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Tom Segev (born March 1, 1945 in Jerusalem) is an Israeli journalist, and historian.1
BiographySegev's parents fled Nazi Germany in 1935 and settled in Palestine. His father was killed in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. Segev studied history and political science at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and earned a doctorate in history from Boston University in the 1970s.2 Segev is a columnist for Ha'aretz, an Israeli liberal newspaper, and has published several books. He is considered a New Historian, a group of left-wing Israeli historians who have begun a reexamination of the history of Israel and Zionism. In 2007, Segev was Helen Diller Family visiting professor at the Berkeley campus of the University of California.3 Segev was also a visiting professor of history at Northeastern University where he taught a seminar on the Holocaust. Main ideasIn the book, The Seventh Million: Israelis and the Holocaust, Segev claims that the Jews in Palestine during World War II were more interested in their own state than in saving Jews in Europe. The book is highly critical of David Ben-Gurion, and created a strong reaction in Israel when it was published. In One Palestine, Complete: Jews and Arabs Under the British Mandate, Segev contends that violent conflict between Jewish and Arab nationalism was inevitable as the two groups could not co-exist given their contrary aims. Segev additionally argues that the British were pro-Zionist (a possibility often dismissed by Israeli historians), and that British support for Zionism stemmed from a misguided—"and anti-Semitic—belief that Jews turned the wheels of history."4 Segev's works are often criticized by both right-wing Israelis for being too 'pro-Palestinian' and by Palestinian Arabs, who feel his works are too pro-Israel.5 In his latest book, 1967, on the Six-Day War, Segev contends that Israel considered deporting local Arabs to Iraq when the war was over as part of a "population transfer." The plan was never implemented. Books
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