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From the Los Angeles Times
Israelis and Palestinians must share the land. Equally.
By Saree Makdisi
May 11,
2008
There is no longer a two-state solution to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Forget the endless arguments about who
offered what and who spurned whom and whether the Oslo peace process
died when Yasser Arafat walked away from the bargaining table or
whether it was Ariel Sharon's stroll through the Al Aqsa Mosque in
Jerusalem that did it in.
All that matters are the facts on
the ground, of which the most important is that -- after four decades
of intensive Jewish settlement in the Palestinian territories it
occupied during the 1967 war -- Israel has irreversibly cemented its
grip on the land on which a Palestinian state might have been
created.
Sixty years after Israel was created and Palestine
was destroyed, then, we are back to where we started: Two populations
inhabiting one piece of land. And if the land cannot be divided, it
must be shared. Equally.
This is a position, I realize, which
may take many Americans by surprise. After years of pursuing a
two-state solution, and feeling perhaps that the conflict had nearly
been solved, it's hard to give up the idea as unworkable.
But
unworkable it is. A report published last summer by the United
Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs found
that almost 40% of the West Bank is now taken up by Israeli
infrastructure -- roads, settlements, military bases and so on --
largely off-limits to Palestinians. Israel has methodically broken
the remainder of the territory into dozens of enclaves separated from
each other and the outside world by zones that it alone controls
(including, at last count, 612 checkpoints and roadblocks).
Moreover, according to the report, the Jewish settler
population in the occupied territories, already approaching half a
million, not only continues to grow but is growing at a rate three
times greater than the rate of Israel's population increase. If the
current rate continues, the settler population will double to almost
1 million people in just 12 years. Many are heavily armed and
ideologically driven, unlikely to walk away voluntarily from the land
they have declared to be their God-given home.
These facts
alone render the status of the peace process academic.
At no
time since the negotiations began in the early 1990s has Israel
significantly suspended the settlement process in the occupied
Palestinian territories, in stark violation of international law. It
preceded last November's Annapolis summit by announcing the fresh
expropriation of Palestinian property in the West Bank; it followed
the summit by announcing the expansion of its Har Homa settlement by
an additional 307 housing units; and it has announced plans for
hundreds more in other settlements since then.
The Israelis
are not settling the occupied territories because they lack space in
Israel itself. They are settling the land because of a long-standing
belief that Jews are entitled to it simply by virtue of being Jewish.
"The land of Israel belongs to the nation of Israel and only to
the nation of Israel," declares Moledet, one of the parties in
the National Union bloc, which has a significant presence in the
Israeli parliament.
Moledet's position is not as far removed
from that of Prime Minister Ehud Olmert as some Israelis claim.
Although Olmert says he believes in theory that Israel should give up
those parts of the West Bank and Gaza densely inhabited by
Palestinians, he also said in 2006 that "every hill in Samaria
and every valley in Judea is part of our historic homeland" and
that "we firmly stand by the historic right of the people of
Israel to the entire land of Israel."
Judea and Samaria:
These ancient biblical terms are still used by Israeli officials to
refer to the West Bank. More than 10 years after the initiation of
the Oslo peace process, which was supposed to lead to a two-state
solution, maps in Israeli textbooks continued to show not the West
Bank but Judea and Samaria -- and not as occupied territories but as
integral parts of Israel.
What room is there for the
Palestinians in this vision of Jewish entitlement to the land? None.
They are regarded, at best, as a demographic "problem."
The
idea of Palestinians as a "problem" is hardly new. Israel
was created as a Jewish state in 1948 only by the premeditated and
forcible removal of as much of the indigenous Palestinian population
as possible, in what Palestinians call the Nakba, or catastrophe,
which they commemorate this week.
A Jewish state, says
Israeli historian Benny Morris, "would not have come into being
without the uprooting of 700,000 Palestinians. ... There was no
choice but to expel that population." For Morris, this was one
of those "circumstances in history that justify ethnic
cleansing."
Thinking of Palestinians as a "problem"
to be removed predates 1948. It was there from the moment the Zionist
movement set into motion the project to make a Jewish state in a land
that, in 1917 -- when the British empire officially endorsed Zionism
-- had an overwhelmingly non-Jewish population. The only Jewish
member of the British government at the time, Edwin Montagu,
vehemently opposed the Zionist project as unjust. Henry King and
Charles Crane, dispatched on a fact-finding mission to Palestine by
President Wilson, concurred: Such a project would require enormous
violence, they warned: "Decisions, requiring armies to carry
out, are sometimes necessary, but they are surely not gratuitously to
be taken in the interests of a serious injustice."
But
they were. This is a conflict driven from its origins by Zionism's
exclusive sense of entitlement to the land. Has there been
Palestinian violence as well? Yes. Is it always justified? No. But
what would you do if someone told you that there was no room for you
on your own land, that your very existence is a "problem"?
No people in history has ever gone away just because another people
wanted them to, and the sentiments of Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull
live on among Palestinians to this day.
The violence will
end, and a just peace will come, only when each side realizes that
the other is there to stay. Many Palestinians have accepted this
premise, and an increasing number are willing to give up on the idea
of an independent Palestinian state and embrace instead the concept
of a single democratic, secular and multicultural state, which they
would share equally with Israeli Jews.
Most Israelis are not
yet reconciled this position. Some, no doubt, are reluctant to give
up on the idea of a "Jewish state," to acknowledge the
reality that Israel has never been exclusively Jewish, and
that, from the start, the idea of privileging members of one group
over all other citizens has been fundamentally undemocratic and
unfair.
Yet that is exactly what Israel does. Even among its
citizens, Israeli law grants rights to Jews that it denies to
non-Jews. By no stretch of the imagination is Israel a genuine
democracy: It is an ethno-religiously exclusive state that has tried
to defy the multicultural history of the land on which it was
founded.
To resolve the conflict with the Palestinians,
Israeli Jews will have to relinquish their exclusive privileges and
acknowledge the right of return of Palestinians expelled from their
homes. What they would get in return is the ability to live securely
and to prosper with -- rather than continuing to battle against --
the Palestinians.
They may not have a choice. As Olmert
himself warned recently, more Palestinians are shifting their
struggle from one for an independent state to a South African-style
struggle that demands equal rights for all citizens, irrespective of
religion, in a single state. "That is, of course," he
noted, "a much cleaner struggle, a much more popular struggle --
and ultimately a much more powerful one."
I couldn't
agree more.
Saree Makdisi is a professor of English and
comparative literature at UCLA and the author of "Palestine
Inside Out: An Everyday Occupation," out this month from W.W.
Norton.
Copyright
2008 Los Angeles Times