Estimates of the Palestinian Refugee flight of 1948

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. This article lists the various interim and final United Nations estimates for the number of Palestinian people who fled or were expelled from the area that became part of Israel after the 1948 Palestine war. It also provides other interim and final estimates for the number of Palestinian refugees for that period.

UN estimates

Estimate of number of people who left or fled the area captured by Israel

Final estimates

Interim estimates

Estimates of total number of people who registered as refugees

Other estimates of flight or refugees

Final

  • 550,000 − 600,000 "Israeli government estimate" according to Efraim Karsh[6]
  • 539,000 According to Walter Pinner [13]
  • 583,121 – 609,071 According to Efraim Karsh[6]
  • 600,000 According to Joseph B. Schechtman[14]
  • 630,000 According to Yoram Ettinger[15]
  • 700,000± According to Benny Morris in his book "The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited"[16]
  • 720,000 According to Irving Howe and Carl Gershman[17][better source needed]
  • 800,000 According to Elia Zureik (750,000 – 800,000 "Private Palestinian sources", 800,000 – 900,000 "Palestinian figures" , 850,000 "United Nations estimate")[citation needed]
  • 800,000± According to Baha Abushaqra[18]
  • 800,000 – Walter Eytan, in a private letter of 1950 referred to the UNRWA registration in 1949 as "meticulous", but thought that "the real number was close to 800,000".[19]
  • 804,767 According to Salman Abu-Sitta[20][note 8]
  • 900,000 According to Abdel-Azim Hammad[21]
  • 935,000 According to Salman Abu-Sitta[22]

Interim

  • 200,000+ by May, 1948 according to Samuel Katz (in 1973)[23][24]
  • 300,000± by May, 1948 according to Noam Chomsky (in 2002)[25]
  • 380,000± by 15 May 1948 according to Ilan Pappe (in 1994)[26]
  • 335,000 by 5 June 1948 according to Yossef Weitz of the Jewish National Fund.[27]
  • 391,000 by 1 June 1948 according to a report by the Haganah's intelligence service (239,000 from the UN-ascribed Jewish state.)[6]
  • 200,000 by the mid-June 1948 according to Emil Ghoury.[6]
  • 300,000± by late July according to W. De St. Aubin, delegate of the League of Red Cross Societies to the Middle East.[6]
  • 631,967 by October "the Arab League estimate" according to Efraim Karsh.[6]
  • 460,000 by late October, according to an Israeli study led by Y. Weitz and E. Danin & Z. Lifshitz.[6]

See also

Footnotes

  1. This estimate by the UN Conciliation Commission has been repeated in a number of other UN documents.[2][3] The number was calculated by estimating the number of non-Jews living within the borders of Israel at the end of 1947 and subtracting the number of remaining non-Jews living within the borders of Israel after the war. It does not include an estimated 25,000 border-line refugees – refugees who lost their livelihood because their village land was located in Israeli-occupied territory, while the village house remained in Arab territory. The figure was later revised down by the UN Concilation Commission to 711,000.[4]
  2. The Committee believed the estimate to be "as accurate as circumstances permit", and attributed the higher number on relief to, among other things, "duplication of ration cards, addition of persons who have been displaced from area other than Israel-held areas and of persons who, although not displaced, are destitute."
  3. Figure refers only to people registered as refugees.
  4. Figure refers only to people registered as refugees.
  5. Figure inflated because "all births are eagerly announced, the deaths wherever possible are passed over in silence, and as the birthrate is high in any case, a net addition of 30,000 names a year".[11] The figure includes descendants of the Palestinian refugees born after the Palestinian exodus up to June 1951.
  6. Figure does not match official UNRWA estimates submitted to the UN.
  7. Figure later revised down to 876,000 by UNRWA after "many false and duplicate registrations weeded out."[11]
  8. Figure calculated by using the official village statistics of 1944/1945 and upgraded to 1948/1949 by taking a net natural increase of 3.8% for four years. The number of non-Jews remaining in Israel was then deducted from the total count.

References

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  7. U.N. General Assembly Official Records, 3rd Session, Supplement No. 11, Document A/648
  8. UN General Assembly Official Records, 3rd Session Supplement No. 11A, Document A/689
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  19. Morris Birth Revisted, p602: "The director general of the Israel Foreign Ministry, Walter Eytan, in a private letter in late 1950 referred to the UNRWA registration in 1949 of 726,000 as ‘meticulous’ but thought that ‘the real number was close to 800,000’."
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