification of the
procedure, as have been introduced by Ordinances and Rules of Court issued by
the Administration. In the Beersheba District, Tribal Law continues to be
administered among the Bedouins by the Sheikhs' Court, from which an appeal lies
to a British officer.
VIII.--ARCHAEOLOGY.
The antiquities of Palestine are of profound interest to Biblical
students and to archaeologists throughout the world. The Administration regards
itself as a trustee on their behalf. To encourage excavation and discovery, to
prevent the injury or destruction of antiquities and to form national
collections of objects that will be of value to the student and of interest to
the local inhabitant and to the traveller, these are the purposes which the
Administration regards as among its most important duties.
Immediately
upon its inception, a Department of Antiquities was formed. It was placed under
the scholarly and capable direction of Professor J. Garstang, D.Sc., who also
holds the posts of Professor of Archaeology in the University of Liverpool, and
of Director of the newly founded British School of Archæology in Jerusalem.
Palestine is fortunate in being a field of investigation by several
archæological bodies established in Jerusalem-- French, American, British,
Italian and Greek, as well as Jewish. The representatives of these bodies have
been constituted into an Advisory Board, under the presidency of the Director of
Antiquities, to which all matters of importance, and particularly applications
for permits to excavate, are referred. The existence and authority of this Board
are a recognition of the international interest of archaeological work in
Palestine.
An Ordinance has been passed, of a comprehensive character, to
protect the antiquities. Permits to excavate sites of interest have been given
to several competent authorities--the Palestine Exploration Fund, the École
Archéologique Française de Jérusalem, the Jewish Archæological Society of
Palestine, the Custodia della Terra Santa and the University of Philadelphia. A
number of buildings and objects of interest have already been brought to light.
A Palestine National Museum has been established and 6,000 exhibits have been
collected and catalogued. A list of the historical sites in Palestine is in
active preparation and partly completed, and a register of every object of
antiquarian interest known to exist in the country is in process of
formation.
A voluntary organisation, the Pro-Jerusalem Society, has
undertaken the care of the town walls and the ancient buildings of a municipal
character in Jerusalem, in addition to much excellent work of other kinds for
the improvement of the amenities of the city. The Government gives to the
Society a grant in respect of this service, together with a subvention, adding
pound for pound to the funds it is able to collect from private
sources.
IX.--DEPARTMENTAL
WORK.
Railways.--All the railways of
Palestine have been brought under the control of the Government. In addition,
the Palestine Railway Department operates, on behalf of the Army, the Sinai
Military Railway between Kantara, on the Suez Canal, and Rafah, on the Egyptian-
Palestine frontier. The total length of the entire system is approximately 1,000
kilometres.
Within the limits of the funds available many improvements
have been effected during the last twelve months. The main line between Rafah
and Haifa, hastily constructed during the campaign, has been strengthened and
protected. As a result, the interruptions which were frequent during the rainy
season of 1919-20 were absent last winter. The line from Jaffa to Ludd Junction
was of narrow gauge, involving the transhipment of all goods carried by railway
between the port of Jaffa and other parts of Palestine and Egypt. This railway
has now been broadened. Three small branch lines are in course of construction.
Stations
have been improved and new stations opened. Sleeping cars and dining
cars are run on a number of the trains. It has been necessary to raise passenger
fares, and with this addition to their income the railways pay their
way.
Commerce and Industry.--A Department of Commerce and Industry
has been created, which keeps in close touch with the trading classes and uses
its best endeavours to promote the
economic development of the country.
Chambers of Commerce have been formed in all the principal towns of Palestine
and have a total membership of nearly a thousand. Conferences of delegates from
these Chambers are held quarterly, under the presidency of the High
Commissioner, and with the presence of the heads of the Government Departments
concerned. At these conferences a great variety of questions of interest are
discussed.
There has been a general fall in the prices of commodities, in
sympathy with the world movement, but they still remain high in comparison with
prices in Egypt and elsewhere.
A table (Appendix IV) shows the value of
imports and exports month by month from April 1st, 1919, to June 30th,
1921.
Except that the export of livestock is still prohibited, and except
for the usual police regulations dealing with the importation of arms and
deleterious drugs, etc., all restrictions upon the import and export trade of
Palestine have now been abolished.
Several new industrial enterprises are
being established. A revival of house- building is beginning in various parts of
the country. Should no unfavourable conditions supervene, there is a prospect of
a considerable development of trade in the near future.
The grant of
mining concessions and of prospectors' licences is still prohibited by
instruction of His Majesty's Government.
Egyptian currency has been made
the only legal tender in Palestine, together with the British gold sovereign, at
the rate of 97.5 Egyptian piastres to the pound. Other currencies, however, are
not prohibited from circulating at whatever price they may
obtain in the
market. It had been found necessary to forbid the export of gold by an Order
made by the Military Administration. This prohibition has been rescinded, with
some advantage to trade and with no counterbalancing
disadvantages.
Agriculture.--A Department was formed in the last
months of the Military Administration for the assistance of agriculture, which
is, and must long remain, the principal industry of Palestine. The Department
has shown much activity. A small technical staff has been engaged. Agricultural
assistants have been posted in all districts and instructed to tour the villages
continually. Plant diseases and insect pests are notified immediately and steps
taken to prevent their spread. Complete preparations have been made to combat a
plague of locusts, should such occur.
A field staff of veterinary
surgeons reports and deals at once with contagious livestock disease. Animals
imported from abroad are subjected to quarantine. Veterinary hospitals have been
established.
A Fisheries Service has been established to deal with
scientific investigations and practical measures for improvement of the fishing
industry.
The Agricultural Department has established five meteorological
stations in conjunction with the Physical Department of the Egyptian
Government.
An Ordinance has been enacted for the protection of forests.
Forest areas are being demarcated and a staff of forest rangers and guards has
been appointed. The destructive felling of the few remaining trees in the
country has been stopped; forest nurseries have been established, and some
hundreds of thousands of trees have been planted by the Government or by private
landowners. Such are the first beginnings of a process which should add largely
to the productiveness of Palestine, increase its rainfall and bring fresh charm
to its scenery.
Agricultural shows, the first ever held in the country,
were organised at Haifa, Jaffa and Nablus. They attracted much interest and are
likely to prove a useful stimulus to the industry. A museum to illustrate all
matters of agricultural interest has been created.
The measures that have
been taken, and particularly the provision of £E.370,000 in loans to
agriculturists, have assisted the revival of the country. Large additional areas
have been cultivated this year and the head of stock show a remarkable
recuperation. The good prices obtained for oranges have been a great
encouragement to the cultivators.
The agricultural development of the
country--and indeed its urban development also--are greatly hampered by the
condition of confusion into which the titles of ownership of land were allowed
to fall during the Turkish régime. There is here a tangle which will need years
of patient effort to unravel. Land Settlement Courts have been established and
are now commencing their work. A Survey Department has been created; assistant
surveyors are being trained; preliminary measures are being taken for carrying
out a cadastral survey of the whole country. A Land Ordinance has been enacted,
which includes provisions designed to prevent land being purchased by
speculators and held back from productive use. The Ordinance includes important
clauses also for the protection of existing tenants when areas of land are sold
for colonisation. The Administration seeks to promote the closer settlement of
the country, but at the same time to secure the present cultivators from the
danger of eviction and loss of livelihood.
A Land Commission, consisting
of a British official and representatives of the Moslem and the Jewish
communities, examines, with these objects in view, all proposals dealing with
the use of State lands or the colonisation of private lands.
The Land
Registries, which had been closed during the Military Administration, were
re-opened in October for transactions. The figures of transactions registered
during the nine months show a total of over 2,000. The number and value of land
transactions show a steady increase in recent
months.
Education.--There is evidence throughout Palestine of an
active desire for opportunities for education. The majority of the Moslems are
illiterate, and to provide a number of schools sufficient for their requirements
is a task of some magnitude. The Administration has adopted a scheme under which
the people of any town or village where a school is needed, are invited to
provide a suitable building and to keep it in repair; the Government defrays,
out of general taxation, the salaries of the teachers and the other costs of
maintenance. Under this scheme new schools are being opened at an average rate
of more than one a week. It is intended to continue this process until the whole
country is covered. A period of four years will probably be necessary.
To
assist in the staffing of these schools, the two Government Training Colleges,
one for men and one for women, have been considerably enlarged, and give
instruction to 75 and 40 students respectively.
Peripatetic teachers,
paid by the Government, have been appointed to work among the Bedouin tribes of
the Beersheba District. In addition to their duties as schoolmasters, they
instruct the adults of the tribes in Moslem religious law.
Fortunately a
number of voluntary schools, maintained for the most part by organisations
outside Palestine, assist in providing for the needs of the population. A system
of State grants to these schools, accompanied by Government inspection, has been
inaugurated. The financial position only permits, however, the distribution of a
very modest sum.
Law classes have been established in Jerusalem, which
will enable young Palestinians to qualify as advocates in the local courts. A
number of junior officials in the Government Service also join in the attendance
at these classes, which comprise about 140 students. The instruction is given by
the principal officials of the Legal Department.
Public
Health.--Both the Military and the Civil Administrations have paid the
closest attention to measures for safeguarding the health of the population. The
Department of Public Health has a fully organised central and local
establishment. The sanitation of the towns is efficiently supervised. A
quarantine service is maintained. Before the British occupation there were no
Government hospitals or dispensaries for the civilian population; at the present
time the Government maintains 15 hospitals, 21 dispensaries, 8 clinics and 5
epidemic posts. In addition, a great deal of hospital work and some sanitary
work is admirably carried out in Jerusalem and certain other towns by Zionist or
by religious organisations.
Progress is being made in combating the two
maladies that are most prevalent in Palestine--malaria and eye-disease. An
expert Commission is engaged in elaborating definite plans for the drainage of
swamps, and for other measures for the extirpation of malaria. The oiling, and
in some cases the closing, of wells and cisterns is being constantly effected in
the towns and villages; a total of over 50,000 have been registered and are
regularly being dealt with. Villages suffering from malaria are visited
fortnightly by Anti-malarial Sub-Inspectors and free quinine is provided. During
the autumn of 1920 six to seven thousand villagers were so treated every
month.
The schools are medically inspected. Special measures are taken
for the treatment of trachoma, by which no fewer than 60% to 95%, according to
locality, of the school children of Palestine are affected. A Travelling
Ophthalmic Hospital treats numbers of sufferers from eve-diseases, both adults
and children. With the exception of these maladies, the health of Palestine has
been remarkably good and epidemic diseases have been kept well under
control.
Public Works.--It is in the Department of Public Works
that lack of capital sums available for expenditure has been chiefly felt.
Certain main roads have been reconstructed or are now in process of
reconstruction. A number of Government buildings have been put into good repair.
The jetty at Haifa, which serves for the loading and unloading of goods in the
absence of a harbour, has been considerably extended. A few minor works have
been carried out. For the rest, the many improvements which the country needs,
and which would tend to increase its prosperity and its revenue, have had to be
postponed until the Mandate is promulgated and a loan can be issued. Meantime
the organisation of the Department of Public Works is being placed on a
satisfactory footing, to be in readiness for any larger tasks which the future
may bring.
The Stores Department has been reorganised in an efficient
manner.
Post Office.--The Post Office, which also administers the
telegraphs and telephones, shows a steady increase in efficiency Several new
post offices have been opened; the postal service has been improved; a number of
the more important telegraph and telephone routes have been rebuilt or
strengthened; a telephone system is in its infancy, but already has 700
subscribers and 22 public call offices. The finances of the Post Office show a
small
credit balance.
Immigration and Travel.--Since the ports
of Palestine were opened to immigration, with certain restrictions, in August,
1920, slightly over 10,000 immigrants have arrived in the country. These were
almost all Jewish; only 315 non-Jewish immigrants were registered. Of the Jews,
8084 came under the auspices of the Zionist Organisation and 1815 came
independently.
During the disturbances in Jaffa and the neighbourhood
early in May this year, all immigration was suspended for the time being. But in
any event it was becoming increasingly evident that the flow of immigrants was
greater than the country was able to absorb. The postponement of works of
development, due to the causes specified earlier in this Report, restricted the
openings for employment far more narrowly than had been anticipated. New
regulations were consequently drawn up.
To obtain a visa to enter
Palestine a person must now be able to show that he belongs to one or other of
the following categories:--
(1) Persons of independent means who intend to take
up permanent residence in Palestine.
(2) Members of professions who
intend to follow their calling.
(3) Wives, children and other persons
wholly dependent on residents in Palestine.
(4) Persons who have a
definite prospect of employment with specified employers or
enterprises.
(5) Persons of religious occupation, including the class of
Jews who have come to Palestine in recent years from religious motives and
who can show that they have means of maintenance here.
(6) Travellers who
do not propose to remain in Palestine longer than three months.
(7)
Returning residents.
In the month of July
the ports have again been opened and persons belonging to those classes have
been arriving. There have been admitted also some hundreds of immigrants not
falling within them, but who had obtained visas for Palestine before the
suspension of immigration in May, had left their homes and would suffer serious
hardship if they were not allowed to proceed.
Partly among the immigrants
and partly among the pre-war residents of Palestine, a small group of Communists
was formed. This group sought to become an agency of Bolshevist propaganda. It
aroused against itself an almost universal hostility and attracted an attention
quite out of proportion to its numbers. As many as possible of this group have
been identified: 15 who are aliens have been deported from the country, and
eight who had acquired Ottoman nationality, together with five aliens, have been
bound over to be of good behaviour.
Measures are being adopted to
encourage the tourist traffic; the results will, however, only gradually become
apparent.
Statistics.--A professional statistician was invited to
Palestine for a period of six months and has been engaged in placing the
statistics of the various departments of the Administration on a sound
basis.
Municipalities.--The Municipal Councils, which before the
war were elective, though on a very restricted franchise, have since the
occupation been nominated. Steps are now being taken to re-establish the
elective principle.
A Commission, composed of officers of the Government
and of the mayors and leading councillors of the towns, has made an exhaustive
enquiry into the existing sources of municipal revenue and methods of
collection. It discovered many matters needing reform and recommended a number
of changes: these are gradually being put into effect.
An Ordinance
permits the establishment of elective councils in small towns, in large
villages, or in suburbs of a distinct character within a municipality for the
local government of which no special provision has been made by the Ottoman
Law.
A Town Planning Ordinance has been enacted in order to prevent the
continuance of the chaotic methods of building new streets and quarters which
had hitherto prevailed in Palestine. Plans have been prepared for Jerusalem and
Haifa, and are in process of preparation for other towns.
With a view to
preserving the charm and preventing the vulgarisation of the country, the
placarding of advertisements has been prohibited throughout Palestine, except,
in towns, in places allotted for the purpose by municipalities, in the railway
stations and on business premises for the purposes of the business conducted
there.
Jerusalem before the occupation had been wholly dependent for
water upon rain-water stored in cisterns. The Army brought a new supply by pipe,
but this supply has already been found insufficient. The Government is bringing
into use some ancient reservoirs of vast capacity, named the Pools of Solomon,
but of unknown date, possibly Herodian, situated eight miles away. By their
employment it will be possible to furnish the city with an abundant supply of
pure water at moderate cost.
The Pro-Jerusalem Society organised an
admirable exhibition of local arts and crafts, which revealed the presence in
Palestine of a number of artists and craftsmen of marked talent. There is reason
to hope that Palestine may gradually become a centre of artistic production,
rivalling perhaps in time the famous emporiums of the East of past
generations.
X.--TRANS-JORDANIA.
Included in the area of the Palestine Mandate is the territory of
Trans-Jordania. It is bounded on the north by the frontier of Syria, placed
under the mandate of France; on the south by the kingdom of the Hejaz; and on
the west by the line of the Jordan and the Dead Sea; while on the east it
stretches into the desert and ends--the boundary is not yet defined--where
Mesopotamia begins. Trans-Jordania has a population of probably 350,000 people.
It contains a few small towns and large areas of fertile land, producing
excellent wheat and barley. The people are partly settled townsmen and
agriculturists, partly wandering Bedouin; the latter, however, cultivate areas,
more or less fixed, during certain seasons of the year.
When Palestine
west of the Jordan was occupied by the British Army and placed under a British
military administration, over Trans-Jordania and a large part of Syria there was
established an Arab administration, with its capital at Damascus. The ruler was
His Highness the Emir Feisal, the third son of H.M. King Hussein, the King of
the Hejaz. When Damascus was occupied by French troops in July, 1920, and the
Emir Feisal withdrew, it was necessary to adopt fresh measures in
Trans-Jordania. I proceeded to the central town of Salt on August 20th, and, at
an assembly of notables and sheikhs of the district, announced that His
Majesty's Government favoured the establishment of a system of local self-
government, assisted by a small number of British officers as
advisers.
Local councils were accordingly formed in the various
districts, the people not being ready to unite in any form of combined
government for Trans-Jordania as a whole. Five British officers were appointed
to assist the councils and their officials and to aid in organising a
gendarmerie. No British troops were stationed in the district.
It cannot
be claimed that the system of administration so set up was satisfactory. The
authority of the councils was flouted by large sections of the population; taxes
were collected with difficulty; the funds at the disposal of the local
authorities were insufficient to ensure the maintenance of order, still less to
defray the cost of roads, schools, hospitals, or other improvements for the
benefit of the people.
Some progress was beginning, however, to be made
when, in the month of November, H.H. the Emir Abdallah, the second son of King
Hussein, arrived from the Hejaz at Ma'an, to the south of Trans-Jordania. His
purpose was declared to be to restore a Shereefian government in Damascus. His
arrival caused much disturbance in the minds of the people of Trans- Jordania
and further impaired the authority, already slight, of the local authorities.
From Ma'an the Emir proceeded on March 2nd to Amman, a town on the Hejaz Railway
to the east of Salt, and there established his headquarters.
The
Secretary of State for the Colonies being in Palestine in the month of March, a
Conference was held with the Emir, who came to Jerusalem for the purpose. An
arrangement was reached by which the Emir undertook to carry on the
administration of Trans-Jordania, under the general direction of the High
Commissioner of Palestine, as representing the Mandatory Power, and with the
assistance of a small number of British officers, for a period of six months
pending a definite settlement. Order and public security were to be maintained
and there were to be no attacks against Syria. Since that time a close
connection has continued between Palestine and Trans-Jordania. British
representatives remain in the principal centres.
I paid a visit to Amman
on April 18th as the guest of the Emir and explained in an address to the
sheikhs and notables the arrangement that had been made. The Emir came to
Palestine again in the month of May. The political and technical officers of the
Palestine Administration have made frequent visits to Trans-Jordania and have
assisted the local officials with their advice. The difficulties of local
finance have continued. Order and security are still lacking. A grant-in-aid of
£180,000 was, however, voted by Parliament in July for the assistance of
Trans-Jordania, and it is hoped that this assistance will enable an effective
reserve force of gendarmerie to be established, revenue to be collected and the
government of the district to be placed on a sounder footing. The district
possesses great agricultural wealth, and the local revenue, if it were
collected, would fully meet the local expenditure.
The political and
economic connection between Palestine and Trans-Jordania is very close. Trade is
active; communications are constant; disturbance in the one area cannot fail to
be of detriment to the other; the prevention of raids from east of the Jordan
and the preservation of order there are of no small importance to the population
on the west. Syria, too, has a close interest in the security of her southern
border. If Trans-Jordania became a prey to anarchy, not only her own
inhabitants, but also the neighbouring territories, would be sufferers. All of
them look to the Mandatory Power to prevent an eventuality which, in default of
her influence and authority, might prove not remote.
CONCLUSION.
I cannot end this Report without expressing my very sincere thanks
to the members of my staff for the work of an arduous year.
British and
Palestinian, at headquarters and in the districts, in the administrative
departments, in the judiciary, in the technical services, in the police--the
officials of the Government have displayed a high degree of loyalty and zeal.
Individual exceptions there have been, no doubt. In so new a service a uniformly
satisfactory standard is not to be expected. But during a time of activity and
change, under conditions often of difficulty
and sometimes of strain, the
staff as a whole have shown a sense of duty, an industry and a loyalty that
redound both to their own credit and to the country's advantage.
The
British military authorities have rendered ready assistance whenever it was
desired. Whether at General Headquarters at Cairo, or at the Divisional
Headquarters in Palestine, or at the local stations, the Commanding Officers
have constantly maintained a close and friendly co-operation with the
Administration. They have dealt promptly and efficiently with all matters of
joint concern. To them also I would convey my cordial thanks.
HERBERT SAMUEL,
High
Commissioner
and Commander-in-Chief.
30th July,
1921.