Grenouille wrote:60 years of "mistreatment" that started with the UN partition plan that was accepted by the Jews but not the Arabs? How about 70 years of mistreatment of Jews living in Palestine, starting with the Arab Revolt in 1936?
The foundation of the state of Israel was more a reaction than the fight against it. A reaction to a growingly hostile environment, an environment which began after palestinian leadership allied itself to the axis powers prior to WW2.
Leaving Sderot and re-settle to central Israel won't change anything. To the folks firing the rockets, that's just as bad as living in southern Israel. All the jews have to leave.
I'm all for peace talks, reparations etc. I supported the offer that was made at Camp David and Kana in 2000, when 97% of Westbank + Gaza + East Jerusalem as capital and compensation for refugees was offered. But Arafat denounced it, proving that the whole conflict is not about the territories occupied in 1967, but about the existance of the State of Israel in it's whole. It's no wonder though, since PLO formed 1965, almost 2 years before the 6 days war, when there was no Israeli occupation of Gaza and Westbank.
I'll repeat this again: the Camp David agreement refused to acknowledge the Right to Return. You cannot offer a reasonable opinion on this if you are not even aware that it is an issue. You are correct that this is not just about the 1967 redrawing of borders.
Here you go:
George Bisharat wrote:Today, many assume that to achieve Middle East peace, we Palestinians must surrender our right to return to our homes and homeland. Millions of Palestinians--with memories and photographs of our stolen properties, keys to our front doors, and an abiding sense of injustice--are expected to swallow our losses in order to facilitate a "two-state solution."
But it's not that simple. Although Israel has claimed that Palestinians willingly abandoned Palestine after being urged to leave in radio broadcasts by Arab leaders, a review of broadcast transcripts by Irish diplomat Erskine Childers in 1961 revealed that Palestinians were exhorted by Arab leaders to stay, not leave their homes. In fact, Yigal Allon, commander of Palmach, the elite Zionist troops, and later Israeli foreign minister, launched a whispering campaign to terrorize Palestinians into flight.
Nor were we simply unintended victims of a war launched by the Arab states against Israel. As far back as the late 19th century, leaders of Political Zionism (the movement to create a Jewish state in Palestine) advocated "transfer" of the Palestinians, by force if necessary. In 1948, Jews owned only 11% of the land allocated by the United Nations to the Jewish state--not enough for a viable economy. As David Ben-Gurion said in February 1948 before he became prime minister of Israel: "The war will give us the land. The concepts of 'ours' and 'not ours' are peace concepts only, and in war they lose their whole meaning."
Zionist leaders knew that an Arab minority of 40% would challenge the Jewish demographic dominance they sought. Hence, nearly half of the Palestinian refugees ultimately expelled were forced out before the Arab states attacked Israel in May 1948. Israeli historian Benny Morris documented 24 massacres of Palestinian civilians, some claiming hundreds of unarmed men, women and children, during subsequent fighting. Thousands more Palestinians were, like the residents of Majdal (now Ashkelon)--a southern coastal city 15 miles north of the Gaza Strip--chased across the border into Gaza after the armistice of 1949.
Palestine had to be "cleansed" of its native population to establish Israel as a Jewish state. Ironically, those who today protest that the return of the refugees would destroy Israel unwittingly confirm this viewpoint, for the refugees are simply the Palestinians and their offspring who would have become Israeli citizens had they not been exiled.
Israel's denial of responsibility for the refugees and rejection of their repatriation (intransigence that was condemned early on by a U.S. official as "morally reprehensible") is nearly as offensive as the original expulsion itself. Israel welcomed immigrant Jews from all over the world but shot Palestinians who tried to return to recover movable property, harvest the fruit of their orchards or reclaim their homes. Oxford professor Avi Shlaim concluded in his book "The Iron Wall" that "between 2,700 and 5,000 [Palestinian] infiltrators were killed in the period 1949-56, the great majority of them unarmed."
These are not the words of your racist Jew-hating stereotype, but a Western-settled and educated academic.
My impression is Grenouille, you are happy to label an entire swathe of people racist in order to justify their slow torture. Nice.
My own take is that at this stage the Right to Return itself is not practical, not at this juncture. It would create conflict and wreck a now prosperous economy and cause unjustified ruction to the people in that ecomony (the Israelis). Which brings us back to negotiation, reparation and the end to economic, political, violent and psychological repression of those kept under effective Apartheid.
Grenouille wrote:But just answer me a few quick questions:
Why is it that it's not possible for jews to live in Gaza and Westbank? If Israel is the evil state while the Palestinians are fighting a just war against their oppressors, how come no Jews are allowed to live in their lands, while there is an arab muslim minority with basicly the same rights like everyone else in Israel? I can already imagine the answer: It's the Israeli's fault. They have been so cruel to the Palestinians that they now hate all jews.
You have a sarcastic implication here of an inherent racism within the Palestinian antipathy towards those whose military have consistently stolen their land, shot them, humiliated through constant military harrassment, prevented from going to work, destroyed their homes, blown up their ambulances, and then shot them some more. Following on from this, you imply that a civilian population is deserving of this treatment. This is callous in the supreme.
Grenouille wrote:And where should all the jews that lived in arab countries prior to 1948 go back? Should they go back to Teheran and live under rule of the Islamic Republic? Go back to Egypt, which would surely welcome them? Or move to Europe and the USA? But why should jews that have been living in the middle east, and whose ancestors have never lived in Europe and the USA move there? Why is it not possible to have one single jewish state among all the muslim states of the middle east?
Why is it necessary for there to be a uni-religion state of any kind at all? No-one here has put forward the implied ethnic cleansing of Israelis forward as a solution or an ideal. Again, you are trying to present the current situation as an insane binary choice, either:
a.) Israeli is destroyed; or
b.) Israel must continue to defend herself as before (read: oppress the displaced minority, and steal more land by sending nutty religious maniacs into Palestinian property, particularly in Jerusalem).
It does not need to work this way. Politicians on both sides have shown a remarkable lack of patience, but unfortunately only one side has any real power in the area, thus preventing the progression of meaningful talks. Because any meaningful talks might lead to a meaningful solution, and a meaningful solution will almost certainly be hard to accept for
both parties. But reparation (money and land) will be involved, as well as assurances of disarmanent of militant parties. Again, I would prefer a single, secular, multi-religious state in Israel, rather than two dysfunctional and paranoid entities next door to each other.
Do you think a draw back from Westbank would be helpful? I used to think so, and I was happy when the Gaza draw back was done in 2005. But recent history has shown that giving back land doesn't help to get peace. Israel withdraws from Gaza, kidnapping and rocket attacks happen. Israel withdraws from Southern Lebanon, kidnapping and rocket attacks. Israel withdrawing from Westbank will only lead to more rocket attacks at this point. And from there, central Israel will be hit.
Blah blah. Read above, again. Plenty of fantastic pissing contests above over death statistics and respective moral trangressions by both sides in the run up to the Lebanon slaughter for you to fume over.
I'll leave you with the final part of the article linked above:
George Bisharat wrote:Isn't it time to explore a way for Jews to co-inhabit Israel/Palestine without excluding, dominating and oppressing Palestinians? The past cannot be undone--but the future can be. We, Israelis and Palestinians together, should be seeking to form a society founded on tolerance and mutual respect for each other's humanity, a country that would truly be the "light unto nations" that Israel always aspired to be. When title to our home is restored--and the rights of its current occupants have been fully respected--I hope one day to stand in front of it with my family and welcome neighbors and visitors of all faiths and backgrounds, as my grandparents did before 1948.