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<h1>WITH THE TURKS IN PALESTINE</h1>
<h2>BY ALEXANDER AARONSOHN</h2>
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<center>TO MY MOTHER</center>
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<center>WHO LIVED AND FOUGHT AND DIED FOR A REGENERATED
PALESTINE</center>
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<h2>INTRODUCTION</h2>
<p>While Belgium is bleeding and hoping, while Poland suffers and
dreams of liberation, while Serbia is waiting for redemption, there
is a little country the soul of which is torn to pieces—a
little country that is so remote, so remote that her ardent sighs
cannot be heard.</p>
<p>It is the country of perpetual sacrifice, the country that saw
Abraham build the altar upon which he was ready to immolate his
only son, the country that Moses saw from a distance, stretching in
beauty and loveliness,—a land of promise never to be
attained,—the country that gave the world its symbols of soul
and spirit. Palestine!</p>
<p>No war correspondents, no Red Cross or relief committees have
gone to Palestine, because no actual fighting has taken place
there, and yet hundreds of thousands are suffering there that worst
of agonies, the agony of the spirit.</p>
<p>Those who have devoted their lives to show the world that
Palestine can be made again a country flowing with milk and honey,
those who have dreamed of reviving the spirit of the prophets and
the great teachers, are hanged and persecuted and exiled, their
dreams shattered, their holy places profaned, their work ruined.
Cut off from the world, with no bread to sustain the starving body,
the heavy boot of a barbarian soldiery trampling their very soul,
the dreamers of Palestine refuse to surrender, and amidst the clash
of guns and swords they are battling for the spirit with the
weapons of the spirit.</p>
<p>The time has not yet come to write the record of these battles,
nor even to attempt to render justice to the sublime heroes of
Palestine. This book is merely the story of some of the personal
experiences of one who has done less and suffered less than
thousands of his comrades.</p>
<center>ALEXANDER AARONSOHN</center>
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<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
<center>ZICRON-JACOB</center>
<p>Thirty-five years ago, the impulse which has since been
organized as the Zionist Movement led my parents to leave their
homes in Roumania and emigrate to Palestine, where they joined a
number of other Jewish pioneers in founding Zicron-Jacob—a
little village lying just south of Mount Carmel, in that fertile
coastal region close to the ancient Plains of Armageddon.</p>
<p>Here I was born; my childhood was passed here in the peace and
harmony of this little agricultural community, with its whitewashed
stone houses huddled close together for protection against the
native Arabs who, at first, menaced the life of the new colony. The
village was far more suggestive of Switzerland than of the
conventional slovenly villages of the East, mud-built and filthy;
for while it was the purpose of our people, in returning to the
Holy Land, to foster the Jewish language and the social conditions
of the Old Testament as far as possible, there was nothing
retrograde in this movement. No time was lost in introducing
progressive methods of agriculture, and the climatological
experiments of other countries were observed and made use of in
developing the ample natural resources of the land.</p>
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<p>Eucalyptus, imported from Australia, soon gave the shade of its
cool, healthful foliage where previously no trees had grown. In the
course of time dry farming (which some people consider a recent
discovery, but which in reality is as old as the Old Testament) was
introduced and extended with American agricultural implements;
blooded cattle were imported, and poultry-raising on a large scale
was undertaken with the aid of incubators—to the disgust of
the Arabs, who look on such usurpation of the hen's functions as
against nature and sinful. Our people replaced the wretched native
trails with good roads, bordered by hedges of thorny acacia which,
in season, were covered with downy little yellow blossoms that
smelled sweeter than honey when the sun was on them.</p>
<p>More important than all these, a communistic village government
was established, in which both sexes enjoyed equal rights,
including that of suffrage—strange as this may seem to
persons who (when they think of the matter at all) form vague
conceptions of all the women-folk of Palestine as shut up in
harems.</p>
<p>A short experience with Turkish courts and Turkish justice
taught our people that they would have to establish a legal system
of their own; two collaborating judges were therefore
appointed—one to interpret the Mosaic law, another to temper
it with modern jurisprudence. All Jewish disputes were settled by
this court. Its effectiveness may be judged by the fact that the
Arabs, weary of Turkish venality,—as open and shameless as
anywhere in the world,—began in increasing numbers to bring
their difficulties to our tribunal. Jews are law-abiding people,
and life in those Palestine colonies tended to bring out the
fraternal qualities of our race; but it is interesting to note that
in over thirty years not one Jewish criminal case was reported from
forty-five villages.</p>
<p>Zicron-Jacob was a little town of one hundred and thirty
"fires"—so we call it—when, in 1910, on the advice of
my elder brother, who was head of the Jewish Experiment Station at
Athlit, an ancient town of the Crusaders, I left for America to
enter the service of the United States in the Department of
Agriculture. A few days after reaching this country I took out my
first naturalization papers and proceeded to Washington, where I
became part of that great government service whose beneficent
activity is too little known by Americans. Here I remained until
June, 1913, when I returned to Palestine with the object of taking
motion-pictures and stereopticon views. These I intended to use in
a lecturing tour for spreading the Zionist propaganda in the United
States.</p>
<p>During the years of my residence in America, I was able to
appreciate and judge in their right value the beauty and
inspiration of the life which my people led in the Holy Land. From
a distance, too, I saw better the need for organization among our
communities, and I determined to build up a fraternal union of the
young Jewish men all over the country.</p>
<p>Two months after my return from America, an event occurred which
gave impetus to these projects. The physician of our village, an
old man who had devoted his entire life to serving and healing the
people of Palestine, without distinction of race or religion, was
driving home one evening in his carriage from a neighboring
settlement. With him was a young girl of sixteen. In a deserted
place they were set upon by four armed Arabs, who beat the old man
to unconsciousness as he tried, in vain, to defend the girl from
the terrible fate which awaited her.</p>
<p>Night came on. Alarmed by the absence of the physician, we young
men rode out in search of him. We finally discovered what had
happened; and then and there, in the serene moonlight of that
Eastern night, with tragedy close at hand, I made my comrades take
oath on the honor of their sisters to organize themselves into a
strong society for the defense of the life and honor of our
villagers and of our people at large.</p>
<p>These details are, perhaps, useful for the better understanding
of the disturbances that came thick and fast when in August, 1914,
the war-madness broke out among the nations of Europe. The
repercussion was at once felt even in our remote corner of the
earth. Soon after the German invasion of Belgium the Turkish army
was mobilized and all citizens of the Empire between nineteen and
forty-five years were called to the colors. As the Young Turk
Constitution of 1909 provided that all Christians and Jews were
equally liable to military service, our young men knew that they,
too, would be called upon to make the common sacrifice. For the
most part, they were not unwilling to sustain the Turkish
Government. While the Constitution imposed on them the burden of
militarism, it had brought with it the compensation of freedom of
religion and equal rights; and we could not forget that for six
hundred years Turkey has held her gates wide open to the Jews who
fled from the Spanish Inquisition and similar ministrations of
other civilized countries.</p>
<p>Of course, we never dreamed that Turkey would do anything but
remain neutral. If we had had any idea of the turn things were
ultimately to take, we should have given a different greeting to
the <i>mouchtar</i>, or sheriff, who came to our village with the
list of mobilizable men to be called on for service. My own
position was a curious one. I had every intention of completing the
process of becoming an American citizen, which I had begun by
taking out "first papers." In the eyes of the law, however, I was
still a Turkish subject, with no claim to American protection. This
was sneeringly pointed out to me by the American Consul at Haifa,
who happens to be a German; so there was no other course but to
surrender myself to the Turkish Government.</p>
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