Ignoring Israel's abuses By Michael Jansen NO ONE should be surprised by the decision taken last weekend by the Israeli government in support of a bill which bars Palestinian citizens of Israel from buying houses in Jewish communities and bans them from acquiring parcels of state-owned land. This practice has existed since the creation of the state. Zionist ideology, which conflicts with Israel's laws and with the principles of democracy, holds that once land becomes “Jewish”, it is inalienably “Jewish”. The author of the bill, National Religious Party Knesset member Rabbi Haim Druckman, called the cabinet decision a “victory for Zionism”. And Education Minister Limor Livnat, who sponsored the resolution in the cabinet, said that the measure “does not stem at all from discrimination, but from the main tenet of Zionism — the return of the Jewish people to its land”. Denying that the measure is undemocratic, she said that each communal grouping in Israel should be allowed to live on its own, in other words, in segregated communities. Less than 10 per cent of the land in Israel is privately owned. Ninety-three per cent falls under the Israel Lands Administration (ILA) which either appropriated state lands or expropriated Palestinian property. Israel was obliged to take this course because the Jewish community owned only a small percentage of the land in the 78 per cent of Palestine captured in 1948. Although the ILA is bound, by law, to allocate this land without discrimination on the basis of ethnicity or religion, municipalities housing Palestinian citizens of Israel, 18 per cent of the population, have jurisdiction over only 2.5 per cent of the land. Shulamit Aloni, founder of the Citizens Rights Movement in Israel which became the leftist Meretz Party, summed up the situation by saying that Israel had become a segregationist state by seizing Arab land, designating it as “state land” and ruling that it should be exploited solely by Jews. This task was accomplished largely by the Jewish Agency and the Jewish National Fund, which are given state land by the ILA for the development of exclusively Jewish communities. While these Zionist organisations have been building small Jewish communities in areas thinly settled by Jews, the government has been squeezing out the “Arabs”. In the Negev, the government has been demolishing “illegal” communities built by bedouins who are not granted permission to construct houses, a discriminatory practice widely used by the Israeli occupation authorities in the West Bank. Similar Jewish communities are being planted in the Galilee, where the expansion of Palestinian municipalities is strictly circumscribed. “Illegal” Arab constructions are bulldozed, illegal Jewish structures remain in place. While the declared purpose of the proposed legislation is to prevent Palestinian citizens from moving into Jewish communities, the adoption of the bill by the Knesset has far greater import for Israel and its inhabitants. It could be used on the ground, in the medium- to long-term, to deprive all of Israel's Palestinian citizens of all their already heavily infringed land rights. It is significant that Labour Party ministers absented themselves from the cabinet session at the time the vote was taken. Labour leader Binyamin Ben-Eliezer claimed that right-wing ministers waited until the Labourites had departed before calling for a vote. But this was no excuse: Labour's ministers had been informed ahead of time that the measure was on the agenda. Only one Labour member, Ephraim Sneh, voted against. The attitude of Labour towards this racist proposal demonstrates that the party has shifted significantly to the right of the Israeli political spectrum and that it no longer cares about the reaction of Arab constituents. One Israeli commentator made the point that since the human rights demonstrations of October 2000, Palestinian citizens of Israel have come to be regarded as “the enemy” by many Israelis. Israeli editorialists and commentators have expressed concern that this measure will revive the formulation “Zionism is racism”, and about accusations that Israel is an apartheid state modelled on South Africa before its racist legislation was repealed. In truth, Zionism is, indeed, racism and Israel has always been an apartheid state. While many Israeli analysts recognise these harsh facts, Western commentators shut them out. It is interesting to note that many quality papers in the US and Europe chose to bury or ignore the Israeli cabinet decision: clearly their proprietors and editors do not wish to revive the “Zionism is racism” accusation. This is a particularly sensitive issue because, in 1975, the UN General Assembly passed a resolution declaring that “Zionism is a form of racism and racial discrimination”. It took Israel and its friends and allies six years to get that resolution rescinded. Meanwhile, on the ground in Israel “proper” and in the occupied Palestinian territories, Israel continues to expropriate Palestinian land, discriminate against its Palestinian citizens, build Jewish settlements, confine Palestinians to shrinking islets of territory and pass laws for Palestinian inhabitants of these “bantustans”. Aloni summed up the situation in a few words: “By right of might, we are acting as a racist nation.” On the one hand, Israel's deeply entrenched racism has been exacerbated by the physical presence of the occupation interacting with the growing political power and influence of ultra-Orthodox religious parties and ultra-nationalist secular formations. Occupation, involving the rule of one people over another, always produces a feeling of racial superiority in the mind of the occupier. He is on top, so he sees himself as a higher being than the occupied. Ultimately the occupier comes to believe he has the right to dominate the other. This attitude is rampant in Israel today. Consequently, in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Israeli soldiers abuse, assault and shoot Palestinians with impunity. Recently, five innocent civilians, including three children, were killed by Israeli troops in Jenin because the Palestinians mistakenly rushed into the streets believing the curfew had been lifted. This week, a woman and her two-year-old child driving in a car in Gaza were murdered because Israeli troops thought the “profile” the Palestinians presented was threatening. Although the Israeli army says it investigates such incidents, offending soldiers are never brought to book. Since March, Israel has besieged, blockaded and invaded Palestinian towns and cities, imposed punitive curfews on hundreds of thousands and arrested thousands of Palestinians. The army's actions are supported by a large majority of Israelis who have no feelings for the Palestinians and no comprehension of their sufferings. Most Israelis simply do not want to know, argues Amira Hass, the Haaretz correspondent most conversant with the plight of the Palestinians under occupation. Israel's right-wing government justifies bad behaviour and cruel abuses by claiming the country is waging a “war against terror”. This endeavour is in fact a campaign to crush Palestinian resistance to the racist occupation and the Israeli land grab. Meanwhile, liberal commentators and politicians in the Western world shut their eyes to unpleasant sights, close their ears to the cries of the victims of Israel's racist policies and practices, and purse their lips to prevent the emergence of comments critical of Israel.
Please help me understand... Racism is about race, no?...I am not sure but I think Zionism is about religion, no?...How can you blend these two together. I fail to see where this question of racism is served as a base in this issue...
If this isn't another blatant attempt by FD Khan to resurrect a tired old argument, then nothing is. FD, what would you do if the "Palestinian citizens" mentioned in the article were trying to kill your father. mother, siblings and children? Leave your front door open and say "c'mon in"? The Palestinians should have demanded a homeland when Jordan occupied the West Bank from 1948-1967. The fact that they didn't makes their current demands ludicrous, to say the least.
As a Jew, I can tell you that if I lived in Israel , given what has been going on over there with the Palestinian suicide bombers etc, I would certainly not want any in my neighborhood.
Tired, Blatant attempt? I think if a country rules that 20% of their population can't own land based on their RACE, then that is a pretty serious situation. We can blanket it and sugar coat it all we want. We can talk about 1940, 1970 and other countries and whatever. But the fact is that it is racism and it is wrong. Maybe RocketMan Tex, if these people were treated better than animals, they wouldn't have so much animosity towards Israel.
#1, Judaism isn't a race. It's a religion. Get it straight. #2, the Palestinians were treated as equals until, under Yasser Arafat, began using terrorism as a means to obtain "their goals". Perhaps if the Palestinians tried peaceful means to obtain a "homeland" they might have a chance at getting one. You need to get your facts straight before you start spouting off.
NJ Rocket, The problem I see is that what If I said that because african-american's have a higher propensity to committ violent crimes, then I don't want any in my neighborhood. Then the government says they can't own land either. The government then proceeds the force them out of their houses to make new houses for White americans. That is essentially what is happening. Any other place in the world and it would be disasterous. Even Nelson Mandela called Israel an apartheid-like state.
Khan...the difference is that a higher propensity to commit crimes is a far cry from government supported suicide bombings....Saddam Hussein is paying the bombers families 25 K a pop for carrying through with the bombings for God sakes. There is a HUGE difference
Rocketman Tex, My God, you get quite emotional and rude with this subject. "Get it straight" and "Start Spouting Off" The Jewish people are a ethnic race as well. Even if it was simply religion, does that make it any better? I just don't see how you can think that systematically taking over more land and creating the largest refugee population in the world is not wrong. I understand you are Jewish and you have sentiments, but are you loyalties that blind? I am muslim and i am disgusted with the actions of most of the countries as I have pointed out on many occasions, you must open your mind and your heart to the value of a life and to what is just and right.
Saddam Hussein is a fool, he is trying to push his "muslim" spirit now, though he has been the most anti-religion since he took over and created his corrupt, joke of a government. There are millions of Palestinians, and with the life they are living: growing up in and living their lives in a refugee camps create extreme groups, all Israeli force tactics are doing is compounding that hatred and the people that feel it. I want the violence to end, I just don't feel that this is the path to do so. I appreciate you discussing the topic and not just trying to insult me like some others are by the way!
Bullsh!t. If you believe this, I pity the people who depend on your brain for anything. I am a Jew and I am disgusted with many of Sharon's actions as the Prime Minister. Your posts and the threads you start, however, do nothing but point fingers, so I'm pointing right back at you. Try being a part of the solution, because if you are not part of the solution, you're just another part of the problem.
But the israelis are responding to attacks on their persons...I mean, imagine going out to a local bar and not coming home. I am not saying that Sharon's responses are well thought out but this is a man whose country is being obliterated by suicide bombers...and the violence will only end when the Palenstinians stop attacking Jews/Israelis.
NJ Rocket: I agree with you 100%. Anger and frustration should never lead to deplorable actions like that. It is cowardly, unjust and disgusting. But as are Israeli tactics against Palestinians. Its just ironic that I CONSTANTLY hear muslims speaking vehemently against not only the Al-Queda, but the Taliban, many "muslim" governments and issues to which there is an ethical right, yet the Jewish opinion is that Israel is without blame.
anybody else see that bastion of right-wing thought, Amnesty International, issued some proclamation that the deeds of the Palestinian suicide bombers are in no way justified by any of the Israeli aggression, particularly because they target civilians???
But Palenstinians leave Israel no choice but to retaliate. When palestinians run free in Israel and walk into a coffee shop with no intentions of ever walking out, they arent left much choice. Jewish opinion is what it is because Jewish people realize (maybe moreso than anyone) that the Muslim terrorist groups that are attacking Israel, are attacking Israel because they resemble the American way closer than anyone. If these bombers and terrorists could make their way to the US as easy as they xcan make their way into Israel, they would....and they showed what would happen when they do.
Actually number 2 isn't true. Water allotment for the two have not been equal for some time. An Palestinian must use the same amount of water for drinking, showering, cooking, and irrigating his crops that an Iraeli gets just for his drinking water allotment. These are palestinian farmers workers etc. not just terrorists. To blame the entire people for the acts of a few is indeed racism. Let me also state that I am 100% AGAINST suicide bombers, and intentional attacks against civilian targets regardless of the cause someone supports. Perhaps the Palestinians saw that the zionists who bombed the British civilian hotel when they wanted independence thought it worked well then, and have been trying it ever since. One thing is obvious. Civilian attacks by the Palestinians aren't bringing them closer to having a Palestinian state. Israel's illegal occupation and oppression of the Palestinian isn't bringing them peace. Both sides need to change tactics. Just a slight clarification. Yes Hussein is paying the bombers families money, but not just the bomber's families. The money also goes to the families of innocent children who are killed by Israeli soldiers etc. The money is set aside for martyrs. Martyrs includes those who are killed doing things other than suicide bombings. The problem is that the media in the U.S. only points out the money going to the families of suicide bombers, and not the money going to the families of innocent victims too. I don't believe this justifies giving additional incentive to suicide bombers, but it is a more accurate presentation of facts.
#1: Bull****. Zionism is based on race not religion. (a) Many of the early Zionists, not to mention many current ones, were/are atheists. They base their argument on nation-building, historical persecution at the hands of the Germans, Russians, Turks and others, and historical claim to the land, not on God's Promised Land. (b) If you can prove you are ethically Jewish, you can become an Israeli citizen. What's more, if you go to Israel, they'll teach you the language and everything. However, if you are a Palestinian born on Israeli soil to a family that has lived there for generations and generations, you still are not an Israeli citizen. (c) If you are a Palestinian and you convert to Judaism (the religion), even submitting to circumcision which is the Biblical measure, do you become an Israeli citizen? (Assuming here, your fellow Palestinians haven't lynched you.) #2: Bull****. The Palestinians were never treated as equals. How can you be treated as an equal if you are never granted citizenship? They can't vote; they can't run for office; they are subjected to a different set of laws; they're impaired in their freedom of movement and their ability to own land. Now, their houses get bulldozed and their computers are confiscated. Israel now is the equivalent of something between the Antebellum South and the Jim Crow South. And this isn't even counting the more subtle transgressions Israel shares with the US now in providing insufficient education, training, healthcare and whatnot to our respective minorities.
True and if more Israelis didn't subscribe to illegal occupation, oppression and racism, the probelm in the middle east wouldn't be as sever as it is now. There are plenty of what if's. Unfortunately we must deal with the reality that currently exists.