
Technorati Tags: Civilian Casualties, Memorial, Mr Fish, Unknown Soldier
Uri Averny writing in Counterpunch on the ongoing struggles of the Palestinians.
The bloody battles that have erupted around the Nahr al-Bared refugee camp near Tripoli in Lebanon remind us that the refugee problem has not disappeared. On the contrary, 60 years after the “Nakba”, the Palestinian catastrophe of 1948, it is again the center of attention throughout the world.This is an open wound. Anyone who imagines that a solution to the Israel-Arab conflict is possible without healing this wound is deluding himself.
From Tripoli to Sderot, from Riyadh to Jerusalem, the Palestinian refugee problem continues to cast its shadow across the whole region. This week, the media were again full of photos of Israeli and Palestinian refugees fleeing from their homes and of mothers mourning the death of their loved ones in Hebrew and Arabic–as if nothing had changed since 1948.
THE ORDINARY Israeli shrugs his shoulders when confronted with the suffering of the Palestinian refugees and dismisses it with five words: “They brought it on themselves.”
Learned professors and market vendors repeat that the Palestinians caused their own downfall when, in 1947, they rejected the Partition Plan of the United Nations and started a war to annihilate the Jewish community in the country.
That is a deeply rooted myth, one of the basic myths of Israeli consciousness. But it is far from reflecting what really happened.
First of all, because at that time there did not even exist a Palestinian national leadership which could take a decision.
In the Arab Revolt of 1935 to 1939 (“the troubles” in Israeli parlance), the Grand Mufti, Hajj Amin al-Husseini, then the leader of the Palestinian Arabs, had most of the prominent Palestinians who did not accept his authority killed. He then fled the country and the remaining Palestinian leaders were exiled by the British to a remote island.
When the hour of destiny struck and the UN adopted the partition resolution, there was no Palestinian leadership capable of deciding one way or the other. Instead, the leaders of the neighboring Arab states decided to send their armies into the country once the British Mandate had come to an end.
True, the masses of the Palestinian people opposed the partition plan. They believed that all of Palestine was their patrimony, and that the Jews, almost all of whom had recently arrived, did not have any right to it. The more so, since the UN plan gave the Jews, then only a third of the population, 55% of the country. Even in this territory, the Arabs constituted 40% of the inhabitants.
(In fairness it should be mentioned that the territory allotted to the Jews included the Negev–a huge desert that was desolate then and has mostly remained so to this day.)
The Jewish side did indeed accept the UN decision–but only in appearance. In secret meetings, David Ben-Gurion did not hide his intention to take the first opportunity to enlarge the territory allotted to the Jewish state and to assure an overwhelming Jewish majority in it. The war of 1948, which was started by the Arab side, created an opportunity to realize both aims: Israel grew from 55% to 78% of the country, and this territory was emptied of most of its Arab inhabitants. Many of them fled the terrors of war, many others were driven out by us. Almost none were allowed to return after the war.
In the course of the war, some 750,000 Palestinians became refugees. Natural increase doubles their number every 18 years, so they are now approaching five million.
That is an immense human tragedy, a humanitarian issue and a political problem. For long periods it seemed that the problem would disappear by itself with the passing of time, but it has repeatedly reared its head again.
MANY PARTIES have exploited the problem for their own ends. Various Arab regimes have at times tried to hitch their wagon to it.
The fate of the refugees varies from country to country. Jordan has accorded them citizenship, yet has kept many of them in miserable camps. The Lebanese have not given the refugees any civil rights at all, and have committed several massacres. Almost all Palestinian leaders demand the implementation of UN resolution 194 which was adopted 59 years ago and which promised the refugees a return to their homes as peaceful citizens.
Few noticed that the Right of Return has served successive Israeli governments as a pretext to reject all peace initiatives. The return of five million refugees would mean the end of Israel as a state with a solid Jewish majority and turn it into a bi-national state–something that arouses the adamant opposition of a minimum of 99.99% of the Israeli-Jewish public.
This has to be realized if one is to understand the way Israelis view peace. An ordinary Israeli, even a decent person who sincerely desires peace, tells himself: the Arabs will never give up the Right of Return, therefore there is no chance for peace, and it isn’t worthwhile even to start doing anything about it.
THUS, PARADOXICALLY, the refugee problem has turned into an instrument for those Israelis who oppose any peace based on compromise. They rely on the fact that almost no Arab leader would dare to give up the Right of Return openly. In private conversations, many Arab leaders recognize that the return is impossible, but they dare not say so openly. To do so would mean political suicide–just as announcing a readiness to take back refugees would be suicidal for an Israeli politician.
In spite of this, a subterranean shift has taken place in recent years on the Arab side. There have been hints that Israel’s demographic problem cannot be ignored. Here and there, creative solutions have been proposed. (Once, in a public meeting of Gush Shalom, a Palestinian representative said: “Today, the Arab minority constitutes 20% of Israel’s citizens. So let us agree that for every 80 new Jewish immigrants coming to the country, 20 Palestinian refugees will be allowed to return. In such a way, the present proportion would be maintained.” The public reacted enthusiastically.)
NOW, A REVOLUTIONARY development has taken place. The Arab League has offered Israel a peace plan: all 22 Arab states would recognize Israel and establish diplomatic and economic relations with it, in return for Israel’s withdrawal from the occupied territories and the establishment of a Palestinian state.
The offer did not ignore the refugee problem. It mentioned UN resolution 194, but added a qualification of fundamental importance: that the solution would be reached “by agreement” between the two parties. In other words: Israel would have the right of veto over refugees returning to Israeli territory.
This put the Israeli government in a difficult position. If the Israeli public understood that the entire Arab world was offering a comprehensive peace agreement without the actual realization of the Right of Return, they might accept it gladly. Therefore, everything was done to obscure the decisive word. The guided (and misguided) Israeli media emphasized the plan’s mention of Resolution 194 and played down the talk of an “agreed upon” solution.
The government treated the Arab offer with manifest disdain, but nevertheless tried to derive advantage from it. Ehud Olmert announced his readiness to talk with an Arab delegation–provided that it did not consist of Egypt and Jordan alone. This way, Olmert and Tzipi Livni hope to attain an important political achievement without paying for it: to compel Saudi Arabia and other states to enter into relations with Israel. Since there are “no free lunches”, the Arabs refused. Nothing came out of the whole affair.
IF SOMEONE had offered Israel this Arab League peace plan on June 4, 1967, a day before the Six-Day War, we would have thought that the Messiah had arrived. Now, our government considers this offer nothing but a clever trick: the Arabs are indeed ready to relinquish the return of the refugees, but want to compel us to give up the occupied territories and to dismantle the settlements.
In a historical perspective, the Arab League is correcting an error it made 40 years ago, which had far-reaching consequences. Soon after the Six-Day War, on September 1, 1967, the heads of the Arab states assembled in Khartoum and decided upon the “Three No’s”–No peace with Israel, No recognition of Israel, No negotiations with Israel.
One can understand why such a misguided resolution was adopted. The Arab countries had just suffered a humiliating military defeat. They wanted to prove to their peoples and the world that they had not gone down on their knees. They wanted to keep their national dignity. But for the government of Israel, it was a present from heaven.
The resolution freed it from any need to conduct negotiations which might have compelled it to return the territories it had just conquered. It gave the green light for the founding of settlements, an enterprise that continues unhindered to this very day, removing the land from under the feet of the Palestinians. And, of course, it swept the refugee problem from the table.
The new Arab League proposal could repair the damage done to the Palestinian cause at Khartoum. The entire Arab world has now adopted a realistic resolution. From now on, the task is to get the Israeli public to grasp the full meaning of this proposal, and especially its significance concerning the return of the refugees. This task rests on the shoulders of the Israeli peace forces, but also of the Arab leadership.
TO ACHIEVE this goal, the refugee problem must be transferred to the realm of reality. It must undergo a process of de-mystification.
At present, an Israeli sees only a nightmare: five million refugees are waiting to flood Israel. They will demand the return of their lands, on which Israeli towns and villages are now located, and their homes, which have been demolished long ago or in which Israelis are now living. Israel, as a state with a Hebrew majority, will disappear.
This fear must be neutralized, and this wound must be healed. On the psychological level, we must recognize our responsibility for that part of the problem which was actually caused by us. A “Committee for Truth and Reconciliation” could, perhaps, determine the dimensions of this part. For this we must sincerely apologize, as other nations have apologized for injustices committed by them.
On the practical level, the real problem of five million human beings must be solved. All of them will have a right to generous compensation, which will enable them to start a new life any way they wish. Those who want to stay where they are, with the consent of the local government, will have the ability to rebuild the life of their families. Those who want to live in the future State of Palestine, perhaps in the areas cleared of settlements, must receive the necessary international assistance. I, personally, believe that it would be good for us to receive back a certain agreed-upon number of refugees in Israel proper, as a symbolic contribution to the end to the tragedy.
That is neither a dream nor a nightmare. We have already mastered more difficult tasks. It would be much easier and cheaper than to continue a war that has no military solution and no end.
Sixty years ago, a deep wound was opened. Since than it has not healed. It infects our life and endangers our future. It is high time to heal it. That is the lesson of Tripoli in the north and Sderot in the South.
Uri Avnery is an Israeli writer and peace activist with Gush Shalom. He is one of the writers featured in The Other Israel: Voices of Dissent and Refusal. He is also a contributor to CounterPunch’s hot new book The Politics of Anti-Semitism.
Technorati Tags: Middle East, Israel, Palestine, Uri Averny
If there’s one thing confused America doesn’t need, it’s Oprah Winfrey giving them a one-sided presentation of this issue. In particular we better hope the Oprah Army doesn’t learn Israel is where “the major war against terror is currently taking place.”
So, Peace groups in Israel and Palestine are asking everyone to take a minute and write to Oprah to ask her to also visit the West Bank and Gaza.
Dear Ms. Winfrey,
I’m writing to ask you to please visit the West Bank and/or Gaza as well as Israel during your upcoming trip to the area.I commend you for your sympathy with the suffering of regular Israelis. However, it’s important to remember the even greater suffering of regular Palestinians. I urge you to use your program to give a platform to the many people on both sides who wish to live together in peace.
This Time, Oprah Just doesn’t Get it
Recently, an email has been circulating, calling on American talk show mogul Oprah Winfrey to visit the Palestinian territories in her upcoming trip to Israel. Apparently, Oprah will make her “pilgrimage” to Israel upon invitation by Eli Weisel, an American-Jewish author, Nobel Peace Prize winner and Holocaust survivor. Winfrey made her announcement last week when she was honored by the Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity for her continued involvement in humanitarian issues.
During the announcement, Winfrey expressed her support for the people of Israel where, according to Weisel, “the major war against terror is currently taking place,” saying she sympathized with the suffering of the Israeli people.
While the blind allegiance most Americans have towards Israel is no shocker to the Palestinians, the fact that a personality such as Oprah Winfrey – known for her compassion with the world’s underdogs – would sidestep the Palestinian cause with such nonchalance was a surprise even to us.
Not that the announcement of her intended visit has gone unnoticed entirely. Other than the email demanding letters to her producers, blog sites across the internet have posted viewpoints on the subject from all sides.
One blogger named Desert Peace wrote, “I only hope that if she comes here she will visit places like Ramallah, Jenin, Gaza, Bethlehem…. the list goes on. Let her watch the demolition of a home in East Jerusalem, let her visit the site of the disabled children’s home demolished a few weeks ago. Let her visit with Bassam Aramin, the father of 10 year old Abir, murdered by Israeli soldiers while at play in her schoolyard. Let her stand at a checkpoint and watch a pregnant Palestinian woman be prevented from going to the hospital to have her child.”
Still, simply hoping that Oprah Winfrey will heed these calls can hardly be called a concerted effort. But again, this has always been the Palestinians’ problem in dealing with the international media. While our hearts are undoubtedly in the right places, our strategies are not.
Take for example, the ongoing Israeli onslaught in the Gaza Strip. Dozens of people have been killed in the last few weeks alone. Buildings have been bombed, cars blown to smithereens and children carried, wailing in pain, to hospital emergency rooms with missile shrapnel lodged in their heads, chests and legs. The Palestinians are well aware how dire the situation is. We are extremely talented at bemoaning our fate to each other, ticking off the horrors perpetrated by the Israeli occupation like a checklist at a grocery store. We cry out at the injustices against us and bury our dead day after day. But, history and experience has proven to us that this is not enough, that our strategy has not served us well in bringing our cause the attention it deserves.
Contrastingly there is the almighty Israeli and Western media machine. Take the same situation – the Gaza Strip – and the picture is painted with a wicked twist. Israel maintains that the Palestinians have forced its hand. It is the duty of the establishment to protect the innocent civilians of Sderot from the terrors of the Qassam rockets, which, for the record, have only killed two Israelis in the past several months and have caused minimal damage otherwise.
While there is truth to this version – Palestinians do fire crudely-made rockets into Israel – the manner in which the tale is told leaves no room for the Palestinians to be shown in any positive light.
So, where do we go wrong time and again? It is true that from the get-go, the Palestinians have already been given the short end of the stick because of the West’s alliance with Israel. Having said that, our public relations machine is still extremely lacking in waging this media war, which in humanitarian terms, we should have won hands-down given the justness of our cause.
When assessing the Palestinians’ performance over the years in terms of our relationship with the international media, one element is clearly absent, which is calculated consistency. Instead of our public relations machine – which includes popular mobilization and organization especially in places such as the United States and Europe – working around the clock to find ways to counter Israeli allegations and put forth our own cause more effectively, we have fallen into the trap of being emotional activists. That is, we react to a certain event or statement instead of devising a well-thought out strategy of our own that would yield better results in the long-run.
The best analogy would be the “boiled-over coffee syndrome”. Israel commits a massacre in the Gaza Strip, killing men, women and children and the Palestinian and Arab community rises up in anger. Demonstrations break out wherever there are Palestinians and we raise our fists in fury. But the coffee eventually settles and the demonstrations and anger die down until the next atrocity. Meanwhile, Israel is calmly and coolly working behind the scenes, making all the politically-correct statements about “regret for the loss of civilian lives” while emphasizing the horror in which the Israeli people live everyday because of the “terrorists” being allowed to flourish in the Strip. And never, not once, do the Israeli military operations stop.
Oprah Winfrey is only the most recent example of someone who “should know better.” But she cannot fully be blamed for her bias. There is no better time than now to contemplate why such an otherwise enlightened public figure would squarely place her loyalties with Israel. No one is saying Oprah should not be allowed to make her trip to Israel with her good friend Wiesel. But the Palestinians – government, people, organizations and solidarity groups – should ensure that Ms. Winfrey comes with an open mind and a travel package complete with information on the entire country. Maybe if she crossed one Israeli checkpoint, set eyes on the offending separation wall or witnessed the poverty that has set in throughout the Palestinian territories due to the international boycott, the human suffering of a people she has so far not cared to understand will be revealed to her.
Technorati Tags: Middle East, Israel, Palestine, Oprah Winifrey
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