Source: CIE
As part of a twenty-six day visit to the United States (May 1951), Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion spends the day touring some of the projects of the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA). The main purpose of the Prime Minister’s trip, the first by an Israeli premier to the United States, is the launch of “The Development Corporation of Israel” (known today as “Israel Bonds”). While President Truman meets with Ben-Gurion on two occasions on May 4th and May 8th, the trip is not an official state visit.
The photo shows members of the Knoxville Jewish community meeting Ben-Gurion on May 6, 1951. Photo Source: Breman Museum
Upon his arrival in New York on May 3rd, the Prime Minister, who would miss Israel’s third Independence Day festivities, declares, “I bring the American people the warm greetings of the people of Israel and the gratitude for the unfailing sympathy of America with our efforts for independence and regeneration. We humbly believe that by constructive work and the pursuit of liberty and peace we shall vindicate the trust placed in our future.”
On Sunday May 6, Ben-Gurion arrives in Knoxville, Tennessee for his two day tour of TVA dams and facilities. TVA is a New Deal project created in 1933 by an act of Congress after President Franklin D. Roosevelt asks them to create “a corporation clothed with the power of government but possessed of the flexibility and initiative of a private enterprise.” TVA operates in seven states and is chiefly concerned with flood control, hydro-electricity, reforestation, fertilizer production, agricultural education, and river navigation. Ben-Gurion is interested in seeing how TVA projects may benefit the young State of Israel. Ben-Gurion is impressed with the scope of the projects telling a Los Angeles audience a few weeks later that it is, “one of the greatest construction works of our time…I hope that we shall be able to duplicate it, and some of your other great works of that type. We need such things desperately.”
As early as 1944, plans for a TVA modeled project for water in the Jordan Valley is proposed by American conservationist Walter Lowdermilk which the World Zionist Organization has adapted into plans by TVA engineer James B Hayes. Soon after Israel’s creation, in August 1949, the United Nations’ Palestine Conciliation Commission establishes a special Economic Survey Commission to investigate the economic problems involved in finding homes for Arab refugees. The Commission is headed by Gordon Clapp, Chairman of the TVA and models much of its recommendations on TVA successes. Its final report calls for the creation of temporary public-works programs to provide employment for Arab refugees. In addition to providing employment, the Commission believes that these projects, “will improve the productivity of the countries where the refugees now reside and can be the start of larger developments.” As the Cold War emerges and American foreign policy interests shift towards preventing the infiltration of the Soviet Union into the region, the recommendations of the Economic Survey Commission are never implemented.
Haye’s plan, as well as a subsequent report by the TVA commissioned by President Eisenhower in 1955, creates proposals for water sharing and development along the Jordan River by Israel and Jordan. The hope is that this project will lead to economic success in resettling refugees in Jordan and that economic cooperation will result in peace treaties with Israel and her neighbors.
In 1959, the Arab League officially rejects the approach taken by the UN of resettlement for the Palestinian refugees being tied to economic development projects. Demanding only refugee repatriation into Israel, the Arab league also states that, “the questions of economic development inherently pertain to the sovereignty of the Arab States, and that they have no relation whatever to the problem of the refugees and their future.”
Israel implements aspects of the TVA plans to create the National Water Carrier which opens in 1964.