Yosef Weitz

Yosef Weitz (Hebrew: יוסף ויץ; 1890–1972) was the director of the Land and Afforestation Department of the Jewish National Fund (JNF). From the 1930s, Weitz played a major role in acquiring land for the Yishuv, the pre-state Jewish community in Palestine.

Biography

Yosef Weitz was born in Boremel, Volhynia in the Russian Empire in 1890. In 1908, he immigrated to Palestine with his sister, Miriam, and found employment as a watchman and an agricultural laborer in Rehovot. In 1911, he was one of the organizers of the Union of Agricultural Laborers in Eretz Yisrael.[1] Weitz married Ruhama and their eldest son, Ra'anan, was born in 1913. Two years later, in 1915, Yosef Weitz was appointed foreman of the Sejera training farm (now Ilaniya) in the Lower Galilee. Weitz helped to found Yavniel, one of the first pioneer colonies in the Galilee, and later, the Beit Hakerem neighborhood in Jerusalem. His son Yehiam (Hebrew for "long live the nation"), born in October 1918, was killed in a Palmach operation on June 16, 1946. Kibbutz Yehi'am was established in his memory.[2] Sharon Weitz, another son, followed in his father's footsteps and later took over as director of the Forestry Department.[3]

Both the Ma'ale Yosef Regional Council and Moshav Talmei Yosef are named in the memory of Yosef Weitz.

Forestry

As head of the JNF Forestry Department, Weitz put his visions of Israel as a forested country into practice. He was spurred on by David Ben-Gurion, who told Weitz he wanted a billion trees planted within a decade. In 1949, he proposed a division of labor between the Israeli government and the JNF. The government would engage in applied research in planting techniques, especially in arid areas, and the development of a timber industry. It would also establish nurseries. The JNF would improve indigenous forests, work in afforestation of hilly regions, stop the encroachment of sand dunes and plant windbreakers. Weitz saw plant nurseries and afforestation as a vital source of employment for the masses of new immigrants arriving in the early days of the state. He was guided by the belief that developing a work ethic was imperative for acculturation.[3]

In 1966, Yatir Forest in the Negev was planted at Weitz's urging. He described the project as "rolling back the desert with trees, creating a security zone for the people of Israel." [4] Named for the biblical town of Yatir, it is now Israel's largest planted forest.[5]

Weitz’s never formally studied forestry but his autodidactic perspective was reflective of the period. The forestry strategy he crafted emphasized the economic utility of forests and the importance of the Aleppo pine as the hardiest of local species. As a result, Israel’s forests for its first twenty years were largely monocultures which would soon suffer serious losses due to natural pests. Weitz frequently clashed with the nascent conservation movement in Israel which found the industrial approach to tree planting that the Jewish National Fund adopted to be objectionable. Including Pine tree plantations on Mount Gilboa which threatened an endemic plant Iris haynei (also known as Iris Gilboa).[6] Today, many of Weitz’s ideas have been replaced with more sustainable approaches to foresting.

Views regarding Palestinian Arabs

Weitz was an advocate of population transfer. On June 22, 1941 he wrote in his diary: "The land of Israel is not small at all, if only the Arabs were removed, and its frontiers enlarged a little, to the north up to the Litani, and to the east including the Golan Heights...with the Arabs transferred to northern Syria and Iraq...Today we have no other alternative...We will not live here with Arabs."[7]

According to Ilan Pappé, passages in Weitz's diary in April 1948 show his support for the transfer of Arabs during the 1948 war:[8] "I have drawn up a list of Arab villages which in my opinion must be cleared out in order to complete Jewish regions. I have also drawn up a list of land disputes that must be settled by military means."[9]

According to Efraim Karsh, Weitz spoke of establishing a transfer committee, but Ben-Gurion rejected the idea, and no such committee was ever established.[10] Nevertheless, Nur Masalha[11] and Benny Morris[12] claim an unofficial Transfer Committee was established in May 1948 composed of Weitz, Danin and Sasson.

Later in life, Weitz's views appear to be more conciliatory towards the neighboring Arabs and he is reported to have refused to attend ceremonies dedicated to the renewed Jewish settlement of the West Bank after the 1967 war.

Published works

References

  1. Encyclopedia Judaica, "Weitz, Joseph," vol. 16, p. 421, Keter, 1972
  2. Tom Segev, "1967, Israel, the War, and the Year that Transformed the Middle East",
  3. 1 2 Pollution in a promised land: An environmental history of Israel, Alon Tal, p. 89
  4. http://bustan.org/TIMELINE%20-%20%20WEB.pdf[]
  5. Jewish National Fund (February 22, 2010). "Beersheba River Park with KKL-JNF on World Environment Day". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 2010-06-11.
  6. Alon TalAll the Trees of the Forest: Israel's Woodlands from the Bible to the Present, p. 260, at Google Books
  7. Masalha, 1992, p. 134-135
  8. Pappe, 2006, p. 61-64
  9. Weitz Diary, 18 April 1948, p. 2358, Central Zionist Archives, Jerusalem
  10. "Benny Morris and the Reign of Error" http://www.meforum.org/article/466
  11. Masalha, 1992, "Expulsion of the Palestinians", p. 188
  12. B. Morris, "The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited", 2004, p. 312

Bibliography

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