The occupied West Bank recently witnessed the biggest land grab in its 30-year history when Israel seized 990 acres belonging to five Palestinian villages to build 5,000 new housing units. Writing in Haāaretz, Israelās oldest newspaper, journalist Amira Hess called this latest annexation nothing less than state-mandated āarmed robbery.ā
It might surprise some readers to learn that under Israelās Law of Return (1953), my American-born, secular Jewish daughter and my Jewish grandson are welcome ā just as any person with a Jewish mother ā to settle in the West Bank. In fact, were they to touch down at Ben-Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv tomorrow, theyād be granted almost immediate citizenship. And under a plethora of laws, regulations, and practices, theyād enjoy more rights and benefits than Palestinian-Arabs with the bad luck to be born in Israel.
They would be joining the migration called āmaking aliyah,ā roughly translated from Hebrew as āmovinā on upā to the West Bank. Settlers are enticed by subsidized four-bedroom houses at $200,000, twice the cost of a two-bedroom apartment in Tel Aviv, complete with gardens, first-rate schools, swimming pools, tax breaks and scenic views. Only the morally squeamish are on stolen land. Moreover, the 700,000 Palestinians (and their descendants), expelled by pre-state Jewish terrorist groups like the Stern Gang and the Irgun, can never return to their homes.
Both Labor and Likud, the major Israeli political formations, have followed a policy of building settlements, of ācreating facts on the groundā while simultaneously engaging in the āpeace process.ā Eventually the settlers would be too numerous and entrenched to be dislodged. When I toured the West Bank in 1981, there were 12,000 Jewish settlers. Today, they number some 350,000 with another 250,000 in East Jerusalem. The government has achieved its objective and Monty Pythonās parrot stands a better chance at resuscitation than a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Correspondingly, Israel has abandoned any pretense about being āthe sole democracy in the Middle East,ā as it becomes an openly racist, unapologetic apartheid state. As Middle East scholar Ben White reminds us, āJewish and a democracyā is an oxymoron and classic Orwellian double-think. According to several close observers, Israel now resembles a theocracy or āethnocracyā with a democratic faƧade. The fact that Arab citizens (18 percent of the population) can vote or be elected to the Knesset is a sham because in reality they are powerless. In sum, we may be seeing the culmination of Israelās original settler-colonial relationship with the Palestinian people.
Can anything be done? Rabbi Henry Siegman, former Executive Director of the American Jewish Congress and once passionate Zionist, believes the Palestinian struggle for statehood is āthe mirror image of the Zionistsā who founded their own state in 1948. In a recent interview for Democracy Now, Rabbi Siegman asserts that Israel has undermined the common bonds and values that once united our two nations. In a final effort to alter their behavior, he advises the U.S. to tell Israel, āWe cannot be seen as aiding and abetting this oppression and permanent disenfranchisement of an entire people. So, youāre on your own.ā
This is wise counsel because continued U.S. military, diplomatic and financial support for Israelās domestic and foreign policies does not serve the interests of the overwhelming majority of American citizens. For our own sakeāand Israelās ā we must cease being its patron and enabler.
Gary Olson, Ph.D. is in the Political Science Department of Moravian College in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. His most recent book is Empathy Imperiled: Capitalism, Culture and the Brain (NY: Springer-Verlag, 2013). Contact: [email protected]
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