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Arab News
Political Zionism’s aims were always clear — to establish, in
all of Palestine, a Jewish state. There were exceptions of course,
cultural Zionists who dreamed of a religious, cultural and spiritual
home in Palestine alongside the indigenous population. But for the
mainstream the objective, and the way to that objective, was clear
— Palestine for Palestinians was to be transformed into Israel for
Jews.
The strategy for achieving that objective was breathtaking. Above
all, the Zionists knew how to wait. “The Negev will not run
away,” said Chaim Weitzman and, as he well knew, nor would the
rest of Palestine. But wait for what? For what Ben-Gurion called a
“revolutionary situation,” meaning a situation in which the
takeover of Palestine could be completed. The first of these
“revolutionary situations” presented itself in 1947 and 1948.
For Palestinians, like so many times before and after, the UN
partitioning of their homeland was a no-win situation. Like the
Palestinian peasant farmer early in the century, confronted with
settlers waving legal documents and demanding his eviction,
Palestinians in 1947 simply could not win. If they resisted they
lost their land, and if they didn’t resist they also lost their
land. In any event, Palestinian society was shattered by the Zionist
onslaught, 750,000 Palestinians were expelled and 78 percent of
historic Palestine became Israel.
Since then, Zionism, now institutionalized as the state of
Israel, has continued its policy of discriminating against all
non-Jews both within and outside its borders, and of ethnically
cleansing Palestinians from Palestine. To this day, the state of
Israel, which openly claims to be a state of Jews only, overtly and
covertly discriminates against non-Jews.
So there’s no nice way of saying it: Zionism is a
discriminatory ideology and Israel, the political expression of that
ideology, is a discriminatory state. In any other situation, in any
other time and place, and with any other people, both would be
termed racist. But not, it seems, when applied to here and now and
to Israelis and Jews. So why is it that individuals and
organizations who found it a simple enough matter to apply the label
of racism to apartheid and South Africa find it virtually impossible
to apply the same label to Zionism and Israel?
The answer is because white South Africans and Afrikaners are not
Jews. White South Africans and Afrikaners have their own history of
suffering, but this history has not been as protracted nor as
intense as Jewish suffering, nor has it become so central to Western
emotional and spiritual life. White South African and Afrikaner
culture, religion and mythology, unlike Jewish culture, religion and
mythology, have not provided the bedrock for much of Western
culture, religion and mythology. And white South Africans and
Afrikaners are not spread so widely, or so influentially, as Jews.
It has also been argued that because of the particularities of
Jewish history and suffering, Jews may do what no one else is
allowed to do, meaning that, unlike anyone else, Jews are entitled
to discriminate. It has therefore also been argued that even taking
into account all the attendant injustices, the creation of a Jewish
state was, at the time, necessary.
But all this is of little use to Palestinians, the victims of
Zionism. Whether the world chooses to see Zionism and Israel as
discriminatory, and whether we choose to label Zionism and Israel as
racist, or even whether we decide that the creation of the state of
Israel was a necessary evil, the suffering of Palestinians at the
hands of Zionism and Israel remains undiminished.
If 1948 was the first of Ben-Gurion’s “revolutionary
situations,” another followed in 1967 when, under cover of the
June War, Israel initiated the second phase of its conquest of
Palestine. Since then the entire solidarity movement has united
around the slogan “end the occupation.”
This slogan, after over 35 years, so cosy and comfortable, seems
like it has been with us forever and will be with us forever. To
move on seems very dangerous indeed. For many, it has provided hope
in an often hopeless situation. But this hope may be delusory since
it can be argued that there is no “occupation” and there never
was an occupation. If there were an occupation, and if the Israelis
had ever the slightest intention of ending it, they would have done
so years ago. The “occupation” is, in reality, the final stage
in the 120 year-old Zionist conquest of Palestine.
So the slogan “end the occupation” could not only be a
diversion from the real issues but also a smokescreen for the true
intentions of the oppressor. Palestinians and their supporters can
comfort themselves that by working to end the occupation, they are
working towards justice, whilst Israelis and their supporters can
comfort themselves that whilst everyone is busy ending the
occupation, they can get on with the real business of conquering
Palestine.
But many Jews and Israelis do want to end the occupation. For
some, still committed Zionists, ending the occupation and fixing
Israel’s borders along 1967 lines, means legitimizing and securing
the ill-gotten gains of 1948. For others, Jews of conscience, the
slogan conceals a deep and abiding wish for the return of the
beautiful Israel of their childhood. That Israel and Zionism never
were beautiful, and never can be beautiful, is irrelevant.
“End the occupation,” whether on banners and flyers, bellowed
through loud hailers or repeated in a million e-mails has, so far,
taken us nowhere. Surely something is wrong. Perhaps this something
is that we’re barking up the wrong tree — that it’s not the
occupation that’s the problem, but the very nature of Israel
itself, of which the occupation is a symptom.
The road map is the latest stage in Zionism’s eternal good
cop/bad cop routine. Sharon, the butcher, has softened up the
victim. All he has to do is to sign and the pain will go away.
Whether to sign or not is for Palestinians to decide, but before
they do, they may note that the first condition of this road map is
the need for the Palestinian Authority to reform itself. Well,
perhaps it should, but what about Israel? Should not Israel also
reform itself? Should we not now call on the state of Israel to
begin a process of transforming itself from being an ethnic state
for Jews to becoming a democratic state for all its citizens?
What’s done is done and, to some degree, cannot be undone, but
would not the pain of exile and dispossession be that much less if
it were no longer justified by the legal acceptance of Israel’s
right to discriminate? Would not solutions to the problems caused by
past injustice be more easily found if that injustice did not remain
enshrined in law and custom?
And within Israel itself, would not the daily discriminations and
humiliations endured by its own Palestinian citizens be much
diminished if Israel was their state as well? And the agony of
occupation, would it not be brought to an end that much more quickly
and painlessly when the notion of a land for Jews only ceased to be
recognized in law? And finally, the right of return which, as many
of us are only now beginning to understand, and so many more of us
need to understand, can neither be relinquished nor withheld: Would
not the ending of Israel’s ethnic basis provide new opportunities
for generosity and compromise in the implementation of that sacred
right? For those Jews and Israelis who claim to want peace and
acceptance in the region, they must know that states that define
themselves along ethnic lines are probably not states with which
most Israelis, Jews or anyone else would wish to associate
themselves, and that this type of ethnic state is utterly
unacceptable in the modern world.
Is not the ethnic basis of Israel a, if not the, major obstacle
to the achievement of a just peace? Imagine how many more options
would be open if there was not the insane need to maintain
Israel’s exclusive Jewish identity. Even with the terrible
injustice of its establishment, a thriving Jewish community is now
present in Palestine. There is a new nation in the Middle East. Now
is the time, whilst acknowledging and rectifying the crimes of the
past, to recognize the realities of the present and so move on to a
new and just future. But can this take place whilst the basic
injustice remains enshrined in the very being of the state of
Israel?
Such a move could, but need not, preclude two states in
Palestine. It could, but need not, preclude the name “Israel”,
and it certainly must not preclude the right of Israeli Jews to live
where they are in peace and prosperity. Nor need it preclude, for
the time being at least, a Jewish majority or a Jewish character,
however defined. What it does, and must preclude are the rights and
benefits of citizenship of that state being conferred on one ethnic
group alone.
And the time to make this call is now, loud and clear. Not tucked
away in obscure policy documents or vague statements about democracy
throughout the region, and not only in articles and essays, but on
banners, slogans and manifestos. Is it not now obvious to everyone
that without such a development progress simply cannot be made? Let
us say it now, loud and clear.
— Paul Eisen is a director of Deir Yassin Remembered dyr@eisen.demon.co.uk
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