IMPOSING
THE WAY OF PEACE! Louay M. Safi In
a report filed from Jerusalem, Barbara Plett, a BBC correspondent, described the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict as thus: Palestinians refuse to acknowledge the past
suffering of the Jewish nation. Israelis no matter how left-wing, cannot take Palestinian
demands on par with their own because to accept Palestinian rights is to deny
Israels right to exist. While
the above statement does not even begin to capture the scope and complexity of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, it gives us an insight into the attitude of many Israelis.
For centuries, European Jewry dreamed of a homeland where they could experience
self-governance and escape oppression and persecution. So desperately did they desire
freedom and wanted to break out of their European ghettos that many of them contemplated
the establishment of a Jewish state away from the Promised Land. Eventually, consensus was
built around Palestine, and the Zionist movement led by Herzl worked in earnest toward
achieving that goal. The
desire for a Jewish state in Palestine was so strong and so intense that Zionist leaders
never considered the fate of the Palestinians. Instead, they built their dream around an
illusion, adopting the slogan: land without people for a people without land.
Today after 80 years of continuous Jewish immigration, there are as many Palestinians as
Israelis in Israel and the occupied territories (one million Palestinians in the former
and 3 million in the latter). The number of Palestinians in the Palestinian
Diaspora is equivalent to the number of Jews remained outside Israel. The salvation
of one community has been achieved at the expense of another. A
series of military conflicts have forced hundreds of thousands out of their homes, thereby
creating a Palestinian Diaspora. Half of the Palestinian people, amounting to over five
million, live away from what they proudly call our homeland. Palestinians have
developed a strong attachment to Palestine, as strong as the one that inspired the Jewish
return. For them, Palestine is a promised land. Those who doubt the attachment of
Palestinians to their homeland need only listen to Palestinian children in the refugee
camps of Sabra and Shatila talk about Palestine and dream of their return, or watch how
Palestinian boys are willing to pay the ultimate price to challenge the Israeli
occupation. The
irony of modern Israel is not easy to miss: a nation created to liberate European Jewry
from discrimination, oppression, and genocide is increasingly guilty of the very practices
it sought to escape. This sticking fact was brought to the fore in a recent UN Human
Rights Commission's resolution that condemned the Jewish State. The
resolution denounced Israel for the "widespread, systematic and gross violations of
human rights perpetrated by the Israeli occupying power, in particular mass killings,
collective punishments, such as demolition of houses and closure of the Palestinian
territories, measures which constitute war crimes and flagrant violation of international
humanitarian law and crimes against humanity."[1] The
resolution passed by small margin. Nineteen states, mainly Arab and Islamic, as well as
Cuba and China, voted in favor, while European and American States voted against it.
Seventeen states abstained. The vote patterns reveal another irony of modern international
politics: states who voted to uphold the human rights of the Palestinians are those who
are often guilty of violating the human rights of their citizens, while the foremost
advocates of international human rights stood in defense of the Israeli occupation. Israel's
ambassador Yaakov Levy denounced the resolution as "partisan, one sided, and
inflammatory." This is because, he explained, there was "no call on the
Palestinian side to stop the violence and rioting." Levy's indignation was echoed by
the American and European envoys. Nancy Rubin, the US envoy, rejected the resolution's
language as "one-sided and vituperative." Rubin's argument is not that the state
of Israel is innocent of the "war crimes" and the "crimes against
humanity" attributed to it, but that the language is blunt and direct, and could
hence disturbing. In a sense Rubin is right: the description of Israel common practices
against the Palestinian are at odd with its image in international media. Yet neither Levy
nor Rubin could deny that Israel is guilty of the practices attributed to it in the Human
Rights Commissions resolution, practices which international law classify as
crimes against humanity. The
term "one-sidedness" that has been used by the Israeli government and its
defenders is crucial to understanding the peace process as it has been envisioned by
Israel. It is a peace in which the conquered and oppressed is called upon to succumb to
the reality of occupation and give up the most peaceful expression of moral indignation.
It is clear that the peace desired by Israel resembles the Roman peace, eloquently
described by the Roman poet Virgil: "You, O Roman, remember to rule the nations with
might. This will be your genius--to impose the way of peace, to spare the conquered and
crush the proud."[2] The
Israeli leadership has been particularly angry that Yassir Arafat failed to use his police
force to control Palestinian protests against Israeli occupation. Unlike the Israeli army
whose main responsibility is to protect armed Jewish settlers even when they are the
aggressors, and even if this means the use of lethal force against Palestinian children
who fight back aggression with stones, Palestinian police is required to control its own
and suppress any attempt to return fire with stones. Barak
complained that Arafat was not a serious peace partner. The evidence of Arafats
insincerity lied, Barak insisted, in his failure to control Palestinian rioters, that is,
in his failure to order the Palestinian police to join hands with the Israelis in
suppressing the Palestinian uprising. Who
gave the Israelis the right to establish an exclusively Jewish state, to drive the
Palestinians out of their homes so that new waves of Jewish immigrants can take over their
homeland, to kill their kids and young ones, to confiscate their lands, to demolish their
houses, to deny them their right to self-determination, to imprison and torture those who
resist occupation, and to build fences around their towns and cities? Who gave the
Israelis the right to do all that? For
decades, Israel has consistently violated International Law and UN resolutions, and has
never been required to account for its excesses. Indeed Israel has been able to get away
with the most hyenas of crimes, including torture, illegal confiscation of Palestinian
land, bombardment of civilians, kidnapping, occupation, etc., thanks to the countless
sympathizers and apologists, most of whom are well positioned in the United States. [1] UN Commission on Human Rights, Grave and Massive Violations of Palestinian Human Rights by Israel, Geneva, Switzerland, October 19, 2000. [2] T. Walter Wallbank and et. al., Civilization Past and Present (Glenview, Illinois: Scott, Foresman and Company, 1978), p. 78. [3] Friedrich Nietzsche, The Will to Power, tran. Walter Kaufmann and R.J. Hollingdale (New York, NY: Vintage Books, 1967), p. 412. |
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| Copyright
© 2001 Louay Safi
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