Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, May/June
1998, Pages 6-7, 94
Special Report
Israel Celebrates Its 50th Anniversary as Palestinians
Struggle for Their Own Independence
By Rachelle Marshall
A recent op-ed article in the San Francisco Chronicle
headlined, Israel at 50A Success Story, included
a box on the side with the words, The Bay Area Celebrates
Israel at 50 and a drawing of the Star of David. There was
no mention of the thousands of Arab Americans in the Bay Area who
will not be celebrating the anniversary of Israels birth,
or of the fact that many will be mourning instead. The omission
was a reflection of Israels success in rewriting its own history.
The Israelis have launched their year-long ritual
of self-congratulation reluctant to acknowledge that their countrys
origins are rooted in the dispossession and forced expulsion of
the Palestinians. An official anniversary poster shows the faces
of three Jewish boysan Ethiopian, a Russian, and a native
Israeliover the slogan, Together with pride, together
in hope. No Arab face is depicted, even though Arabs were
the majority population of Palestine at the time of the 1947 partition.
Current attempts by objective Israeli historians to
dispel Israels founding myth of the Jews return to a
land without a people face strong resistance. A documentary
on Israels first 50 years shown on Israel Television this
spring was condemned by members of the government and others for
including eyewitness accounts of the destruction of Arab villages
and the indiscriminate killing of Arab civilians by Israeli forces.
At least two cabinet ministers demanded that the series, titled
Tkuma, or Rebirth, be taken off the air,
and the director, Ronit Weiss-Berkowitz, received several death
threats. Showing Tkuma forces us to remember facts
that we would like to forget, a columnist for Haaretz
wrote. The anger at Tkuma is because we dont
want to know.
The deliberate erasing from official memory of the
calamity that befell the Palestinians after Israels birth
gives the anniversary celebrations the morbid aspect of a bandage
placed over a suppurating wound. Fifty years after Jewish fighters
seized most of Palestine and forced over half the population to
flee, the wound is not yet healed. Instead it is being further inflamed
by an Israeli government that rejects the principle of land for
peace and continues to impose military rule on more than two million
Palestinians. As a result, violence and the threat of violence continue
to dominate relations between the two sides.
This has become increasingly true at the traffic checkpoints
Israel has set up all over the West Bank. Guarded by bored and trigger-happy
soldiers, the barriers not only cause maddening delays to Palestinian
drivers but are too often death traps as well. On March 10, Israeli
soldiers killed three Palestinian workers at a checkpoint near Hebron,
and seriously wounded 10 others, as a result of what the Israeli
army called a mistake. In a similar incident only a
few months earlier, Jimmy Kanawati was fatally shot as he tried
to reach his home in Bethlehem. On April 7 border guards killed
Mohammed Salaimi as he drove through a checkpoint on his way to
see his wife. Again it was a mistakethe guards
said they thought Salaimis van was stolen and claimed they
had aimed for the tires.
During the street protests that followed the March
10 killings, Israeli soldiers using rubber-coated steel bullets
wounded more than a hundred Palestinians, including eight journalists.
An 11-year old boy, Samer Karama, died on March 17 a few days after
he was shot in the head by an Israeli sniper as he walked home from
school.
Violence broke out again in April, this time within
Israels Green Line borders, when hundreds of Israeli police
descended on the northern Israeli village of Suweij to stop a group
of Bedouin from rebuilding three homes that the Israelis had demolished
a few days earlier. The police clubbed and tear-gassed at least
two dozen of the hundreds of Israeli Arabs who turned out to protest
the demolitions. Israeli authorities claimed the homes lacked building
permits, although residents said they had been standing for 40 years.
Suweij and other villages were established in 1948 when Bedouin
and other Arabs settled in northern Galilee after being forced from
their land by Israeli forces, but Israel has refused to recognize
these villages and they receive no municipal services or government
aid.
Observers interpreted the rare outburst of anger by
Arab citizens of Israel as a reaction to the governments scuttling
of the peace process as well as to its policy of ousting Arabs from
their land in order to expand nearby Jewish communities. Salah Saliim,
an Arab Knesset member, declared over Israel Radio that We
will not agree to this sort of humiliation and oppression. It is
as if we are in occupied territory.
Tense Confrontations
The confrontations in the Galilee took place as tensions
rose in the West Bank over the killing of Hamas militant Muhyiaddin
Sharif, whose body was found near Ramallah in a car that had been
wrecked by explosives. When an autopsy revealed that he had been
fatally shot before being placed in the car, Palestinians assumed
Israelis were responsible. It was a reasonable assumption to make,
since Israel has used car bombs, remote control devices, and other
weapons to assassinate scores of Palestinian leaders as well as
suspected terrorists over the years. The Israeli government has
routinely issued denials afterward, but this time the denials were
apparently true.
The Palestine National Authority (PNA) announced on
April 7 that Sharif had been killed by members of a rival faction
of Hamas and that three Hamas militants arrested in connection with
the crime had confessed. A fourth suspect arrested a week later
also confessed but later recanted his confession. Hamas officials
described the announcement as lies and insults, and
charged the PNA with coercing the suspects into confessing in order
to fulfill Israels demand for a crackdown on Hamas members.
As Hamas and the PNA continued to exchange accusations, and in the
absence of conclusive proof in the case, many Palestinians worried
that the dispute would seriously undermine national unity. Several
organizations, including the Islamic Salvation Party, urged the
two sides to cooperate in order to get at the truth.
Instead of expressing gratitude to the PNA for clearing
Israel of the crime and defusing potential protests, Israeli Prime
Minister Binyamin Netanyahu used the arrests as another excuse to
attack the Palestinian leadership. He claimed the arrests proved
that If the Palestinian Authority wants to, it can fight terrorism,
and warned that Yasser Arafat would be held responsible for any
future attack on Israelis by Hamas. Since the PNA cannot prevent
terrorism any more than Israeli security forces have been able to,
the warning puts Arafat in a difficult position. Netanyahu is certain
to use the next such act as an excuse to further stall the peace
process.
Meanwhile, without any excuse at all, he is refusing
to budge. Negotiations, such as they are, have been reduced to a
three-way exercise involving Israel, the White House and American
Jewish organizations, with the Palestinians virtually ignored. Clinton
and Netanyahu agree that after the next Israeli troop withdrawal
both sides should move immediately to final-status talks, contravening
last years Hebron agreement which calls for three Israeli
withdrawals before the remaining issues are decided. The Palestinians
object to the change because it would mean they would go into the
crucial bargaining over Jerusalem, the return of refugees, and Jewish
settlements with Israel still controling most of the West Bank and
therefore in a position to determine the outcome.
Clinton and Netanyahu differ slightly over how much
land Israel will return to the Palestinians, with Clinton favoring
13 percent and Netanyahu no more than 10 percent, but neither proposal
would provide the Palestinians with enough land for a viable state.
Both leaders have stipulated as well that in return for any withdrawal
the Palestinians must take a series of actions to prevent terrorism,
including silencing anti-Israel incitement and abrogation
of the Palestine National Cov enant. Netanyahu also insists that
Israel be the sole monitor of Palestinian cooperation in safeguarding
Israels security.
Jewish organizations are playing an active role behind
the scenes, with Israels powerful Washington, DC lobby, the
American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), and the Conference
of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations sending competing
signals to Clinton on how to deal with the peace talks. AIPAC and
the Republican-aligned National Jewish Coalition initiated a letter
to Clinton signed by 81 senators and 150 representatives expressing
support for Israels negotiating position and opposing any
pressure by the United States on Netanyahu. The Council of Presidents
took a gentler approach, with a letter to Clinton thanking him for
his efforts so far and supporting his continued involvement in the
negotiations. The slightly more dov ish Americans for Peace Now
has launched a campaign to persuade Congress to back Clintons
peace proposal, and 33 members of the House signed a letter circulated
by Rep. Sam Gejdenson calling for American leadership in the
peace process.
Sponsors of the AIPAC letter in both houses proceeded
to gather signatures even after Middle East envoy Dennis Ross and
Assistant Secretary of State Martin Indyk asked them not to do so.
The security of Israel is paramount, Senator Connie
Mack said in explaining the sponsors refusal. As numerous
members of Congress were urging Clinton to refrain from pressuring
Netanyahu, a poll by the Dahaf Research Institute in Tel Aviv found
that 71 percent of the respondents favored a more active role by
the United States in peace negotiations.
But more activity when the activity is irrelevant
serves no useful purpose. While the Clinton administration and Netanyahu
split hairs over inadequate proposals, and Dennis Ross shuttles
fruitlessly between them, Israel is moving at unchecked speed to
ex pand settlements and create new Jewish neighborhoods in the West
Bank and Jeru salem. At the same time, grassroots support for Hamas,
which rejects the Oslo agreement, is growing among students and
the thousands of poor Palestinians who rely on the social services
the organization provides. Hamas candidates could pose a serious
challenge to Palestinian leaders in the next elections, which means
that Arafat dare not accept any deal with Israel that falls too
far short of achieving the Palestinians goal of national independence.
Israels continued seizure of Palestinian land could soon make
that goal, a two-state solution, impossible to achieve.
Such a dangerous prospect has given greater urgency
to efforts by peace activists in Israel and the United States. More
than 1,500 Israeli reserve officers and soldiers took a full-page
ad in the newspaper Yediot Ahronot last March challenging
Netanyahu to choose between making peace or expanding settlements.
The organizer of the statement, former Sergeant Naftali Raz, warned
that Palestinian areas were like a powder keg, and added, If
the government goes on expanding settlements, another intifada will
break out but this time it will be with firearms, not stones. It
will be war.
More than a dozen liberal American Jewish groups recently
formed a coalition called Beit Shalom in order to provide an alternative
voice to AIPAC and other supporters of the present government in
Israel. Beit Shaloms purpose is to generate pressure on the
White House and Congress on behalf of an even-handed U.S. Middle
East policy that recognizes the rights of Palestinians as well as
Israelis.
But in the end, given the realities of American politics
and the power of money in determining votes, the most crucial elements
in achieving a just peace will be Palestinian unity and steadfastness.
This year, as Israel celebrates its 50th anniversary as a state,
Palestinians will commemorate An-Nakba, or the catastrophe,
to mark their forced exodus from the land in 1948. A variety of
events will be held throughout the year, including lectures, conferences,
exhibits, and rallies. Arab Americans are preparing a quilt containing
the names of 418 Palestinian villages that Israel destroyed after
it became a state. The quilt will tour American cities for a month
this spring before it is shown at a mass rally on Capitol Hill on
June 14.
The primary aim of the commemorations, according to
the official statement, is to pro tect the national memory
for the next generation from obliteration and distortion.
But Ali al-Khalil, Palestinian minister of culture, points out that
the program also aims at the future by reaffirming the Palestinian
peoples right of return, the rights of refugees, and the right
to establish an independent Palestinian state in the West Bank,
Gaza Strip, and Jerusalem within the framework of the recent peace
accords.
While Palestinians are remembering the events of 1948
they might take hope by reflecting on the distant past. Two thousand
years ago, on the occasion of the Jewish Feast of Passover, Roman
soldiers in Jerusalem patroled the walls of the Second Temple, on
alert in case the holidays message of liberation from slavery
inspired Jews to rebel against their Roman rulers. Today the roles
are reversed. This year on Passover Jewish soldiers patrolled the
sealed borders of the West Bank and Gaza in order to guard against
resistance by Palestinians against Israeli rule.
The historical parallel is worth noting by both Israelis
and Palestinians this year as they separately observe the anniversary
of an event that enabled one people to gain its independence but
condemned the other to dispossession and forced exile, The triumph
of the Jewish people after centuries of adversity suggests that
with sufficient determination the Palestinians could someday also
achieve their freedom. American leaders, if they were wise, could
help make that day come sooner rather than later, and without the
bloodshed and agony that Israels birth entailed.
Rachelle
Marshall is a free-lance writer living in Stanford, CA. A member of
the International Jewish Peace Union, she writes frequently on the
Middle East. |